France will file a complaint to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) if the US taxes French goods, Minister of the Economy and Finance Bruno Le Maire stated on Sunday in an interview with broadcaster France 3.
"We are ready to take this to an international court, notably the WTO because the national tax on digital companies touches US companies in the same way as EU or French companies or Chinese. It is not discriminatory", he said.
Just a week ago, the US Trade Representative proposed imposing tariffs on $2.4 billion worth of French goods, while Macron threatened to retaliate alongside other countries, stating that "it wouldn't be France that is being sanctioned or attacked but Europe".
The dispute, which erupted in August, was suspended as Trump and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron agreed to a 90-day truce while negotiating on the digital tax, but the deadline passed last week, showing that the two nations can't find common ground on the issue.
Paris previously tried to convince the whole European Union to support the tax project, but it was declined by the bloc back in April.
The tax, called "GAFA" by the national media (an acronym for Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon), targets tech corporations with global annual sales of more than 750 million euros (around $830 million) and sales in France of at least 25 million euros.