12/19/2024 EU leaders to send 'clear message' to Trump on Ukraine, to debate U.S. ties December 19, 20245:08 AM GMT+1Updated 5 hours ago BRUSSELS, Dec 19 - European Union leaders aim to send a "clear signal" to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump at a summit on Thursday about their continued support for Ukraine and will also discuss the security and economic challenges posed by his return to the White House. The leaders will host Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy at the start of their talks in Brussels and will reaffirm their "unwavering commitment" to supporting Ukraine "for as long as it takes", according to draft conclusions. Trump has repeatedly called for a swift end to the nearly three-year-old war. On Monday he said Zelenskiy should be ready to reach a peace deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin, though he did not say whether this meant Kyiv ceding territory to Moscow as part of a negotiated settlement. Russian forces currently occupy nearly a fifth of Ukrainian territory and are making steady advances in the east of the country. "Russia must not prevail," the EU draft conclusions say, adding that no initiative must be taken on Ukraine without Kyiv's involvement. One EU diplomat described the draft text as sending "a clear signal to the U.S.". The leaders will also discuss wider EU-U.S. relations over lunch amid concerns of a possible transatlantic trade war. Trump has said the EU will "pay a big price" with tariffs for not buying enough U.S. exports. He has already pledged hefty tariffs on three of the United States' largest trading partners - Canada, Mexico and China. The EU knows it will not be spared. UNITY Some EU diplomats said the key for the bloc would be unity and avoidance of Washington conducting discussions or deals with single EU members - a copy of its largely successful unified strategy for dealing with Britain during Brexit negotiations. "The U.S. might try individual negotiations but so far I have not seen countries falling for that," one EU diplomat said. The EU will seek to point out that it is the United States' second-biggest trading partner and a close ally with shared values. However, mindful that Trump is preoccupied by the U.S. goods trade deficit, EU officials have mooted potentially offering to buy more U.S. LNG or arms. The lunchtime "EU in the world" debate is also likely to include China and whether the bloc will be forced to take sides in a U.S.-China trade conflict as well as Britain, which has said it wants to reset ties with the European Union and is seen by the bloc as a crucial security ally. Page 1 Ended France's President Emmanuel Macron and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy pose ahead of a meeting in Brussels, Belgium December 18, 2024. Nicolas Tucat/Pool
Ciro Messina’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
Title: Navigating Tariffs: Strategic Insights for Business Leaders Tariffs can significantly impact business landscapes, presenting both challenges and opportunities. As trade policies evolve, understanding their potential effects becomes crucial for strategic planning. Key Considerations for Business Leaders: - Tariffs can reshape supply chain dynamics - Potential cost increases may impact pricing strategies - Domestic production could see renewed investment - Adaptability is critical for sustainable growth Smart businesses are proactively: - Diversifying supply chains - Exploring domestic manufacturing alternatives - Monitoring trade policy developments - Maintaining financial flexibility While tariffs create complexity, they also spark innovation. Successful organizations view these challenges as opportunities to strengthen operational resilience and strategic positioning. Recommendation: Stay informed, remain agile, and view potential trade policy shifts as a chance to reimagine business strategies. Preparedness and strategic thinking are your most valuable assets in navigating economic uncertainties. Continued learning and adaptability will be key differentiators in the evolving global business environment. #TradePolicy #BusinessStrategy #EconomicInsights
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Title: Navigating Tariffs: Strategic Insights for Business Leaders Tariffs can significantly impact business landscapes, presenting both challenges and opportunities. As trade policies evolve, understanding their potential effects becomes crucial for strategic planning. Key Considerations for Business Leaders: - Tariffs can reshape supply chain dynamics - Potential cost increases may impact pricing strategies - Domestic production could see renewed investment - Adaptability is critical for sustainable growth Smart businesses are proactively: - Diversifying supply chains - Exploring domestic manufacturing alternatives - Monitoring trade policy developments - Maintaining financial flexibility While tariffs create complexity, they also spark innovation. Successful organizations view these challenges as opportunities to strengthen operational resilience and strategic positioning. Recommendation: Stay informed, remain agile, and view potential trade policy shifts as a chance to reimagine business strategies. Preparedness and strategic thinking are your most valuable assets in navigating economic uncertainties. Continued learning and adaptability will be key differentiators in the evolving global business environment. #TradePolicy #BusinessStrategy #EconomicInsights
newsweek.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Foreign Policy impact_U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s It’s true that some of the political imperatives of improving ties with Iran have actually caused economic problems for Russia. For example, the slashing of tariffs with Iran in the EAEU free trade deal is far more beneficial for Iranian exporters than their Russian counterparts. The little we know about U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s foreign policy plans suggests he will seek dialogue with Moscow, and ramp up the pressure on Tehran. Could this sort of approach upend the anti-Western unity at the heart of the growing ties between Russia and Iran? https://lnkd.in/gbVb42wR Major steps toward economic integration: The most significant was the inking of a free trade agreement between Iran and the Moscow-led Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). Due to enter into force in 2025, this agreement will see a reduction of tariffs on 90 percent of goods traded between Iran and EAEU member states Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. This is the first such free trade agreement for Iran, and the second for the EAEU. Iran has also submitted an application for observer status in the EAEU. The Russia-Iran relationship is an experiment—and if it’s successful, the Kremlin would like to see it replicated with other countries. This is not the first time Russia has sought to use Iran as a testing ground. This is exactly what happened, for example, with the construction of the Bushehr nuclear power plant in the 2000s. The facility was the first time Russian state nuclear agency Rosatom had successfully worked abroad, and it became something of a blueprint for subsequent projects. It proved a particularly persuasive option for Middle Eastern states, and Russian contractors are currently building nuclear power plants in Türkiye and Egypt. Now Moscow is in talks with Egypt and the UAE over free trade agreements with the EAEU similar to that developed for Iran. Indonesia is another nation potentially interested in such a deal. Economic heavyweights such as India and China have not received such proposals, however, because Russia sees the EAEU as a group in which Russia should remain the biggest economic player.
Trump Has Few Options to Pry Apart Russia and Iran
carnegieendowment.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
17 Nov 06:55: BBC News: Xi 👺🤥🇨🇳 says he will work with Trump 🤥🇺🇸 in last meeting with Biden 🇺🇸🤡: World: 17 Nov 2024, 02:38 Reuters: The leaders met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Peru on Saturday: Frances Mao: BBC News: Chinese leader Xi Jinping has pledged to work with incoming President Donald Trump in his final meeting with current US leader Joe Biden. (Me: ‘How do we know this. All political leaders lie through their teeth, it seems? Am I being unfair?’) The two met on Saturday on the sidelines of the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit in Peru where they acknowledged "ups and downs" in relations over Biden's four years in office. But both highlighted progress in lowering tensions on issues such as trade and Taiwan. Analysts say US-China relations could become more volatile when Trump returns to office in two months, driven by factors including a promise to raise tariffs on Chinese imports. The president-elect has pledged 60% tariffs on all imports from China. He has also appointed prominent China hawks to top foreign and defence positions. During his first term, Trump labelled China a "strategic competitor". Relations worsened when the former president labelled Covid a "Chinese virus" during the pandemic. Speaking on Saturday at the meeting held at his hotel in Lima, the Chinese president said Beijing's goal of a stable relationship with Washington would remain unchanged. "China is ready to work with the new US administration to maintain communication, expand cooperation and manage differences," Xi said. Biden said strategic competition between the two global powers should not escalate into war. "Our two countries cannot let any of this competition veer into conflict. That is our responsibility and over the last four years I think we've proven it's possible to have this relationship," he said: Please read on:
Xi says he will work with Trump in last meeting with Biden
bbc.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Quelle surprise en effet?? This surprise visit is not exactly a surprise. It seems that Russia and China have cornered the EU into a possibility of where China might agree to "speak to" - not necessarily committedly implore or impactfully persuade Vladimir Putin to pull out of Ukraine providing the EU rolls back its tariffs that are squeezing China. What will Europe do?? The answer is for Europe to remain strongly united and get into Ukraine as soon as possible to lethally remove the Russian invaders from sovereign Ukraine. A liberating international force to eject Russian illegal occupiers from the occupied lands could be deployed quickly from the air from within sovereign Ukrainian skies and lands, to destroy the Russian mined borders that demarcate captured territories without entering Russia and this could end the war imminently. Sovereign Ukraine is free to invite an international coalition to conduct such an operation on its soil and in its skies, none of which is, nor will ever be ceded to the occupiers. None of these need Russia's permission. These obscene geopolitical maneuvers and aggrandizements on the part of the AXIS is completely out of line and unacceptable to the Rules Based International Order. Couple that with the escalating Chinese alliance with Belorussia and their overkill arrival this week in Minsk for supposed counter terrorism exercises and an earlier delivery of four large transport planes of military supplies to Belorussia in January to assist their efforts against Ukraine - the Chinese are entrenching themselves in Europe for the long haul in support of its "no limits" Axis partner Russia, and this needs to be assessed. The EU doesn't negotiate with terrorists nor accept this extreme level of foreign interference. Hungary does not represent the EU. The free world and the EU must never negotiate with these AXIS terrorists. This absurd jockeying must be called out for what it is. It is little more than an immoral unacceptable gangland style reprisal. Wake-up EU and don't accept this extension of Russian and its AXIS aggression on Europe. Ursula von der Leyen Kaja Kallas NATO
Hungary's Orban meets Xi on surprise visit to China
asia.nikkei.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
The #transatlantic relationship should not descend into a #trade war: ahead of the Presidential inauguration, Glen Hodgson underlines the need for constructive EU-US engagement to avoid an escalation in words & actions. So what could be done? -A peace offering to the incoming President and his team would be the offer to extend the suspension of tariffs on steel and aluminium. -At the sectoral level, it would be far more advantageous for EU and US negotiators to look towards special arrangements. -To take the case of spirits, for example, an agreement could be based on best regulatory practices, closer transatlantic coordination to improve protection for distinctive EU and US spirits around the world, and the establishment of a EU-US working group on spirits. Read the full piece here: https://lnkd.in/epKyQUcJ
The transatlantic relationship should not descend into a trade war - Brussels Report
https://www.brusselsreport.eu
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Trump is recalibrating his China strategy with increased tariffs, semiconductor industry protection, and a cautious approach to sanctions. The US-China rivalry is entering a new phase—will it escalate or stabilize? #Trump #US #USForeignPolicy #ForeignPolicy #Geopolitics #China #Russia #USPolitics #GlobalAffairs #TradeWar #TechCompetition #NATO #GlobalSecurity
US Foreign Policy Under Trump's Second Term: Change or Business as Usual! - Stratheia
https://stratheia.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Trump has already stated his intentions to impose tariffs on the U.S.’s three largest trading partners: Canada, Mexico, and China. “It’s approaching a near certainty that we will have tariffs of some form and very likely that those will be applied on day one,” said Chris Siepmann, managing director at Weller James. “It's important, though, to distinguish between the purposes for the 60 percent China tariffs versus the 10 to 20 percent rest of world tariffs that have been floated as campaign promises.” Read the highlights from FiscalNote's recent webinar on Trump's impact on international alliances, markets, and regulations, and how government affairs professionals can strategize and scenario plan for the next four years. https://fnlink.co/3DuACyG #trump #whitehouse #tariffs
What Trump 2.0 Means for Europe, China, and Global Supply Chains
fiscalnote.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
🚫 Liberation nation 🆓 🙏🏼 Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on Wednesday urged the United States to lift export restrictions on some technology and said the country wanted to develop satellite communications. 🗣️ Speaking at an event in Hanoi organized by the American Chamber of Commerce, Chinh also said the two countries should keep good relations and cooperate to foster multilateralism to address global challenges. 🤫 He did not make reference to possible U.S. tariffs on Vietnam despite threats from the upcoming Trump administration of up to 20 percent duties on all imports. Vietnam is a significant exporter to the U.S. and has a large trade surplus with Washington. 💬 "We hope the United States will lift its embargo on Vietnam for some technologies," Chinh told the conference. "We are not fighting anyone, so why do you keep the embargo?" Chinh said. 🛡️ The U.S. currently limits Vietnam’s access to chemical and biological weapons and to technology that is considered critical to U.S. security. But Vietnam is already permitted to import conventional weapons from the United States, as well as some nuclear and missile technology. 🛰️ The prime minister also said Vietnam wanted to develop satellite communications and was in talks with U.S. aerospace giant SpaceX. ✅ He reiterated a call for the United States to recognize the country as a market economy, a move that could reduce tariffs on sanctioned trades. 💰 Chinh also said that foreign investment flows into Vietnam this year were expected to total around $25 billion. https://lnkd.in/gsV2Pcse
Vietnam PM urges US to lift some high-tech export restrictions
tuoitrenews.vn
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Can Vietnam Thrive Under Trump 2.0? The answer depends on trade, trade, and more trade. Hanoi will likely face headwinds early in a second Trump administration, particularly given its significant trade imbalance with the U.S. (the third largest, after China and Mexico), the issue of transshipment as Chinese goods are routed through Vietnam to avoid U.S. tariffs, and the renewed risk of currency manipulator designation - first raised in the late Trump administration but addressed in a deal with the Biden administration in July 2021. Are there any silver linings? Find out more in my commentary below (published a few months ago, but I think it is more relevant to re-read now). https://lnkd.in/gaSWyumT
Can Vietnam Thrive under Trump 2.0?
https://fulcrum.sg
To view or add a comment, sign in
More from this author
-
Cronologico della guerra
Ciro Messina 2y -
How a Trump ally got his unfounded voting-machine audit push in front of federal cyber agency Arizona state
Ciro Messina 2y -
Enel, da Bei primo prestito verde in America Latina Al gruppo di Starace 600 milioni di euro per promuovere investimenti in energia sostenibile
Ciro Messina 2y