U.S. President Donald Trump set import tariffs on Thursday of 25
percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum but is under heavy
pressure from allies including the European Union and Japan to
dilute the measures.
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer was due to meet EU
trade chief Cecilia Malmstrom and separately with Japanese Trade
Minister Hiroshige Seko on Saturday for long-planned talks that
have taken on added urgency amid concerns that Trump's move
could provoke a global trade war.
Zypries told Deutschlandfunk radio that so far no tariffs had
been imposed and it was too early to talk about a looming trade
war. "But we've reached a situation in which the preliminary
skirmishes have become serious," she added.
Zypries said the EU's Malmstrom was trying to solve the dispute
through negotiations, adding: "There are still talks going on,
things are in flux, so if you want you could say it's still
about diplomacy and not war."
The minister said Trump's proposed tariffs would violate the
rules of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and that Germany
would coordinate closely with the European Commission on how to
react if Trump pushed ahead.
"Of course, we would have to take proceedings against him at the
WTO," Zypries said. "And in addition, we will have to think
about counter-measures."
(Reporting by Michael Nienaber; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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