Australia to avoid Trump aluminium tariffs

Trump advisers have previously backed hitting Australian aluminium and other products with tariffs, but the US president has decided not to impose them.

Donald Trump

US President Donald Trump says tariffs will not be imposed on Australia's aluminium exports. (AAP)

US President Donald Trump says he will not be slapping tariffs on Australian aluminium and other products, despite reports his administration was contemplating the potentially volatile move.

The New York Times reported the tariff proposal was supported Robert Lighthizer, the US trade representative, and Peter Navarro, director of White House trade and manufacturing policy, but faced fierce opposition from US military officials and the State Department.

Australia was one of the few nations to avoid Trump's tariffs on aluminium and steel last year after then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull intensely lobbied the president.

"The Australian situation is interesting," Trump told reporters on Sunday before boarding Air Force One for trip to England.

"But the relationship is very strong.

"No, we're doing a very, very special relationship with Australia."

The pro-tariff advisers reportedly urged the president to hit Australia in response to a surge of Australian aluminium in the American market over the past year.

The New York Times reported the US Defense and State Departments told Mr Trump the move would alienate a top ally and could come at significant cost to the US.

Australia is a key military ally in the Asia-Pacific region.

Mr Trump hit allies and foes last year with 25 per cent tariffs on imported steel and 10 per cent on aluminium, while avoiding Australia.

The president is also engaged in an escalating trade war with China and in recent days threatened to impose tariffs on Mexico if they did not stop illegal immigrants entering the US from their nation.

Australia is also on the president's radar with some Republican members of Congress and his former aide, George Papadopoulos, questioning Australia's role in the opening of the FBI investigation into Russian ties to the Trump election campaign in 2016.

Then Australian high commissioner to the UK Alexander Downer met with Mr Papadopoulos in 2016 at a London bar.

Mr Downer said Mr Papadopoulos told him at the bar Russia had damaging material on Mr Trump's presidential rival Hillary Clinton.

The information was forwarded to Canberra and then passed on to US intelligence services and the FBI.


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Source: AAP



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