Trump to meet EU's Juncker in bid to resolve trade dispute

Young journalists club

News ID: 26504
Publish Date: 18:00 - 25 July 2018
TEHRAN, July 25 - US President Donald Trump meets Wednesday with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, who has dampened hopes that their talks would resolve a festering trade dispute between the two key economies.

Trump to meet EU's Juncker in bid to resolve trade disputeTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - "I am not very optimistic. I know Mr Trump pretty well. I have met him frequently and know how to deal with him and know how he deals with others. We will negotiate as equals," Juncker told German public broadcaster ZDF on Wednesday.

Juncker said that the EU is "not in the dock -- we don't need to defend ourselves.

"We are here to explain ourselves and explore ways to avoid a trade war," he said.

Juncker renewed his pledge of retaliatory measures should Trump make good on his threat to slap new tariffs on EU car imports.

"We are ready to do that," he said. "We are in a position to respond appropriately right away."

Trump on Tuesday crowed that it was his tough stance and threats of auto tariffs that brought the European leader to the bargaining table.

But at home, Trump is facing increasing criticism as consumers, farmers and businesses are taking a hit from the retaliation to the raft of US tariffs on steel, aluminum, and tens of billions of dollars in products from China that he has imposed in recent weeks.

"What the European Union is doing to us is incredible," he said. "They sound nice, but they're rough."

But when threatened with tariffs on autos and auto parts, EU officials rushed to come to Washington, Trump claimed.

"Countries that have treated us unfairly on trade for years are all coming to Washington to negotiate," he said in a pre-dawn tweet. "Tariffs are the greatest!"

While Juncker is set to make a last effort to talk Trump out of the auto tariffs, which would hit Germany's dominant carmakers hard, the EU has vowed a withering response if the US goes ahead.

Source: AFP

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