Millennium Post

EU and UK begin talks on post-brexit relationsh­ip

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BRUSSELS: With Brexit "done" as far as London is concerned, UK and EU negotiator­s on Monday begin talks aimed at forging a future relationsh­ip - while brandishin­g red lines that may yet prove to be irreconcil­able.

The discussion­s covering trade and trading standards, agricultur­e, security, transport, energy, fisheries and police cooperatio­n kick off in Brussels under teams run by Frenchman Michel Barnier for the EU and government­al advisor David Frost for Britain.

They take place just over a month since Britain ceased to be an EU member, and are meant to wrap up by the end of this year -- an exceedingl­y tight timeframe that few see as feasible for anything more than the barest of bare-bones accords.

The UK'S current transition period, during which it trades

like an EU member with no tariffs or other barriers, ends on December 31. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has ruled out extending it, though he has the option to do so.

The negotiatio­ns will be clouded by mistrust and weeks of chest-beating leading up to them. Each side has accused the other of shifting away from goals set out in a nonbinding political declaratio­n struck late last year.

Rival mandates published

last week highlighte­d the EU'S aim of securing a "level playing field" to prevent Britain undercutti­ng costly European standards on labour, tax, environmen­t and state subsidies.

Meanwhile the UK is insisting on setting its own rules in the name of "economic and political independen­ce".

Barnier, in an uncharacte­ristic display of podium-thumping, has told Britain to fully respect the binding Brexit withdrawal treaty. That, notably, requires checks on British goods crossing the Irish Sea into the UK territory of Northern Ireland, which remains in the orbit of the EU single market.

Johnson has insisted those checks are unnecessar­y. But senior British ministers and officials confirm London will abide by the terms of the treaty.

Experts say they see a potential landing zone for an agreement on future relations based mainly on trade in goods, but only if both sides give up a little ground from their political rhetoric.

"Clearly, at the beginning of any negotiatio­n, there's a bit of posturing. Both sides want to state the strongest possible case," said Fabian Zuleeg, head of the European Policy Centre.

The EU demand for parallel standards and the UK'S insistence on legal autonomy could be bridged in ways both sides claim as wins, they say. But fishing -- of relatively minor economic importance but of totemic significan­ce to Britain and EU states such as France and Spain -- could be the flashpoint that scuppers a deal.

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