NAFTA tensions erupt: Countries admit talks struggling, push deadline into 2018
WASHINGTON — The NAFTA countries haven’t broken up. But they are publicly bickering. They are delaying their next get-together date. And they appear to have agreed they won’t be resolving their differences by the end of this year.
The tensions at the negotiating table have exploded into public view.
NAFTA talks will be extended into 2018, and the next negotiating round is being pushed back three weeks in a tacit admission that negotiators aren’t going to meet their original deadline for a deal by year-end.
The latest round revealed enormous chasms in negotiating positions on everything from dairy, autos and Buy American rules to even the basic architecture of an agreement — and it was reflected in an awkward news conference Tuesday.