Overview
- A White House official confirmed late Tuesday that President Trump will attend the June 15–17 G7 summit in Évian-les-Bains, France.
- The U.S. will push priorities that include artificial intelligence, linking aid to trade, diversifying critical-mineral supply chains, crime control, tighter immigration enforcement, and more fossil-fuel energy production.
- The administration says leaders will use the summit to build consensus for future agreements rather than sign any deals on site.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent pressed G7 finance ministers in Paris on Tuesday to adopt tougher sanctions on Iran, reflecting ongoing friction with European partners over the conflict.
- France confirmed Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a special invitee, and Indian outlets say a possible Modi–Trump sideline meeting is being watched closely though it has not been announced.