Pressure Mounts in EU-US Trade Negotiations as July 9 Deadline Approaches

EU leaders urgently negotiate a trade deal with the US before July 9 deadline to avoid 50% tariffs on European goods. Germany pushes for immediate agreement while France warns against trade wars within NATO. Trump threatened Spain with double payments during NATO summit, though trade policy remains EU-exclusive.
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Critical EU Summit Addresses US Trade Deal Deadline

European Union leaders are engaged in urgent negotiations with the United States as the July 9 deadline for a new trade agreement rapidly approaches. Germany is pushing the EU to finalize an agreement immediately to avoid devastating 50% tariffs on European exports threatened by the Trump administration. The EU has prepared countermeasures valued at €15 billion targeting American goods if negotiations collapse.

Trump's NATO Comments Intensify Pressure

During the NATO summit, President Trump singled out Spain as the only alliance member refusing to meet the new 5% defense spending requirement. He threatened to impose a bilateral trade arrangement that would force Spain to pay double contributions. "They want to ride for free, but they'll pay through trade," Trump declared. However, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez emphasized that trade policy is exclusively handled by the EU Commission in Brussels.

Diverging European Strategies

French President Emmanuel Macron warned against fighting a trade war within the NATO alliance, stating: "We can't pledge more defense spending while waging trade wars among allies." German Chancellor Merz criticized the EU's negotiation strategy as overly complex, urging focus on key sectors like automotive, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and machinery - industries vital to Germany's economy.

Negotiation Timetable Concerns

EU officials acknowledge the possibility of extending the deadline beyond July 9 to "eliminate uncertainties," though they prefer resolution before the cutoff. Dutch caretaker Prime Minister Schoof advocated for measured negotiations: "We must maintain calm, avoid inflammatory rhetoric, and negotiate properly with the Americans to achieve the best outcome - which is 0% tariffs." Since January 2025, average US tariffs have surged from 2.5% to 27%, the highest level in over a century according to OECD data.