With Boris Johnson you never know who you're going to get.
He can be the joker whose gaffes and flippant asides can deceive someone into not taking him seriously. But he's also the man who, on becoming British prime minister, coldly dispatched enemies in the biggest cabinet purge in decades and who seems dead set on executing Brexit whatever the cost.
The question of "which Johnson" matters: He debuts at the Group of Seven summit this weekend in France, where, as Alex Morales reports, he could tip the geopolitical scales on key issues from keeping alive Iran's nuclear deal to containing China's influence. He also stops off in Berlin and Paris en route to Biarritz.
U.S. President Donald Trump has cut an isolated figure at G-7s to date, but that could be about to change. Johnson is his kind of guy, and persuading the U.K. to break ranks with Germany and France (with the promise of a great free-trade deal after Brexit) on things like Iran seems part of the Trumpian plan.
It remains to be seen how Johnson will play this round, but the fact he is considering pushing a U.K. candidate to lead the International Monetary Fund despite a European contender already being put forward shows a willingness to defy allies close to home and cast aside convention.
- Flavia Krause-Jackson
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