TORONTO >> Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada laid out more than $100 billion in retaliatory tariffs against the United States late Saturday, in a forceful response to President Donald Trump’s decision to impose levies on a range of Canadian goods.

But he made clear that Canada was doing so reluctantly.

“We don’t want to be here,” Trudeau said in a somber televised address from Ottawa, Ontario, that evoked the deep bonds between the two neighbors and close trading partners. “We didn’t ask for this.”

Trudeau spoke hours after Trump hit Canada and Mexico with tariffs of 25% on all goods, with a partial carve out for Canadian energy and oil exports. Trudeau said that Canada would swiftly impose its own “far-reaching” retaliatory tariffs of 25% on $106 billion worth of U.S. goods.

Canada on Sunday published a detailed list of all the U.S. goods imported into Canada that will be subjected to the tariff, including hundreds of products such as honey, tomatoes, whiskey and peanut butter. Also on the list were garments, porcelain goods such as toilets and bath tubs, as well as refrigerators and dish washers.

Initial tariffs worth CA$30 billion will start Tuesday, when the U.S. tariffs go into effect, Trudeau said. That will be followed by tariffs on CA$125 billion worth of goods in the next three weeks, a delay he said would allow Canadian businesses to prepare.

And Trudeau added that more measures were being considered, including curbing or taxing energy exports that the United States relies on.

Trudeau addressed Americans directly, saying that the U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods would harm them, too.

“This is a choice that, yes, will harm Canadians, but beyond that, it will have real consequences for you, the American people,” he said. “As I have consistently said, tariffs against Canada will put your jobs at risk, potentially shutting down American auto assembly plants and other manufacturing facilities.”

Canadian provinces, too, began to respond to the tariffs, with Ontario and Nova Scotia saying that they would pull U.S. beer, wine and spirits from their government-owned liquor stores. British Columbia’s premier announced that the province would stop sales of alcohol produced in “red states.”

The Liquor Control Board of Ontario imports about $690 million worth of U.S. products each year. But although few, if any, parts of Canada’s economy will be left unaffected by tariffs, none are likely to experience more potential turmoil than the auto industry.

The sector employs about 125,000 Canadians and produces some 3,300 cars a day, more than 90% of which go to U.S. buyers. Complicated supply chains mean Canadian auto parts can make repeated trips across the border with the United States and, in some cases, Mexico, making North American vehicles a stew of components from all three countries.

Within hours of the U.S. tariff announcement, a wave of economic patriotism was sweeping over Canada, with retailers putting Canadian flags on shelves with domestically produced products, lists of Canadian alternatives to U.S. goods circulating on social media, and leading politicians from across the spectrum urging citizens to “Buy Canadian!”

In his Saturday night address, Trudeau expressed regret that the two nations, as well as Mexico — all signatories to a free-trade agreement — now find themselves in a trade war that will upend the flow of goods across North America.

The crisis finds Canada in a difficult political moment. Trudeau has said that he will resign as prime minister and leader of the Liberal Party when his party chooses a new leader, and automatically prime minister, in March. Parliament is suspended until that time.

Despite the fraught political climate, though, the top contenders to replace Trudeau from within his own party, as well as the opposition leader vying to win the next federal election, have broadly coalesced around a national unity response to U.S. tariffs. The pain Canada will feel is real: Experts believe the tariffs that take effect Tuesday will tip the country into a recession, putting hundreds of thousands of jobs at risk.

Part of Trudeau’s speech addressed Trump’s claim that Canada is responsible for a major influx of fentanyl and irregular migrants into the United States. In response, Trudeau presented recent data showing that only about 1% of fentanyl in the United States originates in Canada. He also said that about the same percentage of irregular crossings into the U.S. occur at the northern border.

But he also focused on the historically close ties between Canada and the U.S., including military cooperation in two world wars as well as the Korean War and the war in Afghanistan. “From the beaches of Normandy to the mountains of the Korean Peninsula, from the fields of Flanders to the streets of Kandahar, we have fought and died alongside you during your darkest hours,” he said.