Trump sticks with hard line on trade as showdown looms
at G7
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[June 07, 2018]
By Roberta Rampton and David Ljunggren
WASHINGTON/OTTAWA (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump is not backing down from the tough line he has
taken on trade, the White House's top economic adviser said on
Wednesday, setting the stage for a showdown with top allies at this
week's G7 summit in Canada.
The meeting on Friday and Saturday in Charlevoix, Quebec, will be the
first chance G7 leaders have had to confront Trump in person since U.S.
tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada, Mexico and the
European Union were imposed last week.
That move unleashed fury in the Group of Seven industrialized nations
and prompted quick retaliation from Canada and Mexico and a promise from
the EU to do so as well, unnerving investors who fear a trade war that
could derail the global economy.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the summit host, and British
Prime Minister Theresa May, who will also attend, are among those to
sharply criticize the U.S. tariffs as unjustified and punitive.
"There are disagreements. He's sticking to his guns. And he's going to
talk to them," Larry Kudlow, Trump's top economic adviser, told
reporters in Washington.
Trump, who has vowed to protect U.S. industry and workers from what he
describes as unfair international competition as part of an "America
First" agenda, is due to hold bilateral meetings with Trudeau and French
President Emmanuel Macron during the summit, Kudlow said.
A French presidency official said that while G7 members would raise
their unhappiness over the tariffs with Trump, they would not deliver an
ultimatum that he drop them because the summit "isn't the place where
you negotiate things like that."
The official, speaking to reporters after Macron met Trudeau for talks
in Ottawa on Wednesday, said the six non-U.S. G7 nations were united on
the main topics to be discussed. The G7 groups Canada, the United
States, Japan, Britain, Italy, France and Germany. The EU also attends.
Trump's meeting with Trudeau could be particularly frosty, given the
president's recent sharp criticism of Canadian trade policies and the
anger in Ottawa over Washington's decision to justify its new tariffs on
national security grounds.
"I know we're going to have some very, very frank conversations quite
clearly around the table," Trudeau told Global TV, adding he would
convey Canada's displeasure over the tariffs personally when he met
Trump in Quebec.
Two Canadian-based sources said divisions between the United States and
other G7 members were so great that senior officials in charge of each
nation's preparations planned to hold an unusual additional meeting the
night before the summit in a bid to find consensus.
[to top of second column] |
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow gives a press briefing
about upcoming G7 in the White House in Washington, U.S., June 6,
2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
G7 summits usually end with the host nation issuing a final communique, but
Canada may decide not to do so, preferring instead to release a statement by
Trudeau summarizing the talks, said the sources.
LOW EXPECTATIONS
Expectations for a resolution this week of the trade dispute
are low after finance leaders from the United States' G7 partners butted heads
with U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at a meeting last week.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she expected "difficult discussions" at the
summit.
Canada and Mexico already have retaliated against a range of U.S. exports and
the EU has promised to do so as well, raising the specter of a tit-for-tat
escalation.
Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, pressed about a Washington Post
report that the White House was considering additional economic penalties
against Canada, told reporters that Ottawa was unaware of any such move.
U.S. stocks, apart from those of steel and aluminum producers, have fallen
sharply in response to Trump's recent tariff announcements and other actions
against trading partners. But U.S. shares rose on Wednesday.
Adding to the uncertainty is European anger over Trump's decision to pull the
United States out of the international nuclear agreement with Iran. European
allies have urged Trump to reconsider.
The French presidency official said that if a final communique were issued,
France would insist it mentioned the Paris accord on climate change that Trump
withdrew from last year. France would also oppose any wording that described the
Iran pact as obsolete, the official added.
Despite the G7's efforts to coax the Trump administration away from a
go-it-alone approach, some analysts now question whether Washington remains
committed to basic policies that have upheld the post-World War Two
international economic system.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton and David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by Jason
Lange and Tim Ahmann in Washington, Jean-Baptiste Vey in Ottawa and Paul Carrel
and Madeline Chambers in Berlin; Writing by Paul Simao; Editing by Alistair Bell
and Peter Cooney)
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