A group of 11 nations — including U.S. allies like Canada, Japan, and Australia — signed a broad free-trade deal on Thursday in Chile. The agreement brings together nations representing 500 million people around the Pacific. The U.S. started the negotiations during the Obama era to counter China's growing influence, but President Trump last year withdrew the U.S. from the deal, then known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership. The signing came on the day Trump officially imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum. Chile's foreign minister, Heraldo Munoz, said the pact, now known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, sends a strong message "against protectionist pressures, in favor of a world open to trade, without unilateral sanctions and without the threat of trade wars." [The New York Times, Reuters] |
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