South America's four-nation trade bloc Mercosur began a tense meeting Wednesday reeling from US steel and aluminum tariffs and a spat between its two biggest members.

Foreign ministers of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay opened the two-day meeting in the southern Brazilian town of Bento Goncalves, paving the way for a heads of state summit on Thursday.

Recent elections have laid bare ideological tensions between Brazil and Argentina, threatening to hamper ratification of June's historic Free Trade Agreement with the European Union.

The 55th Mercosur summit will be the last for Argentina's President Mauricio Macri, pictured, who will soon be replaced by leftist Alberto Fernandez
The 55th Mercosur summit will be the last for Argentina's President Mauricio Macri, pictured, who will soon be replaced by leftist Alberto Fernandez AFP / JUAN MABROMATA

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro said Buenos Aires had "much more" to lose in case of tensions with Brasilia than vice-versa, but he would focus on "pragmatism" in his dealings with Argentina's incoming leftist president Alberto Fernandez.

The far-right leader has already said Fernandez would turn his country into "the Venezuela of the south."

Fernandez antagonized Bolsonaro by championing the release of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from prison, and the Brazil president will snub Fernandez's inauguration in Buenos Aires next Tuesday, having dubbed him a "red bandit."

"Argentina took a left turn. We are going to rely on pragmatism. If we fight, we all lose, but Argentina loses much more," Bolsonaro said.

Brazil's Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo pictured at the opening of a two-day Mercosur meeting in Bento Goncalves, Brazil
Brazil's Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo pictured at the opening of a two-day Mercosur meeting in Bento Goncalves, Brazil AFP / CARL DE SOUZA

The bloc's 55th summit -- the last for Argentina's market-friendly President Mauricio Macri -- has more immediate concerns however, coming in the aftermath of US President Donald Trump's decision Monday to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum from Argentina and Brazil.

Trump accused them of manipulating their currencies to gain an unfair advantage for agricultural exports, thereby hurting US farmers.

Both countries stepped in to replace American exports of soybeans and other agricultural goods to China, benefiting from the US trade war with the Asian giant.

Brazil's Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo at the opening of the Mercosur summit in southern Brazil
Brazil's Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo at the opening of the Mercosur summit in southern Brazil AFP / CARL DE SOUZA

Longer term, the tension between South America's two biggest markets has concerned business leaders in both countries, particularly given their economic interdependence.

No date has yet been set for the first meeting between Bolsonaro and Fernandez, who takes office on December 10.

Brazil is Argentina's largest trading partner, and Argentina is Brazil's third-largest, behind China and the United States.

Brazil has even threatened to leave Mercosur, worried that Fernandez, who inherited a serious economic crisis from Macri, will fall back on protectionism.

"We still don't know whether the Brazilian government really intends to leave Mercosur or whether its statements are a way of putting pressure on Argentina to adopt a more liberal stance on international trade," said Mauricio Santoro, of the international relations department at the State University of Rio de Janeiro.

Trump's announcement that he was imposing tariffs has put the two countries in the same boat.

"That decision should bring Brazil and Argentina together. The tensions are not to their advantage," said Rubens Barbosa, head of Brazil's Institute of International Relations and Foreign Trade.

"We will see if this can be settled at the Mercosur meeting," he said.

At the summit, the four countries are to sign a border police cooperation agreement to prosecute fugitive criminals. They will also discuss the reduction of the Common External Tariff and the increase in the rate of imports from third countries.