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(FILES) In this file photo taken on June 29, 2018 US President Donald Trump speaks to the press aboard Air Force One in flight as he travels from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, to Bedminster, New Jersey. North Korea is "very serious" about efforts toward denuclearization, US President Donald Trump said in remarks broadcast on July 1, 2018."I think they're very serious about it. I think they want to do it," he said in a prerecorded interview on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures" program. "We have a very good chemistry," he said. / AFP PHOTO / SAUL LOEB

‘The EU is possibly as bad as China’ on trade, Donald Trump says in Fox interview

‘They don’t want our farm products,’ Trump said. ‘Now in all fairness they have their farmers … But we don’t protect ours and they protect theirs’

Europe is “possibly as bad as China” on trade, US President Donald Trump said in an interview broadcast Sunday, with trade wars emerging against both the Asian giant as well as long-time allies in Europe and Canada.

“The European Union is possibly as bad as China, only smaller,” Trump said on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures programme.

Trump’s tariffs could mean US job losses, warns General Motors

“They send a Mercedes in, we can’t send our cars in. Look what they do to our farmers. They don’t want our farm products. Now in all fairness they have their farmers … But we don’t protect ours and they protect theirs,” he said.

Trump had already threatened tariffs on cars imported from the European Union, in response to the EU’s retaliatory tariffs last week on iconic US products including bourbon, jeans and motorcycles.

The EU retaliation came after Trump’s administration on June 1 struck Europe as well as allies in Canada, Mexico and elsewhere with tariffs on aluminium and steel.

Canada’s retaliatory tariffs take effect Sunday against American products including Florida orange juice, ketchup and Kentucky bourbon.

‘We will not back down’: Canada strikes back at US US$12.6 billion tariffs

Canada and the US are among the world’s largest trading partners, with an estimated $673.9 billion in goods and services exchanged in 2017, with the US scoring a small surplus ($8.4 billion), according to US government data.

At Trump’s insistence, Canada, Mexico and the US are renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.

“Nafta, I could sign it tomorrow but I’m not happy with it. I want to make it more fair, OK?” Trump said, adding that he wants to wait until “after the election.”

A Harley-Davidson Inc. badge sits on a motorcycle fuel tank outside the company's store on the Champs Elysee in Paris, France, on Thursday, June 28, 2018. France’s economic revival has helped the country tackle its deficits and debt, but steps are still needed to bring public spending under control, the country’s national auditor said in a warning to President Emmanuel Macron’s government. Photographer: Christophe Morin/Bloomberg

Trump’s Republicans are fighting to retain control of Congress in November midterm elections.

In the interview the president again complained about Canada’s protected dairy industry, saying “that’s not fair.”

Against China, the world’s second-largest economy, the White House in mid-June announced stiff 25 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports, sparking immediate retaliation from Beijing.

Will the China-US trade row pave the way for a soybean Silk Road?

Trump on Wednesday said he supported tougher restrictions on foreign investment in sensitive technology, as well as export controls on those goods, but he stopped short of imposing specific restrictions on China.

Asked about that decision, Trump said in the interview that he is not backing down on China tariffs.

“No, no, no, no,” he said, noting that more tariffs could be imposed if there is no deal with China.

“I will tell you, China wants to make a deal and so do I, but it’s got to be a fair deal for this country,” he said.

The US has complained about Chinese policies that Washington said either forced companies to relinquish key technology or allowed China to steal it outright.

Get ready for short-term trade pain, US tells American firms in China

The president announced 25 per cent import tariffs on hundreds of Chinese products to pressure the country to alter its practices. Those tariffs are due to take effect July 6.

That came on top of the tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium that went into effect in late March – measures that prompted Beijing to slap punitive duties on 128 US goods, including pork, wine and certain pipes.

Also on Friday, Trump said that European companies would face sanctions if they traded with Iran. “Of course. That’s what we’re doing, absolutely,” he said.

Trump will leave for a trip to Europe later this month for a meeting with NATO allies, whom he has criticised sharply for paying too little for their joint defence.

Additional reporting by Reuters.

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