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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addresses a joint press conference with his Latvian counterpart following their meeting in Riga, Latvia, on July 10, 2018.ILMARS ZNOTINS/Getty Images

U.S. President Donald Trump’s NATO allies will have little time for his pro-Russian musings when he meets the alliance’s leaders at their annual summit in Brussels starting on Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says.

Mr. Trudeau delivered that message during a day-long visit to Latvia ahead of the 29-country military summit, and just hours after Mr. Trump moved to disrupt the meeting by casting Russia in a positive light.

Prior to his departure for Brussels, Mr. Trump raised eyebrows when he said that of all the items on his travel itinerary, Russian President Vladimir Putin likely poses less of a problem for him than his miserly NATO allies or the European Union’s pending Brexit breakup with Britain.

Mr. Trump also heaped praise on former British foreign secretary Boris Johnson, who led Britain’s “leave” campaign during its 2016 Brexit referendum, and whose resignation this week has triggered a political crisis for Britain’s Conservative government.

Britain’s 2016 referendum saw the leave side prevail with 52 per cent of the vote – a populist victory combined with Mr. Trump’s surprise victory in the U.S. presidential race later in the year that sparked upheaval in the global order.

Mr. Trudeau was sideswiped last month by Mr. Trump’s anti-establishment behaviour when the President trashed him on Twitter hours after the Group of Seven summit in Quebec, calling him “very dishonest and weak.”

Mr. Trudeau made it clear that he will join his fellow NATO allies in the defending an alliance originally built to counter the former Soviet Union, following the Second World War.

“The meeting tomorrow will be an opportunity for all of our countries to rededicate ourselves to NATO, to demonstrate that it’s actually important, that it actually does important things and that the collection of values and rules that it was brought in to defend 75-plus years ago are just as relevant today as they ever were,” Mr. Trudeau said.

“I look forward to having words with President Trump.”

Mr. Trump is to meet Mr. Putin in Helsinki next week in a summit that has generated much unease. Special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating potential co-ordination between Russia and Mr. Trump’s Republican presidential campaign.

Asked whether he was concerned about the Helsinki summit, Mr. Trudeau said: “There is a strong consensus around the NATO table that Russia has been creating significant problems in the world and we need continue to demonstrate a strong response, including with sanctions.”

Mr. Trump has been railing against NATO allies for what he sees as weak defence spending.

The U.S. President is also threatening to disrupt the NATO summit by minimizing the negative influence of Russia – a repeat of his tactic before last month’s G7 summit, when he called for Russia’s reinstatement in the group.

“So I have NATO, I have the U.K., which is in somewhat turmoil, and I have Putin. Frankly, Putin may be the easiest of them all. Who would think? Who would think?” the President said outside the White House before his departure.

Mr. Trump travels to London later in the week and will get a first-hand view of the political turmoil currently engulfing the government of Prime Minister Theresa May over her government’s Brexit plan. Ms. May is dealing with the aftermath of departure of some Brexit hardliners from her cabinet because they object to her approach.

Most notable is the departure of Mr. Johnson, who was one of the primary drivers of the campaign for Britain to leave the EU. Mr. Trump has praised Brexiters and trashed the EU in the past, and he piled on ahead of his first visit to Britain.

“Boris Johnson’s a friend of mine. He’s been very, very nice to me – very supportive,” Mr. Trump said. “Maybe we’ll speak to him when I get over there.”

Mr. Trump’s comments are “frightful” even if he has a point about some NATO countries not spending enough on defence, including Canada, said Brett Boudreau, a retired Canadian Forces colonel now based in London and who was formerly posted to NATO headquarters in Brussels.

“Disparaging long-standing allies at the same time as talking up the country that has wantonly seized territory and redrawn Europe’s borders by military force for the first time since World War Two is disconcerting to say the least,” Mr. Boudreau said.

Mr. Trump is unpopular in Britain, so supporting Johnson could help Ms. May and sow doubt about Britain’s decision to part ways with the EU, he added.

“The notion that ‘America First’ Trump so obviously supports Brexit and one of its populist proponents is bound to give real pause for a lot of people, who are likely to conclude that if it’s that great for the U.S., then it will be at the expense of the U.K.”

Canada and Britain will eventually start their own free trade talks if and when the Brexit divorce is finalized, but until then the Canada-EU free-trade deal remains in force.

Both countries will be well-served in the meantime by the British Parliament’s recent decision to ratify the deal, known as CETA, said Joseph Pickerill, a spokesman for International Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne.

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