The comments came after Britain's Brexit minister David Davis caused a row with Ireland by suggesting that Friday's interim divorce deal was "more a statement of intent than it was a legally enforceable thing".
The deal agreed by British Prime Minister Theresa May and EU commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker set out Britain's divorce bill and the rights of expatriates, and also made guarantees on Ireland's sensitive border with the British province of Northern Ireland.
"But we see the joint report of Michel Barnier and David Davis as a deal between gentlemen," Schinas added, referring to the EU's chief negotiator.
If approved by EU leaders on Friday, the informal deal on the divorce terms -- part of the Brexit process under Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty -- will allow the two sides to move to talks about their future relationship, including trade.
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"It is a clear understanding that it is fully backed and endorsed by the UK government," Schinas said of the Friday deal.
Dublin and Brussels were alarmed by Davis's comments yesterday, which seemed to minimise the UK's commitment to the deal.
Davis also said Britain will not honour financial commitments agreed in last week's agreement if it fails to secure a future trade deal.
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