EU still seeks Trump trade deal—but readies retaliation

Photo courtesy: AFP/FILE

By Agence France-Presse

On Monday, July 14, the European Union (EU) moved to firm up possible retaliation if the U.S. President Donald Trump hits the bloc with 30%t tariffs, while insisting it was still looking to clinch a deal by August 1st.

EU Trade Chief Maros Sefcovic said Brussels was putting forward a list of U.S. goods worth EUR 72 billion ($84 billion) that could be targeted with levies if talks fail.

He said after meeting EU ministers, “The EU, as you know very well, never walks away without genuine effort, especially considering the hard work invested, how close we find ourselves to making a deal. But it takes two hands to clap.”

Trump threw months of painstaking talks into disarray on July 12 by announcing he would hammer the bloc with the sweeping tariffs if no agreement is reached by August 1.

Sefcovic, the EU’s chief trade commissioner, said he planned to speak to U.S. counterparts later on Monday to try to get negotiations back on track.

EU ministers roundly backed the push to try to salvage the talks—which Brussels believed were on the cusp of success last week—and to keep on trying to find an accord. But they also agreed to move ahead with readying a retaliation if Trump makes good on his threat.

Denmark’s foreign minister, Lars Lokke Rasmussen, whose country holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said, “There was a total unified position among the ministers that we should be ready to respond if needed. If you want peace, you have to prepare for war.”

Brussels has been working on the list of U.S. imports it could target since May—landing on the EUR 72 billion package after lobbying from member states.

The EU has already prepared a separate list of U.S. imports worth EUR 21 billion that it is ready to target over earlier tariffs from Trump on steel and aluminum.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen delayed rolling out those measures on Sunday, July 13—a day before they were set to kick in—as a sign of goodwill towards Washington.

INTERVENTION FOR TRUMP’S TARIFF THREAT. Vice-President of the European Commission for Interinstitutional Relations, Maros Sefcovic, gestures as he speaks during a press conference following a meeting of the EU-United Kingdom Joint Committee and the EU-United Kingdom Partnership Council at the EU headquarters in Brussels, on May 16, 2024. (Photo courtesy: John Thys/AFP)

‘No taboos’

Before heading into the meeting with EU ministers, Sefcovic warned that if Trump did impose 30-percent tariffs, it would make trade “almost impossible” between the two economic giants. He said, “Practically it prohibits the trade.”

EU nations—some of which export far more to the United States than others—have sought to stay on the same page over how strong a line to take with Washington in order to get a deal.

France’s trade minister Laurent Saint-Martin said retaliation plans should be drawn up with “no taboos,” adding that the weekend’s setback called for a rethink of the bloc’s tactics.

He said at the Brussels talks, “If you hold anything back, you are not strengthening your hand in negotiations. Obviously, the situation since Saturday requires us to change our strategy.”

Photo courtesy: Philip Fong/AFP

Deals and duties

Since returning to the presidency in January, Trump has unleashed sweeping stop-start tariffs on allies and competitors alike, roiling financial markets and raising fears of a global economic downturn.

But his administration faces pressure to secure deals with trading partners after promising a flurry of agreements. So far, U.S. officials have only unveiled two pacts, with Britain and Vietnam, alongside temporarily lower tit-for-tat duties with China.

The EU, alongside dozens of other economies, had been set to see its U.S. tariff level increase from a baseline of 10 percent last July 9, but Trump pushed back the deadline to 1st of August.

The EU tariff is markedly steeper than the 20 percent levy Trump unveiled in April—but paused initially until mid-July.

Thomas Byrne, the minister for Ireland whose pharmaceutical industry puts it on the front line of Trump’s trade war along with industrial powerhouse Germany, called for Europe to “work our hardest” for a deal before August 1.

He said, “That gives us certainty, it protects investments, it protects jobs.”

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