BRUSSELS — A flurry of talks between Britain and the European Union ended Sunday without a Brexit agreement, leaving the two sides three days to close a gap in their positions before a make-or-break summit.

An unscheduled, face-to-face meeting between EU negotiator Michel Barnier and British Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab, and a hastily scheduled meeting of 27 EU ambassadors in Brussels, had sparked speculation that the long-awaited deal was imminent.

Barnier dashed those hopes Sunday evening, writing on Twitter: “Despite intense efforts, some key issues are still open” in the divorce talks. The key stumbling block remains the need “to avoid a hard border” between Ireland and the U.K’s Northern Ireland after Brexit, he said.

The lack of advancement on the border issue increased the chances that the Brexit negotiations will fail to produce an agreement spelling out how the EU will interact with its former member and vice versa. EU officials have warned that real progress was needed before the summit starting Wednesday.

The British government said there were still “unresolved issues” but it remained committed to making progress at the EU summit.

An EU official said no further negotiations were planned before the leaders of EU countries convene in Brussels. Both sides previously agreed that a special November meeting would be the deadline for reaching an agreement since Britain is due to leave the EU on March 29.

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The EU and the U.K. are seeking an elusive compromise position on the difficult Irish border question ahead of the summit. The “Irish backstop” is the main hurdle to a deal that spells out the terms of Britain’s departure from the EU and future relationship with the bloc.

After Brexit, the currently invisible frontier between Northern Ireland and Ireland will be the U.K.’s only land border with an EU nation. Britain and the EU agree there must be no customs checks or other infrastructure on the border, but do not agree on how that can be accomplished.

Raab, Britain’s Brexit secretary, was not expected in Brussels Sunday, but he made a last-minute trip for an in-person meeting with Barnier.

“With several big issues still to resolve, including the Northern Ireland backstop, it was jointly agreed that face-to-face talks were necessary,” Raab’s office said.

Theresa May

The EU’s “backstop” solution – to keep Northern Ireland in a customs union with the bloc – has been rejected by Britain because it would require checks between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K.

The alternative – to keep the entire U.K. in a customs union until a permanent solution can be found – has outraged pro-Brexit members of Theresa May’s government, who claim that approach would limit the country’s ability to strike new trade deals around the world.

The idea is also anathema to the Democratic Unionist Party, a Northern Ireland Protestant party that props up May’s minority government.

So even if May strikes a deal with Brussels, she will struggle to get it past her government and Parliament at home.

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