Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
15JUN

G7 ends with no joint statement

3 min read
11:40UTC

The G7 summit at Kananaskis in Alberta closed without a joint communique, an unusual breakdown for a body whose entire output is consensus text. Trump left early as the Iran deal moved; Macron and Trump then contradicted each other on whether the summit mattered.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The G7 spent three days on the war and could not agree a single shared sentence about it.

The G7, the Group of Seven major industrial democracies, ended its summit at Kananaskis in Alberta without a joint communique. 1 For a body whose entire purpose is to issue consensus text, no agreed statement is an unusual breakdown. Donald Trump left early as the Iran deal developed, the same declaration he had posted to Truth Social before the signing now pulling him out of a multilateral room.

The leaders managed only a line on staying "vigilant" over the conflict's energy impact and a reaffirmation of Israel's right to self-defence. France's Emmanuel Macron credited G7 pressure with speeding the ceasefire; Trump publicly denied the summit played any role. The two could not even agree on whether the gathering had mattered.

The absence of a framework carries forward. A Modi-Trump bilateral is set for 17 June at the summit's close , and it will now have to handle the deaths of three Indian sailors on the Settebello without any multilateral structure behind it. The forum designed to coordinate the Western response to the war produced no coordinated position on it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The G7 is a group of seven wealthy democracies: the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada. They meet once a year and almost always publish a joint statement (called a communique) that represents their agreed position on global issues. Not publishing one is rare and is treated as a sign the group could not agree. At Kananaskis in Alberta, Canada, on 15 June, the leaders produced no such joint statement. Trump left early to manage the Iran deal. Macron publicly said G7 pressure had helped speed the deal; Trump denied the summit played any role. The result is that the world's seven biggest democracies have no shared, published position on the Iran deal, its nuclear terms, or what happens next. That absence matters because France, Germany and the UK have their own legal obligations under the JCPOA and had expected to shape any new Iran framework.

First Reported In

Update #129 · Iran deal signed, but no paper to show

Global News Canada· 16 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
G7 ends with no joint statement
The one venue built to manufacture agreement could not produce a shared sentence on the war it spent three days discussing.
Different Perspectives
G7 Leaders (ex-US)
G7 Leaders (ex-US)
Kananaskis ended without a joint communique for the first time in the body's history; Macron credited G7 pressure with speeding the ceasefire while Trump publicly denied the summit played any role. The split between US and European G7 partners over what the memorandum means for sanctions relief was the direct cause of the text failure.
Protection-and-Indemnity insurers
Protection-and-Indemnity insurers
London-based P&I mutual clubs declined to underwrite Hormuz crossings while the IRGC Strait Authority remained operational, making the passage commercially impassable regardless of the memorandum's terms. Shipping operators said they would wait weeks for on-water conditions to change before routing tankers through.
IRGC Persian Gulf Strait Authority
IRGC Persian Gulf Strait Authority
P&I mutual insurers declined to underwrite Hormuz crossings on 15-16 June while the IRGC's Strait Authority remained in operation, reducing actual transits to two vessels against a pre-war daily rate of 94. The corps' revenue-generating toll mechanism, created 5 May and collecting $1.5-2 million per VLCC in crypto, has not been stood down and cannot be dissolved by Ghalibaf's signature.
Israeli Cabinet
Israeli Cabinet
Netanyahu admitted he had not seen the memorandum's text but confirmed IDF forces would stay in southern Lebanon; Finance Minister Smotrich called for ten Beirut buildings destroyed per Hezbollah drone and National Security Minister Ben-Gvir said the agreement 'does not bind us in any way'. Israel signed nothing in Islamabad and is the central unresolved variable in the Lebanon clause.
Iranian Majlis hardliners
Iranian Majlis hardliners
Around 60 MPs signed a letter demanding Ghalibaf explain the memorandum; Paydari faction MP Sabeti said the deal violates the Supreme Leader's red lines, and MP Aboutorabi argued the document carries binding obligations 'that cannot be resolved by simply changing the name'. President Pezeshkian defended the negotiators against accusations of betrayal, confirming the fracture inside Iran's political class.
US Vice President JD Vance
US Vice President JD Vance
Vance signed on 15 June and said the memorandum was 'not conditioned on Israel withdrawing from Lebanon' while also saying it 'envisioned a ceasefire that covers both Iran and Lebanon'. The two formulations are incompatible and hand Iran's foreign minister a ready-made violation claim before Geneva.