A day after applauding British Prime Minister Theresa May at a summit in Brussels for the progress made so far, her 27 counterparts endorsed an interim deal on the terms of Britain's divorce from the European Union.
But although discussions will begin in January on a post- Brexit transition period of around two years, they stressed that actual talks on future trade ties would not start until March as they need more clarity on what Britain wants after it leaves the bloc.
As he arrived for the meeting today, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker -- who sealed the deal with May on December 8 after tense all-night talks -- said the British premier had made "big efforts".
But he warned the next stage "would be much harder than the first phase, and the first phase was very hard".
Britain voted to leave the EU in a referendum in June 2016 and is due to end its four decade membership on March 29, 2019.
At a meeting without the British premier today, the other EU leaders formally agreed there had been "sufficient progress" in the first phase and that the second phase could begin.
May had last night addressed her counterparts over dinner and was "clear about wanting to move onto trade talks as quickly as possible" with "ambition and creativity", a British official said.
Leaders said there had been polite applause for May, who came to the summit hours after a humiliating parliamentary defeat over her Brexit plans.
After the dinner, German Chancellor Merkel said May had made "good offers" but added that "there remain many issues to be solved and we don't have much time".
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said May was "a tough leader in the interest of Britain."
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said she was a "formidable political operator" but that it was "crucial" she sets out Britain's wish list for long-term ties.
British officials are hoping for a deal by March on a two-year transition out of the bloc, during which their relationship would largely stay the same.
A trade deal will be a tougher period, with options including following the model of a recent EU-Canada trade deal, or Norway's membership of the European Economic Area.
But questions still linger over the divorce agreement, after Davis appeared to suggest it was not legally enforceable and that Britain would only pay its exit bill if it got a trade deal.
EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has said there will be a "separate track" in the second phase of negotiations that remains dedicated to the Irish question.
"Even a primary school student will realise there is a problem to solve with the Irish border," said Austria's Chancellor Christian Kern.
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