Worst Relationships between Heads of Friendly or Allied Countries (user search)
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  Worst Relationships between Heads of Friendly or Allied Countries (search mode)
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Author Topic: Worst Relationships between Heads of Friendly or Allied Countries  (Read 6519 times)
Indy Texas 🇺🇦🇵🇸
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« on: March 23, 2015, 10:39:06 PM »

Barack Obama (U.S.) and Benjamin Netanyahu (Israel) - obviously very visible recently

Richard Nixon (U.S.) and Indira Gandhi (India) - the G-rated version involves him habitually referring to her as "that witch"

Richard Nixon (U.S.) and Pierre Trudeau (Canada) - of Nixon's tirades against him, Trudeau would say, "I've been called worse things by better people."

What are some others?
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Indy Texas 🇺🇦🇵🇸
independentTX
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 12,284
United States


Political Matrix
E: 0.52, S: -3.48

« Reply #1 on: April 04, 2015, 08:59:10 PM »

Ludwig Erhard and Charles de Gaulle weren't very friendly.
I also understand that Kennedy and Ben Gurion had a frosty relationship. 


Is it true that Ike and Churchill didn't get along?

I'm not sure if Ike and Churchill didn't get along (wouldn't surprise me), but I know Eisenhower and Attlee had some heat.

Carter and Thatcher did not like each other at all. Not only because they were opposites in personality and politics, but because Carter was very close with Jim Callaghan (one of the oddest friendships between Prez and PM I can think of), which is a similar situation to what happened between John Major and Bill Clinton because Major and Bush were good friends.

Nobody liked Pierre Trudeau.

Further to that, wasn't there some heat between Dubya and Jean Chretien or Paul Martin?



Personality, yes, but Carter was as much of a privatizer and a deregulator as Thatcher (it's just that as POTUS, there wasn't nearly as much to privatize or deregulate). Carter would be a malicious capitalist pig by the standards of the 1970s Labour Party.
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