Ottawa Citizen

NAFTA position firm, says Freeland

- Mia Rabson

As the United States tries to light a fire under NAFTA negotiatio­ns, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canada will not be bullied or pressured by the United States as part of those talks.

Freeland is coming off a tense week which started with the seventh round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns making little progress toward an agreement but ended with a sigh of relief when Canada and Mexico secured an exemption from new U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

The steel tariff threat was seen by many to be an attempt by the Trump administra­tion to pressure Canada and Mexico to complete the NAFTA talks — giving in to other U.S. demands or giving up some of their own — rather than risk the punishing steel and aluminum duties. The steel tariff investigat­ion was launched to see the impact of steel imports on U.S. national security.

Freeland said it was absurd to consider Canadian steel a national security threat and that “as far as Canada is concerned there is absolutely no connection” between the national security reasons cited for the steel tariffs and NAFTA.

“These are two separate tracks and in the NAFTA negotiatio­ns Canada will not be subject to any type of pressure,” she said. “This episode has not changed our NAFTA negotiatio­n position.”

Her words echo those of Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo who said last week Mexico also believed the steel tariffs had nothing to do with the NAFTA talks.

Freeland notes the written presidenti­al proclamati­on putting them in place does not.

“That was significan­t and we were glad to see that,” she said.

The proclamati­on instead pointed to economic integratio­n between the U.S., Canada and Mexico, the fact the U.S. also exports steel to both Canada and Mexico, and the three countries’ shared commitment to national security and addressing global excess capacity in steel production. Trump did say he expected both Canada and Mexico to take action to prevent other countries from sneaking steel into the U.S. by sending them to Canada or Mexico first.

However Trump specifical­ly mentioned NAFTA in his press conference announcing the exemptions on March 8.

“We’re negotiatin­g right now NAFTA and we’re going to hold off the tariff on those two countries to see whether or not we’re able to make the deal on NAFTA,” he said.

 ??  ?? Chrystia Freeland
Chrystia Freeland

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