Lethbridge Herald

U.S. delivering NAFTA bombshells

New round of talks likely contentiou­s

- Alexander Panetta THE CANADIAN PRESS – PENTAGON

The NAFTA talks have now entered their most difficult phase with the United States beginning to drop its bombshell proposals on the negotiatin­g table at a just-begun fourth round outside Washington.

U.S. officials had foreshadow­ed that this week-long round would be where the most contentiou­s discussion­s opened and that is coming to fruition, with the American side levelling one demand deemed a non-starter — and preparing to deliver another one.

The just-delivered demand would create a so-called terminatio­n clause. It would end NAFTA after five years, unless its member countries explicitly opted to renew it. That proposal was delivered late Wednesday night.

That comes after the U.S. proposed far stricter Buy American rules at the last negotiatin­g round, and in the leadup to one of the most important proposals of the entire negotiatio­n: on rules for auto parts, which could come as early as Friday.

‘’More contentiou­s issues will be coming up very shortly,’’ U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said during a panel discussion this week at the Dentons law firm.

‘’So far the talks have mainly done basic background things. Kind of what I would call boilerplat­e things. Relatively easy issues.’’

The other NAFTA countries say they’re legitimate­ly baffled by where the U.S. is headed. Sources say others are trying to figure out what this hardline approach signals from the U.S. — opening positions that will be flexible with some bargaining; hard demands; or a desire to poison the talks, let them collapse, and simply do away with NAFTA.

Some allies of President Donald Trump predict the deal will be successful­ly renegotiat­ed.

Newt Gingrich said this week he sees little appetite within the U.S. cabinet for the type of turmoil cancelling NAFTA might cause. He said Trump’s team is filled with free-traders, who simply believe the U.S. needs tougher deals.

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