Walking away, President Joe Biden wrapped his arm around Zelensky’s shoulders.
None of the G7 leaders are particularly popular at home, even as they produce results abroad.
After all, it was Trump who had argued over dinner at the 2019 G7 summit in Biarritz, France, that Russia should be allowed back into the group.
That level of chaos was nowhere to be found in Hiroshima this past week, when leaders appeared to generally like each other.
Even before Biden left for the G7 summit, the stalemate over raising the federal borrowing limit prompted a scramble to rearrange the president’s engagements so he could return to Washington early.