<p>The United States and Britain expressed optimism about the prospects of a trade deal on Tuesday as they launched the latest round of talks focused on goods and tariffs.</p>.<p>US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer told a security conference he was "very pleased" with progress in negotiations with Britain and predicted a trade deal "reasonably soon".</p>.<p>British trade minister Liz Truss said the two sides were intensifying talks as they enter a fifth round.</p>.<p>Britain has put a US trade deal at the top of its post-Brexit wish list, having cited the freedom to strike bilateral deals as one of the main benefits of leaving the European Union.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/brexit-negotiators-in-new-bid-to-unblock-trade-talks-904622.html">Brexit negotiators in new bid to unblock trade talks</a></strong></p>.<p>No target date for an agreement has been set, however, and Truss has had to rebut opposition criticism that a deal would mean lowering food standards and allowing US companies access to the British health system.</p>.<p>Lighthizer, speaking by video link from Washington to a British government conference on transatlantic co-operation, said talks were taking place continuously.</p>.<p>"These things take time ... but we are making great headway and we have got 30-some groups negotiating and negotiating bitterly right now," Lighthizer told the Atlantic Future Forum.</p>.<p>"I am optimistic across the board and I think that it is going to happen reasonably soon," he said.</p>.<p>Truss, speaking by remote link to the same conference, said western port cities like Liverpool would benefit from a US trade deal as Britain widens its gaze beyond a 45-year-old bias in favour of trade ties with the EU.</p>.<p>The tone of the public exchange contrasted with a stand-off between London and Brussels over Britain's future trade ties with the EU following its exit from the bloc in January.</p>.<p>The EU and Britain urged each other on Tuesday to compromise to avoid a disruptive Brexit finale.</p>.<p>Lighthizer, who has named the UK trade talks one of his top priorities for 2020, has called for full access for US agricultural products.</p>.<p>The two sides are seen at odds, however, over tariffs including US steel and aluminium duties imposed in 2018.</p>.<p><strong>Aircraft dispute</strong></p>.<p>A growing potential flashpoint concerns Britain's close links to jetmaker Airbus, which is at the centre of a 16-year-old transatlantic trade spat over aircraft subsidies.</p>.<p>The EU has won the right to hit back with tariffs on US goods to punish US subsidies to Boeing - a year after Washington slapped duties on EU goods over subsidies granted to Airbus by Britain, France, Germany and Spain.</p>.<p>US President Donald Trump has said Washington will "strike back harder" at any European tariffs.</p>.<p>Analysts say Britain is squeezed between applying its share of the tariffs in defence of Airbus and risking a setback in trade talks with the United States, or delaying them and further corroding tense talks over a European trade deal.</p>.<p>Without referring to recent tariff wars between the United States and China, Truss questioned the use of tariffs but did not address how Britain would handle the Boeing subsidies case.</p>.<p>"Even before the COVID crisis started we have seen trade barriers going up and we have seen tariffs being raised, and that surely is not the answer," Truss said.</p>.<p>Lighthizer defended the right of nations to defend their trade interests but said this did not amount to protectionism.</p>.<p>"Nationalism is not necessarily a bad thing. ... Countries becoming stronger is not necessarily inconsistent with international trade," he told the conference.</p>.<p>Both officials called for an overhaul of the Geneva-based World Trade Organization as it prepares to select a new leader.</p>.<p>"There is no doubt that there needs to be reform at the WTO. We need to make the global trading system work," Truss said.</p>
<p>The United States and Britain expressed optimism about the prospects of a trade deal on Tuesday as they launched the latest round of talks focused on goods and tariffs.</p>.<p>US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer told a security conference he was "very pleased" with progress in negotiations with Britain and predicted a trade deal "reasonably soon".</p>.<p>British trade minister Liz Truss said the two sides were intensifying talks as they enter a fifth round.</p>.<p>Britain has put a US trade deal at the top of its post-Brexit wish list, having cited the freedom to strike bilateral deals as one of the main benefits of leaving the European Union.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/brexit-negotiators-in-new-bid-to-unblock-trade-talks-904622.html">Brexit negotiators in new bid to unblock trade talks</a></strong></p>.<p>No target date for an agreement has been set, however, and Truss has had to rebut opposition criticism that a deal would mean lowering food standards and allowing US companies access to the British health system.</p>.<p>Lighthizer, speaking by video link from Washington to a British government conference on transatlantic co-operation, said talks were taking place continuously.</p>.<p>"These things take time ... but we are making great headway and we have got 30-some groups negotiating and negotiating bitterly right now," Lighthizer told the Atlantic Future Forum.</p>.<p>"I am optimistic across the board and I think that it is going to happen reasonably soon," he said.</p>.<p>Truss, speaking by remote link to the same conference, said western port cities like Liverpool would benefit from a US trade deal as Britain widens its gaze beyond a 45-year-old bias in favour of trade ties with the EU.</p>.<p>The tone of the public exchange contrasted with a stand-off between London and Brussels over Britain's future trade ties with the EU following its exit from the bloc in January.</p>.<p>The EU and Britain urged each other on Tuesday to compromise to avoid a disruptive Brexit finale.</p>.<p>Lighthizer, who has named the UK trade talks one of his top priorities for 2020, has called for full access for US agricultural products.</p>.<p>The two sides are seen at odds, however, over tariffs including US steel and aluminium duties imposed in 2018.</p>.<p><strong>Aircraft dispute</strong></p>.<p>A growing potential flashpoint concerns Britain's close links to jetmaker Airbus, which is at the centre of a 16-year-old transatlantic trade spat over aircraft subsidies.</p>.<p>The EU has won the right to hit back with tariffs on US goods to punish US subsidies to Boeing - a year after Washington slapped duties on EU goods over subsidies granted to Airbus by Britain, France, Germany and Spain.</p>.<p>US President Donald Trump has said Washington will "strike back harder" at any European tariffs.</p>.<p>Analysts say Britain is squeezed between applying its share of the tariffs in defence of Airbus and risking a setback in trade talks with the United States, or delaying them and further corroding tense talks over a European trade deal.</p>.<p>Without referring to recent tariff wars between the United States and China, Truss questioned the use of tariffs but did not address how Britain would handle the Boeing subsidies case.</p>.<p>"Even before the COVID crisis started we have seen trade barriers going up and we have seen tariffs being raised, and that surely is not the answer," Truss said.</p>.<p>Lighthizer defended the right of nations to defend their trade interests but said this did not amount to protectionism.</p>.<p>"Nationalism is not necessarily a bad thing. ... Countries becoming stronger is not necessarily inconsistent with international trade," he told the conference.</p>.<p>Both officials called for an overhaul of the Geneva-based World Trade Organization as it prepares to select a new leader.</p>.<p>"There is no doubt that there needs to be reform at the WTO. We need to make the global trading system work," Truss said.</p>