sábado, 2 de maio de 2026

Trump threatens to raise tariffs on EU automobiles to 25 percent

 


Trump threatens to raise tariffs on EU automobiles to 25 percent

 

The social media post comes amid simmering trade tensions between the EU and U.S. on the terms of the trade agreement they reached last year.

 

By Daniel Desrochers

05/01/2026 12:46 PM EDT

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/01/trump-tariffs-eu-automobiles-trade-00902679

 

President Donald Trump on Friday said he will raise tariffs on automobiles and auto parts from the European Union because the 27-country bloc is not living up to its end of a trade agreement struck last summer.

 

“I am pleased to announce that, based on the fact the European Union is not complying with our fully agreed to Trade Deal, next week I will be increasing Tariffs charged to the European Union for Cars and Trucks coming into the United States,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “The Tariff will be increased to 25%.”

 

The tariffs on European automobiles and auto parts are currently set at 15 percent as part of the Turnberry Deal, an agreement the EU and U.S. struck last July at Trump’s resort in Scotland. The deal required the EU to lower its tariff rates on U.S. industrial goods, purchase $750 billion worth of energy and invest $600 billion in exchange for lower tariff rates from the U.S.

 

Trump’s threat comes a week after the top EU trade official, Maroš Šefčovič, traveled to Washington to meet with Trump administration officials and came away reassured that the deal between the two countries remained solid.

 

At the time, Šefčovič said he “was reassured by Ambassador [Jamieson] Greer, by all my interlocutors, that a deal is a deal for both sides. … And for us, the terms of the deal and all the terms and conditions there are absolutely fundamental for being implemented and fulfilled.”

 

Those remarks came despite lingering trade tension between the two partners. The EU has chafed at how many products are being hit with U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs, and the U.S. has been frustrated with the plodding pace of the EU’s implementation of their end of July deal.

 

While the European parliament passed legislation in March that would lower tariffs on U.S. goods, the bloc still has to negotiate the deal with its member capitals and the European Commission.

 

“President Trump’s behaviour is unacceptable; we in the EU, in the European Parliament, are honouring the Scotland deal. We are currently drafting the legislation; we have a parliamentary position and aim to finalise this in June. However, the US has repeatedly breached the agreement, for example with over 400 products containing steel and aluminium, which are now subject to an average tariff of 26 per cent,” Bernd Lange, a German Social Democrat and chair of the International Trade Committee in the European Parliament, said in a statement Friday.

 

“This latest move demonstrates just how unreliable the US side is,” he continued. “We have already witnessed these arbitrary attacks from the US in the case of Greenland; this is no way to treat close partners. Now we can only respond with the utmost clarity and firmness, drawing on the strength of our position.”

 

The U.S. tariffs on EU automobiles and auto parts were issued under Section 232, which focuses on specific industries. That power was not affected by the February Supreme Court ruling overturning some of Trump’s tariffs, which gives the administration broad flexibility to quickly ratchet up the duties on the sector.

 

Those auto tariffs played a significant role in driving the EU to the bargaining table last summer, putting pressure on Germany’s signature automobile industry, including major brands like Volkswagen, BMW and Audi.

 

Koen Verhelst contributed to this article.

Why America Needs NATO

NATO CRISIS: Trump Pulls 5,000 Troops From Germany: "Disloyal" NATO Allies Warned Amid Iran War

Why a US Withdrawal from Europe Looks Increasingly Likely

 

Germany says it expected Trump’s withdrawal of US troops as row over Iran comments grows – live / Opening summary

 


Germany says it expected Trump’s withdrawal of US troops as row over Iran comments grows – live

German defence minister responds to US president’s announcement that 5,000 US troops will leave bases in Germany

https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2026/may/02/us-israel-war-iran-germany-american-troops-donald-trump-middle-east-latest-news-updates?filterKeyEvents=false&page=with%3Ablock-69f5332c8f08ab365d7fd868#block-69f5332c8f08ab365d7fd868

 

Taz Ali

Sat 2 May 2026 09.20 BST

6m ago

09.17 BST

 

German defence minister says American troops in Europe 'in our interest and in the US's'

The German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, has called on European allies to shoulder more responsibility for their security, after the US announced it would withdraw 5,000 US troops from Germany.

 

Pistorius said the presence of American soldiers in Europe was “in our interest and in the interest of the United States”, but added: “It was foreseeable that the US would withdraw troops from Europe, including Germany.

 

“We Europeans must take greater responsibility for our security.”

 

Germany is the US military’s biggest basing location in Europe, with about 35,000 active-duty military personnel, and serves as a key training hub.

 

On Friday, the Pentagon said the withdrawal of troops was expected to be completed over the next six to 12 months.

 

The announcement came amid a public feud between the US president, Donald Trump, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, after the European leader said the US was being “humiliated” by Iran.

 

Pistorius said Germany was “on the right track” in taking steps to strengthen the country’s defence capabilities, as he pointed to the expansion of its Bundeswehr armed forces, greater and faster procurement of equipment and the construction of infrastructure.

 

You can read last night’s report on this story here:

 

31m ago

08.52 BST

Opening summary

Hello and welcome to our live coverage of events in the Middle East.

 

The German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said that it was “foreseeable” that the US would withdraw troops from Europe, after the Pentagon announced it would pull thousands of American soldiers from Germany.

 

US President Donald Trump said on Friday that the US will withdraw 5,000 active-duty troops from Nato ally Germany in the next six to 12 months, fulfilling his earlier threats after clashing with German chancellor Friedrich Merz over the Iran war.

 

Earlier this week, Merz said Iran had “humiliated” the US and questioned how Trump planned to end the conflict, saying: “The Americans obviously have no strategy.”

 

Responding to the announcement of plans to withdraw 5,000 US troops from Germany, Pistorius said: “It was foreseeable that the US would withdraw troops from Europe, including Germany.”

 

He added that Europeans must take greater responsibility for their own security, and that Germany was “on the right track” in this regard.

 

In other developments:

 

Trump said he is “not satisfied” with a new proposal from Iran on ending the war, as peace talks remain stalled despite a weeks-long ceasefire. Iran delivered the proposal text to mediator Pakistan on Thursday evening, Iranian state news agency Irna reported, without detailing its contents.

 

The US state department said it was approving military sales totalling more than $8.6bn to Middle Eastern allies Israel, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. It came as Washington warned European allies including the UK, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia to expect long delivery delays for US weapons as it scrambles to replenish stockpiles depleted by the Iran war, according to a report in the Fianancial Times citing multiple sources.

 

In Lebanon, 12 people were killed in Israeli strikes in the south, Lebanon’s health ministry said, including in the town of Habboush, where the Israeli army had issued an evacuation order despite the continuing ceasefire. Israeli warplanes “launched a series of heavy strikes … less than an hour after” the warning, the state-run National News Agency said.

 

The US Treasury Office warned that any shipping companies that paid tolls to Iran for passage through the strait of Hormuz, including charitable donations to organisations such as the Iranian Red Crescent Society, would risk punitive sanctions. Tehran has proposed charging fees on vessels passing through the strait, as part of a deal to end the war.

 

Trump wrote to US lawmakers on Friday declaring hostilities with Iran “terminated”, despite no change in the US military posture, as he faces continuing pressure at home to seek congressional authorisation for the war.

 

The state department’s announcement on Friday included approving military sales to Qatar of Patriot air and missile defence replenishment services costing $4.01bn and of advanced precision kill weapon systems (APKWS) costing $992.4m. They also included approval of the sale to Kuwait of an integrated battle command system costing $2.5bn and to Israel of APKWS costing $992.4m.

 

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei urged his people to wage economic battle and “disappoint” its enemies, as the war and years of sanctions take a toll. In a written statement he also said “the owners of damaged businesses should avoid, as much as possible, layoffs and separation of their workforce”.

How Germany Misjudged Trump’s Anger on Iran

 



news analysis

How Germany Misjudged Trump’s Anger on Iran

 

After Chancellor Friedrich Merz upset President Trump with criticism of the war, he offered no public sign he believed Mr. Trump’s threats to pull troops were serious.

 

Jim Tankersley

By Jim Tankersley

Reporting from Berlin

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/02/world/europe/germany-trump-merz-troops-withdrawal.html

May 2, 2026, 3:12 a.m. ET

 

As President Trump fired off a series of social media posts criticizing Germany this week, including a threat to pull some American troops from the country, German leaders showed no public signs that they believed the president was serious.

 

That now appears to have been a miscalculation — one of several that German leaders have made in the course of Mr. Trump’s war against Iran.

 

Pentagon officials said on Friday that they planned to relocate 5,000 troops from Germany to the United States and around the world within the next year. German officials offered no immediate public reaction.

 

The Americans privately made clear the move was meant to punish Germany, for not helping more with the war effort, as Mr. Trump has demanded, and for criticizing Mr. Trump’s strategy from the highest levels.

 

Until that announcement, the consensus view in German politics appeared to be that Mr. Trump was most likely bluffing with his redeployment threats. He had tried, and failed, to remove some of America’s 35,000 troops from Germany at the end of his first term in office. He would need congressional approval to move troops from Europe now.

 

In early March, when Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, visited Mr. Trump in Washington, Mr. Merz said the president had taken any threat of troop reductions off the table.

 

“President Trump has also assured me not just today, but once again, that the United States will maintain its military presence in Germany,” Mr. Merz told reporters in a German-language news conference near the Capitol, shortly after meeting Mr. Trump.

 

German leaders were also confident that the Trump administration needed its military presence in Germany as much, or more, than the Germans did. Unlike some other European allies, Germany had allowed America to help launch attacks on Iran from bases inside Germany’s borders. It has continued to allow injured Americans to be treated in a major American hospital on German soil that has for decades hosted Americans injured in wars including in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

Germany’s quiet nonchalance about the possibility of a troop withdrawal was reflected again this week.

 

Mr. Merz offered no public apologies or retreat from his seemingly off-the-cuff comments on Monday that criticized Mr. Trump’s war strategy in harsh terms. He had told German high-school students that the United States had “no strategy” to end the war and that Iran’s negotiators had “humiliated” the entire American nation.

 

On Thursday, Mr. Merz, who invested heavily in building a rapport with Mr. Trump over the last year, told German soldiers in the city of Munster that “we maintain close and trusting contact with our partners, including and especially in Washington.” He stressed the relationship with Washington was one of mutual respect and fair sharing of security burdens.

 

“This trans-Atlantic partnership is especially important to us, and to me personally,” he said, but did not offer an apology for the comments that had ignited the row with Mr. Trump.

 

Then Mr. Merz’s vice-chancellor, Lars Klingbeil, raised tensions further on Friday, clapping back at another critical social media post from Mr. Trump.

 

In a May Day speech, Mr. Klingbeil defended Mr. Merz from the president’s broadsides. “We really don’t need any advice from Donald Trump right now,” Mr. Klingbeil said. “He should see the mess he’s made” with the war, he added.

 

Mr. Klingbeil leads the center-left Social Democrats, the junior partner in a governing coalition led by Mr. Merz’s center-right Christian Democrats. He has been more critical of Mr. Trump in the past than Mr. Merz. He also had been traveling with Mr. Merz in Munster, and has been in close consultation with him over a host of domestic issues recently.

 

Mr. Trump has consistently surprised German leaders with his conduct in the war. After Mr. Merz met with the president in the Oval Office and over lunch at the White House in March, some officials came away convinced that the conflict would not last long because Mr. Trump was already expressing concerns over the economic effects of war-related energy price spikes.

 

Instead, Mr. Trump persisted with attacks even after gasoline and natural gas prices rose sharply from Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

 

German officials also believed they had found a sort of compromise with the president over his demands that Europe send military assets to secure the strait and make it safe for shipping again.

 

Mr. Merz said repeatedly that Germany would join such a security effort, including by sending minesweepers, but only on two conditions: Germans wanted a permanent cease-fire, as opposed to the temporary one currently in place. And to comply with the German constitution, they wanted the effort to have the blessing of an international body, like the United Nations or the European Union.

 

That appears not to have been enough for Mr. Trump. On Friday, a Pentagon official did not just cite Mr. Merz’s comments as a reason to pull back troops. The official also cited Germany’s failure to contribute to the Iran war effort itself.

 

Julian E. Barnes and Helene Cooper contributed from Washington.

 

Jim Tankersley is the Berlin bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

Pentagon orders removal of 5,000 US troops from Germany