What happens when they face down our walk away option and just let us get on with it? After all ROI have been sorted in part by the WA and beyond that issue it is only France, Holland and Spain out of the 27 that have significant borders and customs operations to deal with. For the rest they will have a smaller budget but not much else to worry about. There is fishing but then fishing is a tiny part of any EU country economy. None of then lose access to anything they have now, they don't have to deal with WTO or set up new regulator regimes etc. It genuinely is not hard for them to let us walk away.
But of course if they do it - it will be there fault that it happened right?
You don't understand much about negotiations do you?
I will make a few points to enlighten you:
1. The EU made no concessions to the UK during the time that the hapless May and Robbins were directing the UK's negotiations - why? - because they did not need to.
The period during which Remainer May was compromising the UK resulted in the undermining of the UK which was set out in the WA she tried to get the UK committed to. So Remainers were/are responsible for the UK being in a worst position in negotiations than we were in 2016
2. Since the change of management and approach the EU have had to adapt their approach and positions. Indeed, they have not faced down the prospect of a walk-away option - they have instead made compromises and accommodations since last winter. Giving up the poisonous unfettered backstop was a major concession - although one that would not have been necessary had we been not previously led by Remainers.
This simple fact should allow even the 'ultra-Remainers' to accept the truth of the benefit that having the No-Deal option has provided to the UK negotiating team and therefore the UK. Strangely, not on here it seems.
3. With the UK having used the threat of No-Deal we have been able to strip some of the bonuses that May gave to the EU and eventually we will get to their real 'red-lines'. And don't simply forget all the bollocks posted by Remainers on here about what those red-lines were/are and how the EU would never move.
Hardly a day goes by without further EU concessions and now it seems the absolutely sacrosanct LPF conditions are not quite so sacrosanct after all - and so on. The UK are not there yet - but at least our stance is forcing the EU to strip away their previously stated red-lines and start heading towards reality. Remainers on here have been so far up Barnier's arse it has been sickening, but when - in pretty short order - Frost takes control and reverses so many of the EU gains there is not a murmur of satisfaction. What is it about positives for the UK that is such an anathema to the Remainers?
4. Should the EU's real red-lines - when we get to them - allow for a deal to be made then that will be good for both sides, but should they still require inappropriate concessions from the UK then the outcome should be a no-deal.
That is just simple because the only thing that May ever got right was that No-Deal is indeed better than a Bad-Deal.