BRUSSELS: EU Presi­dent Donald Tusk pressed European leaders on Tues­day to “stick to their guns” in talks with Washing­ton to exempt Europe from controversial US tariffs on steel and aluminium exports.

In March US President Donald Trump unveiled a wave of blanket tariffs on metals imports, granting only temporary exemptions to key allies including Europe.

The EU is exempt until June 1 from the duties of 25 per cent on steel and 10 percent on aluminium, with the US demanding greater access to the European market in order to grant a permanent exemption.

“Tomorrow night I will propose we stick to our guns,” said Tusk in a letter to EU leaders before they meet at a dinner in Sofia on Wednesday, partly devoted to the subject.

“This is the only way to protect European interests,” said Tusk.

“But we need to be sure that we have done everything in our power, and within the limits of the international trade rules, to avoid a negative scenario,” added Tusk, a former Polish prime minister.

To prepare, Europe has lined up its own punitive tariffs on American imports, including iconic items such as Harley-Davidson motorbikes, blue jeans and bourbon whiskey. But Europeans have committed for now not to use them.

Behind their message of unity and firmness, Euro­peans are studying several scenarios to put an end to the trade row, short of triggering the countermeasures.

The European Commis­­sion, which handles trade talks for the bloc, recently opened the door to a “restricted” trade agreement with the US, which would only cover tariffs on industrial and agricultural products.

Germany is in favour of such an opening, unlike France, which fears the spectre of the very unpopular TTIP, the major trade agreement negotiated by the EU with the US, but dropped when the protectionist Trump came to power.

Meanwhile some member states are reported to be open to accepting minimal quotas on steel and aluminium from the US, which would limit their exports at near current levels.

The EU and US have spoken almost ten times to resolve the conflict since the tariffs were first announced in March.

“I hope to get a reasonable conclusion,” US Com­me­rce Secretary Wilbur Ross said on Monday, but “if not they will go into effect.”

Published in Dawn, May 16th, 2018

Opinion

Editorial

Brewing catastrophe
Updated 19 Jun, 2025

Brewing catastrophe

If Mr Trump makes the mistake of plunging into the fight on Israel’s behalf, the world will enter very dangerous territory.
Pension bill
19 Jun, 2025

Pension bill

IT is, indeed, a worrying conundrum. The federal government’s annual pension burden now exceeds its fiscal space...
Abandoned Karachi
19 Jun, 2025

Abandoned Karachi

THE explosive mix of decay, institutional apathy and corruption has, once again, placed Karachi among the bottom ...
Spread of hate
Updated 18 Jun, 2025

Spread of hate

HATE speech is not confined to words; in fact, there is a causal link between hateful rhetoric and real-world...
Big challenges
18 Jun, 2025

Big challenges

BALOCHISTAN’S Rs1.028tr budget, featuring a public development investment of Rs245bn and provincial surplus of...
Rampant disinformation
Updated 18 Jun, 2025

Rampant disinformation

WITH the arrival and proliferation of digital media, the creation of information is now a decentralised function,...