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British Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union (Brexit Minister) David Davis (R) and EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier attend a press conference by the British prime minister and the European Commission president at the European Commission in Brussels on Dec. 8, 2017.EMMANUEL DUNAND/The Globe and Mail

Britain wants a trade deal with the European Union that includes the best parts of the bloc's agreements with Japan, Canada and South Korea, along with financial services, Brexit Secretary David Davis said, showing optimism a pact can be struck within a year.

The chances of Britain leaving the EU without a deal, defaulting to World Trade Organization rules, have "dropped dramatically," Mr. Davis said in a BBC TV interview on Sunday. Still, he signalled the painstaking agreement struck on Friday to end the first phase of Brexit negotiations isn't binding, and that Britain's exit payment of as much as £39-billion ($67-billion) is contingent on reaching a free-trade agreement. Doing so, he said, "is not that complicated."

"We start in full alignment: We start in complete convergence with the EU, so we then work it out from there," Mr. Davis said on the Andrew Marr Show. "What we want is a bespoke outcome: We'll probably start with the best of Canada, the best of Japan and the best of South Korea and then add to that the bits that are missing, which is services," he said. "Canada plus plus plus would be one way of putting it."

The Brexit secretary's bullishness belies the noise coming from his counterparts in the EU. It's taken eight months of, at times, bitter haggling to make sufficient progress on what was supposed to be the easiest part of the talks – resolving Britain's exit payment, its future border with Ireland, and the rights of EU and British citizens living in each other's territories.

European Council President Donald Tusk spoke on Friday of the challenges ahead: "So much time has been devoted to the easier part of the task and now to negotiate a transition arrangement and the framework for our future relationship we have, de facto, less than a year," he said in Brussels. "We all know that breaking up is hard, but breaking up and building a new relation is much harder."

Mr. Davis cited his EU counterpart, Michel Barnier, in describing the next phase as being about "how we manage divergence so it doesn't undercut the access to the market." He said Prime Minister Theresa May's cabinet has discussed a vision for "an overarching free-trade deal, but including services, which Canada doesn't, with individual, specific arrangements for aviation, for nuclear, for data, a whole series of strands which we've worked out, most of them based on where we start now."

Ms. May's office has said her cabinet hasn't discussed the "end state" it wants as an outcome of the Brexit talks, but will do so before year-end.

British Prime Minister Theresa May has managed to secure a divorce deal with her EU counterparts that means crucial talks on future trade ties can now begin.

Reuters

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