Keir Starmer rules out retaliatory tariffs against US
Briefly

Keir Starmer rules out retaliatory tariffs against US
"I think that this can be resolved, and should be resolved, through calm discussion, he said. Any decision about the future status of Greenland belongs to the people of Greenland and the kingdom of Denmark alone. That right is fundamental, he continued. Starmer said he was determined to keep the UK-US relationship strong, constructive and focused on results, adding that defence and security ties between the two countries were in the national interest."
"Starmer told reporters: A trade war is not in our interests, and therefore my first task is to ensure we don't get to that place, which is what I'm focused on at the moment I don't want to lose sight of the central goal here, which is to avoid the seriousness that a trade war would bring. He added: We must find a pragmatic, sensible, sustained way through this, that avoids some of the consequences that will be very serious for our country."
The prime minister rejected imposing retaliatory tariffs on the United States after Donald Trump threatened tariffs and sanctions over Greenland. The government judged that US tariffs would damage the British economy and be against national interests, preferring calm diplomatic discussion between allies. The statement affirmed that any decision on Greenland's future belongs to the people of Greenland and the kingdom of Denmark. The prime minister assessed that military action was unlikely and emphasized maintaining strong, constructive UK–US defence and security ties. The priority is avoiding a trade war and finding a pragmatic, sustained way to prevent serious economic consequences for the UK.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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