
Jul 28, 2025, 18:54
Photo: Screenshot from an online video
The US on Sunday announced that it had reached a trade agreement with the EU, which includes a 15 percent tariff on EU goods. BBC described the agreement as the result of "tough negotiations," even as some hailed it as a "huge deal."
The agreement also includes terms unilaterally proposed by the Trump administration, under which the EU would increase investment in the US by $600 billion, including purchases of American military equipment, and commit $750 billion to energy spending, according to the report.
According to a video clip showed by the Florida's Voice, President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen told Trump during a press conference following the agreement that "You're known as a tough negotiator and dealmaker." Trump quickly interjected, "But fair," prompting von der Leyen to echo, "And fair." However, Trump immediately followed up with, "That's less important," which drew laughter from the room.
When asked by a reporter whether he could offer the EU better than the current 15 percent tariff rate, Trump confirmed, "Better meaning lower?" After the reporter replied "Yes," he immediately shot back, "No," while von der Leyen remained silent, a Fox News video shows.
Von der Leyen's performance during the press conference prompted some users' scorn on social media platform X, where they said she appeared "under pressure." As videos showed her hands folded on her knees, the scene further fueled online reaction of her passive posture.
In another exchange, as she attempted to praise Trump's approach, he cut in to declare himself "fair" — then quickly added "but less," prompting an awkward nod from Von der Leyen. The moment was widely described by X users as "cringeworthy."
While the framework has been finalized, it has drawn criticism across the EU, with official and industry figures warning that tariff levels remain elevated and the agreement offers little cause for optimism.
Finnish Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Ville Tavio said on Sunday local time that while the agreement has eased tensions, there is little reason to celebrate, as tariff levels remain high, China Media Group (CMG) reported. In the long run, this may not be a particularly sustainable agreement, but we'll wait and see, according to Tavio, per CMG.
Tavio said he looks forward to the European Commission providing detailed information about the content of the agreement and the positions of EU member states, according to the report. He noted that trade policy has become increasingly strained and global trade more unstable as a result of tariff negotiations initiated by the Trump administration.
The tariffs level has also been criticized as harmful by leaders in Germany's business and economic circles.
According to estimates by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a blanket 15 percent tariff — alongside higher duties on steel and aluminum — would reduce Germany's GDP by 0.15 percent within a year, equivalent to a loss of 6.5 billion euros ($7.1 billion). The overall GDP of the EU would decline by 0.1 percent.
Julian Hinz, head of the Research Center Trade Policy at the Kiel Institute, strongly criticized the agreement to lower tariffs to 15 percent, describing it as "a bad deal, scarcely better than the Trump administration's 30 percent tariff threat," according to CMG's another report.
He emphasized this undermined the rules-based global trading system, and slammed it as a serious strategic mistake.
Describing the deal as a painful compromise that was an "existential threat" for many of its members, Germany's BGA wholesale and export association said it was time for Europe to reduce its reliance on its biggest trading partner, the Reuters reported on Monday.
"Let's look on the past months as a wake-up call," said BGA President Dirk Jandura. Jandura called on the Europe must now prepare itself strategically for the future, "we need new trade deals with the biggest industrial powers of the world."
Global Times
US can’t deliver and EU can’t receive $750 billion of oil and gas, just like Japan won’t pony up $550 billion in new US investments
- US-EU trade pact — like Japan’s — a Potemkin illusion
So it's like the phase1 trade deal with China during war criminal, The Donald 1.0. As all commentary on who pays the tariffs have said, it's the Great Satan importers and sheeple who pay, not the exporters. YET AGAIN, war criminal, The Donald, throws a punch, misses and hits the amerikan sheeple square in the jaw!
The EU leaders are unhappy, not the people. Ordinary people don't care where their finished products end up.
However, in my opinion it's American folks not understanding the meaning of tariffs. After all, it's the American importers paying the tariffs before custom's releases any item. NOT the producer in whichever country they originated from.
Needless to mention, but the American end-consumer is paying the 10 or 50 % tariffs which is nothing else but a tax on the back of Americans to fill Uncle Sam's endlessly deep pocket...
EU capitulates to Trump in vassal-state trade deal
Trump ate von der Leyen for breakfast – Orban
Von der Leyen ducks Trump’s trade blitz – but deal exposes EU’s faultlines
The 15% tariff is “the best” the EU could get, the European Commission chief has claimed, amid fierce criticism
- Von der Leyen defends US trade deal
You have to wonder how total capitulation is the best deal. War criminal, The Donald, should have started at 60% and then lowered it to 30%. As it's twice the reduction he would have got EVEN MORE concessions. She's either corrupt and/or incompetent.
So, yet more shameful unequal treaties.
The EU agreed to purchase $750 billion in American energy products, invest $600 billion in the US on top of existing expenditures, open up countries’ markets to trade with the US at zero tariffs and purchase “vast amounts” of military equipment, Trump said.
. . .
The deal doesn’t cover the EU’s steel and aluminum exports, which will remain subject to 50% tariffs, according to senior US officials. Aerospace tariffs, meanwhile, will remain at 0% pending the outcome of a Section 232 probe, the officials added.
. . .
The EU had prepared to put levies on about €100 billion ($117 billion) — about a third of American exports to the bloc — if a deal wasn’t reached and Trump followed through on his warning.
. . .
Not all EU members were pleased with the accord reached on Sunday. France’s junior minister for European affairs, Benjamin Haddad, called the agreement “unbalanced” on social media and said the bloc should activate its anti-coercion instrument, which would allow it to retaliate against US technology companies.
- EU Reaches Tariff Deal With US to Avert Painful Trade Blow
It makes war criminal, The Donald's, threats and the EU vassal counter-threats look like nothing more than a pantomime to provide cover for the EU vassals to capitulate.
Clearly, von der Layen is incompetent and useless and should be replaced by the penguins on Norfolk Island for negotiations.
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