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TRADE WAR

Trump delays decision on auto tariffs for up to six months

US President Donald Trump on Friday announced a six-month delay in imposing steep tariffs on auto imports, seeking to force Europe and Japan into broader concessions on trade.

Doing it his way: Donald Trump tries to keep the pressure on European and Japanese trade negotiators.
Doing it his way: Donald Trump tries to keep the pressure on European and Japanese trade negotiators. MANDEL NGAN / AFP
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The decision marked a temporary reprieve from what would have been a sizable escalation in Trump's multi-front trade wars.

The US tariffs threaten a major chunk of global economic activity with profound disruption. Hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of cars are manufactured, shipped and sold internationally every year.

In a proclamation, the president directed US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer to update him within 180 days on the outcome of negotiations with the EU, Japan and "any other country" Lighthizer deems appropriate.

By leaving the threat of tariffs hanging, Trump's move raises the temperature in European capitals already angered by the imposition of punishing US duties on steel and aluminium last year.

Trump's decision also preserved a truce declared last year with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker in which both sides agreed to cease trade hostilities while efforts continued to resolve the trade dispute.

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