As the U.S.'s first and oldest ally, France has had its ups and downs with Washington since their treaty of 1778.
The Trump administration's latest actions treat France more like an enemy, and risk sending relations with President Emmanuel Macron to a new low.
The U.S. is to investigate French plans to tax technology giants like Facebook and Amazon over concerns the move "unfairly targets American companies." That's the same grounds used to impose tariffs on China.
The move may wrong-foot the European Union, with its leadership in transition and already shaken by President Donald Trump's threat of 25% tariffs on car exports. It also drives a wedge between Berlin and Paris, since auto giant Germany is keen to move ahead with talks on a limited U.S.-EU trade deal that are stalled amid French opposition to including agriculture in any accord.
What's more, Trump has options to skirt the EU and hit France over the digital tax, which is expected to pass the Senate in Paris today. One proposal would double tax rates for French citizens and companies in the U.S
The standoff makes for difficult discussions among Group of Seven finance ministers next week, then G-7 leaders next month. The host? France.
— Alan Crawford
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