Italy reacted angrily on Friday after reported comments by U.S. President Donald Trump mocking Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, with the foreign minister cancelling a planned U.S. visit.
Meloni said she was “frankly stunned” by Trump’s comments to Italian channel La7.
According to a written transcript of the phone interview provided to AFP by the network, he said Meloni “begged me for a picture” at the G7 summit this week and he agreed only because he “felt sorry for her.”
He also suggested that Meloni was probably “happy that I talked to her, I didn’t have to talk to her.”
Meloni called what Trump said “made up,” adding: “Neither I nor Italy ever beg.”
“I don’t know why the president of the United States behaves this way with his own allies,” the far-right leader wrote on X.
“I can only say that it’s a pity he doesn’t show the same determination with enemies of the West, with enemies of the United States, with leaders with whom, instead, he is far more accommodating,” she said.
Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani on X called Trump’s words “grave and offensive” and said he was canceling a visit to the U.S. planned for Sunday and Monday.
Justice Minister Carlo Nordio said the comments were a “painful injury” to Italy-U.S. ties, while Defense Minister Guido Crosetto said “these jokes do not benefit anyone.”
At the end of the G7 summit in Evian on Wednesday, Meloni had spoken of a “very positive climate” and “no friction” between Trump and other world leaders present.
But she also said she and Trump both had “quite strong characters.” She was seen several times with the U.S. president at the summit including a meeting on a sofa after which he appeared to pat her shoulder.
Meloni has tried to position herself as a bridge between Europe and the Trump administration, but the relationship came under strain during the Middle East war.
Read more: The G7 advocates for “unimpeded and toll-free” passage through the Strait of Hormuz
Trump turned on Meloni in April after she defended Pope Leo XIV from the U.S. president’s harsh criticism of the pontiff’s anti-war views.
Meloni condemned Trump’s remarks as “unacceptable” — prompting the president to turn his fire on her.
“I’m shocked at her. I thought she had courage, but I was wrong,” the U.S. president said in an interview with Italian daily Corriere della Sera at the time.
He accused Meloni of failing to help the United States with NATO.
Trump has threatened to pull U.S. troops from Italy, saying Rome “has not been of any help to us” in the Iran war.












