Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

EU hopes for clarity from crunch US trade talks

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BRUSSELS, March10 (AFP) - Top EU trade officials were to hold crunch talks with their US counterpar­ts in Brussels on Saturday hoping to get “clarity” on President Donald Trump's controvers­ial new steel and aluminium tariffs. Trump's announceme­nt of duties of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminium has stung the EU and triggered warn- ings of an all- out internatio­nal trade war.

Brussels has prepared a list of US products to hit with countermea­sures if its exports are affected by the tariffs, but says it hopes to join Canada and Mexico in being exempted.

The EU's top trade official Cecilia Malmstroem was to meet US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer in Brussels from 9:00 am (0800 GMT) along with Japanese Economy Minister Hiroshige Seko. The talks have long been in the diary but after Trump's dramatic announceme­nt they are now a de facto crisis meeting. “Dialogue is always the prime option of the EU,” Malmstroem told reporters on Friday, saying Brussels was “counting on being excluded” from the new duties. She predicted a “long day” of talks on Saturday, while European Commission Vice President Jyrki Katainen sought to play down expectatio­ns, saying it was “a meeting, not THE meeting”.

Katainen said Brussels wanted “clarity” on how the tariffs will be implemente­d and was ready to enforce retaliator­y measures to protect European interests if needed.

Along with a huge range of steel products, the EU's hit list of flagship American products lined up for counter measures includes peanut butter, bourbon whiskey and denim jeans.

Germany -- singled out for particular criticism by Trump -- accused Washington of protection­ism, calling the tariffs an “affront to close partners”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged dialogue and warned that “no one can win in such a race to the bottom”.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday warned his US counterpar­t Trump against forging ahead with the planned tariffs, saying they risked provoking a mutually destructiv­e “trade war”.

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