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1994-05-12
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<text>
<title>EC Trade Commissioner Welcomes NAFTA Vote</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Foreign Broadcast Information Service, November 18, 1993
EC Trade Commissioner Welcomes NAFTA Vote
</hdr>
<body>
<p> [Text] Brussels, 18 November (AFP)--The prospects of a GATT
world trade accord have been greatly enhanced by the
ratification of the NAFTA trade accord in the U.S. House of
Representatives, the European Commission said here Thursday.
</p>
<p> EC Trade Commissioner Leon Brittan said he warmly welcomed
the vote, which would "greatly assist" the chances of completing
the Uruguay Round of GATT trade talks by its make-or-break
deadline of December 15. In a communique, he said: "I
congratulate President Clinton and his administration on this
outcome." The communique was issued after the House of
Representatives voted by a bigger majority than expected to
ratify the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) between
the United States, Mexico and Canada. "I am sure that the
commitment to open markets shown by the vote will greatly assist
the successful conclusion of the Uruguay Round (of talks under
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) before December 15,"
Brittan said. He added: "I have always regarded NAFTA as an
agreement which opens up the North American market without
imposing barriers against the outside world, although we shall
of course have to study carefully the precise form in which it
has been passed."
</p>
<p> Brittan said he would be meeting U.S. Trade Representative
Mickey Kantor in Washington on Monday to discuss the Uruguay
Round, confident that the NAFTA vote would reinforce the U.S.
determination to conclude the round successfully. "I hope this
will now enable the U.S. Administration to contribute fully to
the solution of the limited number of substantial problems that
still remain," he said.
</p>
<p> EC officials say the Uruguay Round negotiations have been
held up for several weeks because the U.S. authorities could not
risk making concessions for fear of alienating domestic support
for the NAFTA pact. They are now hoping that, with NAFTA out of
the way, the major players in the Uruguay Round--the United
States, the EC and Japan--will make the trade-offs necessary for
a GATT settlement involving 115 countries.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>