Macron, European leaders mock Donald Trump for the ‘termination’ of Azerbaijan-Albania War that never happened | Watch

European leaders at a high level in Copenhagen have had US President Donald Trump’s repeated compositions between Armenia and Albania, with a viral cut sharing French President Emmanuel Macron with his Azerbaijani counterpart, and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama. In a track of the European political community meeting on Thursday, the trio could be laughed at Trump’s claim that he had mediated a peace agreement with Azerbaijan and Albania, with the French president even a ridiculous excuse. “You must make an excuse to us … because you did not congratulate us on the peace agreement that President Trump made between Albania and Azerbaijan,” Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama is heard and said to an initially confused Macron. The moment the words left Rama’s mouth, Aliyev is seen bursting in laughter, and Macron immediately captures and gives a ridiculous excuse. “I’m sorry for that,” Macron said jokingly as the cut cut off. The viral cut is perhaps a look at how President Trump’s continued compositions and Gaffes and his nonchalance are received about the same in international political circles. With the US president watching a Nobel Peace Prize, Trump has claimed since he was adopted in January, he has ended seven wars, including one between Azerbaijan and Armenia. After mediating the peace and ending decades of conflict, the US president told the world of his achievements, but in the process he produced Gaffe to Gaffe. Trump recently announced a joint press conference with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and Trump announced with confidence: “We have established him Aber-Baijan and Albania,” instead of Armenia, to the confused of the British Prime Minister. He told Fox News earlier that he had put an end to an ‘insoluble war’ between Azerbaijan and Albania (not Armenia) ‘which was going on for many, many years’. Perhaps the most striking was the 79-year-old’s recent allegation during a dinner speech that he ended a conflict between Armenia (yes, he got it right at the time) and Cambodia, countries that are nearly 7,000 km apart.

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