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U.S. Warns EU Tariff Threat Will Return Unless Juncker Delivers

Trans-Atlantic Goodwill Ebbs, Putting Trade Peace at Risk

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S.-European trade truce struck last summer that’s helped keep punitive tariffs at bay is at risk of unraveling, with America’s top diplomat to the European Union citing a lack of good will and progress in negotiations.

“The good faith and understanding that existed on July 25 has not been followed through on,” U.S. Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland said in an interview in Brussels, referring to the day President Donald Trump met with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker to discuss trade.

U.S. Warns EU Tariff Threat Will Return Unless Juncker Delivers

The meeting was supposed to launch a “phase of close friendship” and “strong trade relations,” according to a joint statement at the time. And while official trade talks haven’t yet started, a disagreement over how to proceed and what was even agreed upon at the encounter has left the two sides at an impasse.

The deteriorating relations come at a difficult time, with the U.S. Commerce Department poised to present a report on the national-security implications of auto imports to the president that could lead to tariffs on foreign cars. Trump used the same argument last year to hit steel and aluminum imports with duties, which led the EU to retaliate with its own targeted tariffs.

‘In the Room’

Complicating matters is the fact that the two sides don’t agree on what was included in the scope of their discussions, particularly when it comes to agriculture. The joint statement said efforts would be made to ease trade in non-auto industrial goods, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, medical products and soy beans while opening markets for farmers and workers.

“It said very clearly, without doubt -- and I was in the room where it happened so I know this -- that agriculture would not be in,” EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said Jan. 18, describing the July meeting between Trump and Juncker.

Sondland says the EU has “misrepresented” what was discussed and that Juncker explicitly said agriculture would be included in the negotiations but that it would be left out of the statement to provide the EU political cover.

‘Friendly Tone’

“Agriculture was absolutely discussed in the meeting, and it was intended to be in the joint declaration,” Sondland said, adding that Juncker asked Trump to remove that particular word from the document to appease member states for whom it could be a delicate topic.

“It was an accommodation, a language accommodation,” Sondland said. “The president understood the context and he wanted to keep a very friendly tone to this meeting and he said, ‘of course I’ll accommodate you if that helps you with some of your member countries sort of soften the tone, no problem.”’

Sondland added that the two sides had agreed to immediately work on ways to reduce non-tariff barriers, but the EU hasn’t followed through.

“There have been a lot of talks but nothing,” he said. “On the non-tariff barriers, nothing of substance.”

--With assistance from Shawn Donnan.

To contact the reporters on this story: Richard Bravo in Brussels at rbravo5@bloomberg.net;Nikos Chrysoloras in Brussels at nchrysoloras@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ben Sills at bsills@bloomberg.net, Robert Jameson

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.