Retaliation must be considered to Trump ‘blackmail’: Business leaders

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Business groups have told CNBC that the EU must consider retaliatory measures in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to impose tariffs on the bloc.

The EU has frozen its EU-US trade deal in response to Trump announcing plans to impose 10% tariffs on six EU nations, alongside the U.K. and Norway from Feb. 1 on Saturday. There have been calls for the bloc to consider using its anti-coercion instrument (ACI), a set of measures that allow it to impose sweeping trade sanctions. 

“All EU trade defense instruments — including the Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI) — must now be reviewed,” Volker Treier, chief executive of foreign trade at the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DIHK), which represents nearly 4 million businesses, told CNBC. He added that the ACI should be a “last resort.”

Europe should be “prepared to act decisively if our interests are put at risk” while continuing to work for de-escalation, Ole Erik Almlid, CEO of the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise, which represents thousands of businesses, told CNBC.

“Europe must not allow itself to be blackmailed, not even by the United States,” Bertram Kawlath, president of the German industrial sector association VDMA, which represents 3,500 engineering companies, said in a statement on Sunday.

“Greenland is part of Europe and must remain so. If the EU gives in here, it will only encourage the American president to make the next ludicrous demand and threaten further tariffs,” he said, adding that the European Commission should examine whether the ACI can be used.

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