NATO leaders anger Trump with on camera mockery

Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte (L), French president Emmanuel Macron (front), British prime minister Boris Johnson (R) and Canada`s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (back-C) as the leaders of Britain, Canada, France and the Netherlands were caught on camera at a Buckingham Palace reception mocking US President Donald Trump`s lengthy media appearances ahead of the NATO summit on Tuesday in London. Photo: AFP
Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte (L), French president Emmanuel Macron (front), British prime minister Boris Johnson (R) and Canada`s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (back-C) as the leaders of Britain, Canada, France and the Netherlands were caught on camera at a Buckingham Palace reception mocking US President Donald Trump`s lengthy media appearances ahead of the NATO summit on Tuesday in London. Photo: AFP

The leaders of Britain, Canada, France and the Netherlands were caught on camera at a Buckingham Palace reception mocking US President Donald Trump's lengthy media appearances at the NATO summit.

The footage, shot by the British host's camera pool on Tuesday evening and spotted and subtitled by Canadian broadcaster CBC, set the tone for the allies' summit in Watford, just outside London.

British pime mnister Boris Johnson can be heard asking France's pesident Emmanuel Macron: "Is that why you were late?"

Canada's pime mnister Justin Trudeau interjects: "He was late because he takes a 40 minute press conference off the top."

Earlier Tuesday, Macron's one-on-one pre-summit meeting with Trump had been proceeded by a lengthy question and answer session with the media, as the leaders publicly disagreed about NATO strategy and trade.

In the video, Macron appears to tell an anecdote about the encounter as Britain's Princess Anne and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte look on, but the French leader's back is to camera and he is inaudible amid the hubbub.

"Oh, yeah, yeah, he announced..." an amused Trudeau declares, adding: "You just watched his team's jaw drop to the floor."

As he did at last year's NATO meeting, Trump has thrown out normal summit protocol and used his appearances with allied leaders to field dozens of questions from the world's media.

He has condemned as "nasty" Macron's criticism of NATO as brain dead, branded European countries that have failed to meet military spending targets "delinquent" and railed against moves in Washington to impeach him.

After the summit, a flustered Johnson insisted that reports of the exchange were "nonsense", but Trump had clearly seen it and he was angry, particularly with the apparent ring-leader, Trudeau.

"He's two-faced," Trump told reporters, in yet another press appearance, this time before his head-to-head with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"With Trudeau, he's a nice guy. I find him to be a nice guy, but the truth is, I called him out on the fact that he's not paying two percent and I guess he's not very happy about it," he said.

NATO members have a target of spending two percent of their GDP on defence, and Canada is among the majority in failing to do so.

Trump had been due to give another news conference, this time on his own, later Wednesday after the 29 NATO leaders hold a full three-hour closed-door summit session and issue a statement to celebrate their unity.

But, despite having been only too happy to talk to the press for the two days of the meetings, he abruptly cancelled this scheduled appearance.

"When today's meetings are over, I will be heading back to Washington. We won't be doing a press conference at the close of NATO because we did so many over the past two days. Safe travels to all!" he tweeted.