“The Tariff will be increased to 25 per cent.”
The US-EU pact, which was struck in last year’s northern summer, had capped the American tariff on European cars and trucks at 15%.
In an attempt to lure European manufacturers to the US, Trump continued: “It is fully understood and agreed that, if they produce cars and trucks in USA plants, there will be NO TARIFF”.
Bernd Lange, the European Parliament’s trade committee chair, denounced Trump’s tariff increase.
“This latest move demonstrates just how unreliable the US side is,” Lange said. “This is no way to treat close partners. Now we can only respond with the utmost clarity and firmness, drawing on the strength of our position.”
Trump’s relationship with Europe has fractured since the start of the war with Iran, and he has frequently criticised allies whom he claims are abandoning the US.
“Italy has not been of any help to us, and Spain has been horrible. Absolutely horrible,” he said on Thursday.
A day earlier, amid rising tensions with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, the US President suggested he could pull American troops out of Germany.
The President’s declaration is an example of what Government ministers have referred to as a “Brexit dividend”, which has seen Britain exempted from harsher tariffs directed at the EU.