Italy will stop responding to U.S. President Donald Trump’s provocative remarks, Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said in an ​interview on Tuesday, as NATO leaders prepared to meet ‌in Turkey.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni last month accused Trump of fabricating a story about her after the U.S. president told an Italian TV channel ​that she had “begged” him to take a photo with ​her at a G7 summit in France.

With the two ⁠leaders due to attend the NATO summit in Ankara on Tuesday ​and Wednesday, Trump appeared to reignite the dispute when he posted ​on Truth Social a picture of Meloni looking up at him with the caption “RESTRAINING ORDER NEEDED”.

Trump “speaks for himself. We have a U.S. President who loves ​to provoke, especially on social media. We have decided to ​stop responding to these remarks so as not to fuel disputes among ‌our ⁠allies,” Tajani told La Stampa newspaper.

“We are and will remain friends of the United States as our strategic partner and that of Europe,” he added.

Meloni was once a vocal supporter of Trump ​and was the ​only European ⁠leader to attend his inauguration in 2025.

However, she criticised him this year for lashing out at ​Pope Leo over his condemnation of the Iran ​conflict. ⁠That in turn prompted a blunt rebuke from the U.S. president, who accused her of lacking courage.

Italy’s Il Foglio newspaper headlined its ⁠front ​page on Tuesday mocking Trump’s jibe against ​Meloni, publishing a picture of the U.S. President with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, under ​the same caption “RESTRAINING ORDER NEEDED”.