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Anthropic Urges AI Development Halt to Address Economic Implications of Fast Progress

In a bid to address the rapid advancements in...

Parliamentary Vote Suspends Transatlantic Trade Agreement Indefinitely

The European Parliament has officially suspended the US trade deal ratification process, responding to President Trump’s threat of 10% tariffs unless Europe supports his Greenland acquisition plans. This parliamentary action represents the most substantial material response Brussels has delivered against what several European leaders characterized as blackmail.
Bernd Lange, chairman of the European Parliament’s trade committee, made clear that compromise remains impossible while threats concerning Greenland persist. The suspended agreement had promised American exporters unprecedented access to European markets with zero tariffs on numerous industrial goods.
European officials have carefully distinguished between separate agreements, confirming the $750 billion energy purchase commitment remains unaffected by the trade deal suspension. Lange emphasized this energy arrangement operates independently, allowing Brussels to preserve energy cooperation while defending political principles.
The deteriorating diplomatic relationship became apparent when Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, revised her travel schedule following her parliamentary address. She cancelled a Davos visit where Trump was attending the World Economic Forum, choosing instead to return directly to Brussels for emergency summit preparations.
The Thursday evening summit will address powerful response mechanisms available to European leaders. These include implementing €93 billion worth of retaliatory tariffs and potentially activating an anti-coercion instrument never previously deployed. Originally designed to counter Chinese economic pressure, this mechanism could enable the EU to restrict US businesses from accessing European markets. Potential targets span technology companies like Apple and Netflix, cryptocurrency platforms, aircraft manufacturers, and agricultural exporters, though European officials acknowledge consumers might face increased costs or limitations on American products and services.

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