
Swiss President's 'disastrous' call with Trump resulted in higher tariffs
04 Aug 2025 09:00pm
Switzerland's President Karin Keller-Sutter (C) puts on headphones as he prepares to deliver a speech after a meeting to discuss trade relations and tariffs, in Geneva, on May 9, 2025. Switzerland and the United States agreed to speed up talks on striking a deal on Washington's tariffs, the Swiss president said following a meeting with top US officials. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)
MOSCOW - Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter had a "disastrous" phone call with US President Donald Trump, after which the US leader announced high tariffs of 39 per cent on Swiss goods, reported Sputnik quoting a Financial Times report, citing a Swiss diplomat.
The 30-minute conversation was the culmination of more than three months and hundreds of hours of negotiations, during which Swiss officials believed they were on track to reach the same deal as the one with the UK, which agreed on 10 per cent tariffs. Instead, Trump announced 39 per cent, one of the highest rates in the world, the newspaper said. US President Donald Trump waves upon arrival at the White House in Washington, DC, on August 3, 2025 after spending the weekend at his Bedminster residence. (Photo by Mandel NGAN / AFP)
Swiss officials were confident that they had managed to reach a preliminary deal; they were counting on tariffs at the level of 10 per cent.
However, in a telephone conversation with the Swiss president, Trump expressed dissatisfaction with the deficit in trade with Switzerland, emphasising that he considered 10 per cent duties insufficient.
"There was nothing Keller-Sutter could say," the source concluded.
The new tariffs are being introduced to 69 American trading partners; they come into force on August 7, which may give the countries on the list some time to conclude a trade deal with the United States and avoid raising import rates.
According to the text of the decree, the highest tariffs of 41 per cent are imposed on Syria, imports from Myanmar and Laos will be subject to a rate of 40 per cent, and goods from Iraq and Serbia will be subject to a tariff of 35 per cent. - BERNAMA-SPUTNIK/RIA NOVOSTI
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