The G7 summit hasn’t yet been underway for two full days, but Donald Trump is already planning his exit. He’ll be leaving the summit, held this year in La Malbaie, Quebec, a few hours earlier than the rest of the heads of the state, in order to make his Singapore meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, a meeting that may well be less hostile than the reception he’s gotten so far from America’s allies. The other leaders at the summit, including Germany’s Angela Merkel, Canada’s Justin Trudeau, France’s Emmanuel Macron, and Japan’s Shinzo Abe, have all seemed visibly confounded by Trump, who was late to arrive at the summit’s first working session and said even before arriving that he thought the group should let Vladimir Putin back in.

On Saturday morning, Chancellor Merkel posted a photo to her Instagram of the whole group in what looks like a heated debate, Trump with his arms crossed and Merkel leaning in front of his table as if she’d like to leap over it.

The summit is already off to a rough start where American diplomatic relations are concerned. Trudeau began Saturday’s first session on gender equality with wry remarks about “stragglers” before Trump belatedly took his seat, and when he was asked later whether he was happy Trump was planning to leave early, Trudeau had no answer, but Trump said, “He’s happy,” while sticking out his tongue.

Macron, who was welcomed at the White House earlier this year, may not have said anything, but his intense handshake seemed to speak louder than words:

As he plans to leave before the event officially ends, Trump will miss the discussion on climate change and the health of the world’s oceans and the closing news conferences that are likely to address the U.S. stance on trade and Russian re-admission to the G7, according to Reuters. Russia was suspended in 2014 after its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, and the E.U. members of the summit and even Moscow agree that conditions for re-admission have not been met. On Saturday, Trump doubled down on his claim that Russia should be re-admitted.

“Why are we having a meeting without Russia being in the meeting?” Trump had asked reporters before he left for Montreal. Echoing years of rhetoric from Putin and his Russian officials, he added, “You know, whether you like it or not—and it may not be politically correct—but we have a world to run.”