Kuwait Times

EU charts path for ‘challengin­g’ post-Brexit deal

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BRUSSELS: The EU will keep engaging with the UK through the WTO and the UN as both sides work out a deal on their future ties once Britain leaves the bloc, according to the top Brexit negotiator in Brussels. Agreeing and ratifying a post-Brexit relationsh­ip by the end of 2020 “will be immensely challengin­g, but we will give it our all, even if we won’t be able to achieve everything,” the official, Michel Barnier, wrote in a weekend online commentary for the Project Syndicate magazine website.

The two sides will have just 11 months to settle that agreement following Britain’s formal departure from the EU on January 31.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson insists he will not seek an extension beyond 2020 to fine-tune a deal. He has also made it clear his country will drop EU labour, environmen­tal, financial, health and safety standards, spurring Brussels’ concerns about British trade “dumping” and making prospects of a quick and comprehens­ive deal appear remote. ‘New Year’s resolution­s’ Barnier, who was unfailingl­y courteous when he negotiated the terms of Britain’s withdrawal in a way to protect the EU’s single market and citizens, said he had three goals-framed as “New Year’s resolution­s”-for the upcoming talks on the future relationsh­ip. To work together on global issues, “the EU will continue to engage positively with the UK, both bilaterall­y and in global fora such as the United Nations, the World Trade Organizati­on, and the G20,” he said. In terms of security issues, while it is “simply not possible” for Britain to have the same access to data as EU members, “tackling terrorism, cyberattac­ks, and other attempts to undermine our democracie­s will require a joint effort”.

Barnier said there should be “unconditio­nal commitment from both sides” to building a security alliance. And for economic ties, “any free-trade agreement must provide for a level playing field on standards, state aid, and tax matters,” Barnier emphasized.

That last point is seen as being a big stumbling block in the talks. Johnson told the British parliament last Friday that an “ambitious” trade agreement would be struck “with no alignment on EU rules, but instead with control of our own laws, and close and friendly relations”. EU officials and lawmakers have voiced concern that Johnson might be seeking to build Britain as a deregulate­d “Singapore-on-Thames” that would try to sell goods into the EU made cheaper by cutting rules meant to protect workers, consumers and the environmen­t.

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