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US defends America First agenda ahead of Trump visit to Davos

January 25, 2018 00:00:00


Protesters holding posters with Trump's portrait saying "You're not welcome" during the demonstration against the upcoming visit of US President Donald Trump at the World Economic Forum in Davos, in the streets of Zurich, Switzerland, on Tuesday. — AP photo

DAVOS, Switzerland, Jan 24 (Reuters): Senior US officials hit back on Wednesday against suggestions that Donald Trump's "America First" agenda was hurting globalisation and trade, setting an aggressive tone ahead of the US president's visit to the World Economic Forum.

World leaders, including Canada's Justin Trudeau and Brazilian President Michel Temer, raised concerns this week at the gathering in the Swiss ski resort of Davos about growing protectionism, in remarks that delegates said seemed aimed at Trump's policies.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron are also expected to speak later on Wednesday.

Under his America First agenda, Trump has threatened to withdraw from the North American free-trade agreement (NAFTA), disavowed the global climate change accord and criticized global institutions including the United Nations and NATO.

Trump is expected to arrive by on Thursday and deliver a keynote address to the forum on Friday, mingling with the same elite "globalists" that he bashed during his 2016 presidential run.

In a press briefing in Davos ahead of his visit, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross defended aggressive trade actions taken by the United States and said more were to come.

"This is about an America First agenda. But America First does mean working with the rest of the world," Mnuchin said. "It just means that President Trump is looking out for American workers and American interests no different than he expects other leaders would look out for their own."

Ross said US trade actions were provoked by "inappropriate behaviour on the part of our trading counterparties."

On Tuesday, for example, US slapped steep import tariffs on washing machines and solar panels, in moves billed as a way to protect American jobs.

China and South Korea condemned the tariffs, with Seoul set to complain to the World Trade Organisation over the "excessive" move.

"Many countries are very good at the rhetoric of free trade but in fact actually practice extreme protectionism," Ross said.

Many in Davos worry that a brighter world economic outlook could darken if geopolitical threats - from protectionism and climate change to cyber attacks and war - gather pace in 2018.

Trump, the first sitting US president to attend the forum since Bill Clinton in 2000, is a source of much of this anxiety after a volatile first year in office in which he has turned American foreign policy on its head.

The US delegation is the largest ever to come to Davos, with 10 members of the Trump's cabinet and senior White House staff, Mnuchin said. That includes Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law and adviser.


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