Europe will fight back against tariffs, U.S. warned
BRUSSELS — The European Union warned U.S. President Donald Trump Monday that the bloc will step back from a commitment to buy more American soybeans and liquid gas if European cars are hit with punitive tariffs.
The U.S. Commerce Department is expected issue its guidance on whether auto imports endanger
U.S. national security enough to justify import taxes, giving
Trump 90 days to decide whether to impose them.
EU President Jean-Claude Juncker said that during a summit in Washington last summer, Trump promised not to damage trans-Atlantic trade with such measures.
“Trump has given me his word that there will be no car tariffs for the time being,” Juncker told the German newspaper Stuttgarter Zeitung.
“I believe him,” Juncker said. “However, should he renege on that commitment, we will no longer feel bound by our commitments to buy more U.S. soya and liquid gas.”
European Union spokesman Margaritis Schinas said that if the U.S. goes ahead with “actions detrimental to European exports, the European Commission would react in a swift and adequate manner.”
The EU and the United States have been trying to work out a trade deal but progress has been slow.
Over the weekend, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said U.S. authorities appeared to have already concluded that European cars were a national security threat.
She noted that German automaker BMW’s biggest plant is in South Carolina