The US and Europe have agreed to put aside a 17-year dispute over aircraft subsidies for Boeing and Airbus and work together to counter China's global ambitions to dominate key industries
President Joe Biden during a meeting with Guy Parmelin, president of the Swiss Confederation, at the Intercontinental Hotel in Geneva on Tuesday, June 15, 2021. President Biden on Tuesday announced the end of a bitter, 17-year dispute with the European Union over aircraft subsidies for Boeing and Airbus, suspending the threat of billions of dollars in punitive tariffs on each other’s economies for five years and shifting their focus to China’s growing ambitions in the aircraft industry. Image: Doug Mills/The New York Times
BRUSSELS — The United States and Europe on Tuesday agreed to put aside a 17-year dispute over aircraft subsidies for Boeing and Airbus and work together to counter China’s global ambitions to dominate key industries.
The agreement, which suspends the threat of billions of dollars in punitive tariffs on each other’s economies for five years, is a clear sign of President Joe Biden’s seriousness in repairing relations with the European Union and getting the wealthy bloc on his side in what he regards as a generational challenge from the rise of a technologically advanced and autocratic China.
Biden sees Europe as an ally, not an economic “foe,” as former President Donald Trump did, and he has pledged to work with the EU to counter China’s military, economic and technological ambitions. While Trump also saw the dangers of an unbound China, he did little to try to bring Europe along, instead punishing it with tariffs. Biden is convinced that, as Asia as a whole grows in population and wealth, the democratic world that believes in the rule of law and multilateral institutions must do more to protect its economies and values.
“Europe is our natural partner, and the reason is we’re committed to the same democratic norms and institutions, and they are increasingly under attack,” Biden said during remarks here.
The agreement means that significant punitive tariffs estimated at $11.5 billion — on a wide variety of products, including aircraft parts, wine, tractors, spirits, molasses and cheese — will continue to be suspended after both sides had agreed to do so in March while they tried to settle the dispute. The battle first broke out in 2004, over government subsidies that Europe provides to Airbus.
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