Mexico, Canada dismiss Trump threats to scrap NAFTA trade pact

Reuters  |  MEXICO CITY/OTTAWA 

By Gabriel Stargardter and David Ljunggren

CITY/OTTAWA (Reuters) - and on Wednesday dismissed U.S. President Donald Trump's latest threat to scrap NAFTA, describing it as a negotiating tactic aimed at winning the upper hand in talks to update one of the world's biggest trading blocs.

At a campaign-style rally in Arizona on Tuesday night, cast doubt on any deal to improve the North American Agreement and said "we'll end up probably terminating at some point."

Initial talks between Mexico, the United States and to update ended in Washington over the weekend amid signs of deep division on key issues. Further discussions are due to start in City on Sept. 1.

has long called the 1994 treaty a bad deal that hurt American workers, saying it should be renegotiated or ended.

Trump's top trade official, Robert Lighthizer, underscored the termination threat on Wednesday, saying the United States was seeking "substantial changes to address its fundamental failures."

"President has been clear from the very beginning that if the renegotiation is unsuccessful, he will withdraw from the agreement," Lighthizer said in a statement issued by

the Office of the United States Trade Representative.

Trump's comments initially pushed Mexico's peso currency down more than 1 percent but it later recovered its losses. The peso has been sensitive to Trump's anti-rhetoric, touching record lows shortly after his election in November 2016 on fears that he would raise tariffs on Mexican goods.

Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray sought to brush off Trump's threat, saying the comments would not scare in the negotiations.

"He's negotiating in his own particular style," he told Mexican television.

Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo added in a statement that has a "Plan B very clearly defined" in case talks fail, but declined to provide details.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, speaking to reporters in Montreal, said his officials would "stay focussed on the hard work we have ahead of us at the negotiating table ... I don't see anything changing in that."

He did not directly refer to Trump's remarks.

A Canadian official earlier said the government had been bracing for moments of turbulence.

"This was always a card we knew the president would likely play ... it may have been a bit earlier than expected," said the official, who declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the situation.

(Additional reporting by Veronica Gomez in City and David Lawder in Washington; Editing by Frances Kerry and Tom Brown)

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