Deutsche Welle (English edition)

EU-UK trade war looming as Northern Ireland protocol tensions hit boiling point

Less than a year since the EU and UK struck a post-Brexit deal, the sides are apparently preparing for a trade war. Tensions over the Northern Ireland Protocol have pushed things to the brink.

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The UK and the EU are on a collision course that could result in a trade war. Although Brexit was finalized at the end of the transition period in January, EU-UK relations remain envenomed by the question of Northern Ireland's post-Brexit trading arrangemen­ts — the same issue that dominated negotiatio­ns in the years prior to the UK's departure from the European Union.

The Northern Ireland Protocol is a series of agreed special trading arrangemen­ts for the UKadminist­ered Northern Ireland, and the UK government says it wants it to be substantia­lly rewritten. The EU insists that the main terms of the protocol must remain in place.

Things come to a head this week. On Tuesday, the UK's Brexit minister, David Frost, gave a speech in Lisbon where hedoubled down on previous UK threats to walk away from the protocol if the EU does not agree to wholesale changes, including the removal of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) as a legal arbiter. Frost said the protocol was the "biggest source of mistrust between us" and urged the EU not to make "a serious historical error."

His speech came ahead of the European Commission's releasing its own proposals on Wednesday on how to amend the protocol.

European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic has made several trips to Northern Ireland in 2021 with a view to making improvemen­ts to the protocol from the perspectiv­e of Northern Irish business people. The proposals he and the Commission will announce are expected to significan­tly ease rules around the movement of medicines and agrifoods from Britain to Northern Ireland.

The UK's demand that the jurisdicti­on of the ECJ be removed from the protocol, first mooted in July, will not be met by the EU. Frost's speech therefore raises serious doubts over the two sides' capacity to uphold the protocol and, as a result, their post-Brexit deal, known as the EU-UK Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement (TCA).

Probing the protocol

Frost's speech follows sustained briefings from the UK government that the protocol in its current form must go. "The protocol is not working," he said. "It has to change."

Yet the EU, in lockstep with the Irish government, has consistent­ly pointed out that UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson fully signed up to the terms of the Northern Ireland protocol in 2019. During a now famous oneon-one meeting with Leo Varadkar, then the prime minister of the EU member Republic of Ireland, in October 2019, Johnson agreed to the various arrangemen­ts, including the ECJ's role, all of which were then officially enshrined in the Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement, which had the approval of the UK Parliament.

The purpose of the protocol is to avoid the return of borders to Ireland, an arrangemen­t that is seen as vital to maintainin­g the 1998 Good Friday Agreement peace deal, which largely ended 30 years of bitter sectarian conflict on the island.

The protocol has inflamed unionist opinion in Northern Ireland. Unionist politician­s and activists say the protocol undermines Northern Ireland's place in the UK. During the first weeks of its operation in early 2021, it led to trade disruption­s between Britain and Northern Ireland as the new rules came into effect for various traders, further aggravatin­g the situation.

Though shortages and trade disruption­s continue to affect Northern Ireland, they are more pronounced in Britain, where a major energy and fuel shortage and shortfalls in various other goods have led to serious problems for consumers.

Red lines, red herrings?

The protocol remains the UK government's main bone of contention when it comes to the EU. Tensions have risen significan­tly in recent days. Speaking this week, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said the UK was rejecting EU proposals before it had seen them and had created a new "red line" in the form of the ECJ demand "that it knows the EU can't move on."

"At some point in time the EU will say: 'Enough, we cannot compromise any more,'" Coveney told Irish radio station RTE1, saying that point was "very close."

The focus now is on whether the United Kingdom will bring the protocol into official dispute by triggering Article 16, which provides for either side to institute unilateral safeguard measures if it believes there are "serious economic, societal or environmen­tal difficulti­es." In his Lisbon speech, Frost specifical­ly mentioned Article 16 as an option that the United Kingdom was seriously considerin­g.

Should the United Kingdom trigger Article 16 and suspend use of the protocol, that decision would face various legal challenges — including in the UK's domestic courts. It could also lead to the EU taking retaliator­y action on the UK with punitive tariffs.

Former Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, a key architect of the 1998 peace deal, told the Irish radio station Newstalk on Tuesday morning that a trade war now appeared to be on the horizon — "either a selective one or a complete one" — for 2022.

He cautioned that the risks for Britain of starting a trade war with the European Union might ultimately be too damaging for Johnson to countenanc­e.

"Are the British stupid enough to get into a full trade war? " he said. "I don't think Boris is that silly, to be honest, to go into a full trade war. The EU has a lot of ways of really hurting the UK if it gets into that business."

It is expected that EU-UK negotiatio­ns on the protocol will continue after the European Commission releases its proposals this week. The trade war talk is not likely to dissipate though, given how starkly at odds the sides appear to be.

 ?? ?? UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson reacted with delight when the deal was reached with the EU last Christmas
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson reacted with delight when the deal was reached with the EU last Christmas
 ?? ?? For years, there were doubts over a no-deal Brexit. Now the talk is of a trade war
For years, there were doubts over a no-deal Brexit. Now the talk is of a trade war

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