Khaleej Times

EU’s anti-Trump show

- — AFP

The European Union’s top officials will meet the leaders of China and Japan next week to boost ties in the face of fears that US President Donald Trump will spark an all-out global trade war.

brussels — The European Union’s top officials will meet the leaders of China and Japan next week to boost ties in the face of fears that US President Donald Trump will spark an all-out global trade war.

The trip by EU Council President Donald Tusk and Commission head Jean- Claude Juncker includes the signing of a free trade deal with Japan, which was moved from Brussels last week because Japanese premier Shinzo Abe was dealing with deadly floods at home.

Their Asian tour comes as the EU — which, with 28 countries and 500 million people is the world’s biggest single market — tries to forge alliances in the face of the protection­ism of Trump’s “America First” administra­tion.

European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said the “landmark” Japan deal was “the biggest ever negotiated by the European Union”.

“This agreement will create an open trade zone covering nearly a third of the world’s GDP,” Schinas added.

In China on Monday, the two leaders will meet with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang to discuss their shared tensions with Washington, having both recently announced new tar- iffs on US goods in retaliatio­n for measures imposed by Trump.

They are expected to reaffirm their support for the rules-based internatio­nal order, including the World Trade Organisati­on, which faces unpreceden­ted criticism from Trump’s administra­tion.

The leaders will also discuss climate change — another area on which the EU is in disagreeme­nt with Trump after he pulled out of the Paris climate deal — and nuclear issues in North Korea and Iran, Schinas said.

But the EU and China will have to smooth over existing difference­s over Beijing’s own restrictiv­e market practices including the “dumping” of cheap Chinese

imports, especially steel. Some of those concerns are shared by Washington.

The EU recently pushed through measures targeting China that were intended to offset the consequenc­es of granting China socalled market economy status at the WTO, which will make it more difficult to prove and punish illegal

[US-Japan] agreement will create an open trade zone covering nearly a third of the world’s GDP

Margaritis Schinas, European Commission spokesman

trade practices by Beijing.

In Tokyo, talks will also focus on presenting a united front against the United States over its tariffs, with the Japanese government having slammed them as “extremely deplorable”.

The EU-Japan deal was hailed recently as a “strong signal to the world” against US protection­ism by EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom, who is travelling with Juncker and Tusk to Asia.

Abe was originally due to come to Brussels to sign the deal last week, but he called off the trip after flooding and landslides in Japan that killed more than 200 people.

Tusk had said that after the “tragic circumstan­ces” they would move the summit to Tokyo.

Schinas confirmed that Juncker would stick to his “very demanding agenda” and go on the trip to China and Japan, despite suffering from a painful medical condition that made him stumble repeatedly at a Nato summit in Brussels this week.

 ?? — AFP ?? The trip by EU Council President Donald Tusk includes the signing of a free trade deal with Japan.
— AFP The trip by EU Council President Donald Tusk includes the signing of a free trade deal with Japan.

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