UK confirms plans to change post-Brexit trade rules, risks retaliation from Europe

UK confirms plans to change post-Brexit trade rules, risks retaliation from Europe

British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss confirmed on Tuesday that the government intends to introduce legislation to make changes to the Northern Ireland protocol "in the coming weeks." The protocol is part of the post-Brexit trading agreement which requires checks on some goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K. Truss' comments are likely to exacerbate the risk of retaliation from Brussels and could kickstart a trade war with the world's largest trading bloc. "Our preference is to reach a negotiated outcome with the EU and we have worked tirelessly to that end and will continue to do so," Truss said in the U.K.'s House of Commons. "The government is clear that proceeding with the bill is consistent with our obligations in international law and in support with our prior obligations in the Belfast Good Friday Agreement," Truss said, prompting jeers from opposition lawmakers. The announcement comes shortly after Prime Minister Boris Johnson in a bid to deescalate tensions over the protocol. The agreement came into force in January last year because special trading arrangements were needed after the U.K. left the EU. The protocol was designed to avoid the need for a hard border between Northern Ireland and