Ambassador 'has PM's Full Support' Despite Trump Criticism
Downing
Street has reaffirmed its "full support" for the UK's ambassador to
the US after Donald Trump said he will no longer work with him.
The US
president was responding after leaked emails revealed Sir Kim Darroch had called
his administration inept.
In a
series of tweets Mr Trump also criticised Theresa May's handling of Brexit
saying she had created "a mess".
Number 10
called the leak "unfortunate" and said the UK and US still shared a
"special and enduring" relationship.
BBC New York
correspondent Nick Bryant said Sir Kim was still planning to join International
Trade Secretary Liam Fox for a scheduled meeting with the president's daughter,
Ivanka Trump, on Tuesday.
A Downing
Street spokesman said: "We have made clear to the US how unfortunate this
leak is. The selective extracts leaked do not reflect the closeness of, and the
esteem in which we hold, the relationship."
But he said
ambassadors needed to be able to provide honest assessments of the politics in
their country, and the prime minister stood by Sir Kim.
"The UK
has a special and enduring relationship with the US based on our long history
and commitment to shared values and that will continue to be the case," he
said.
Former
Conservative leader and foreign secretary Lord Hague urged the UK government to
be "patient" and "not escalate things".
However, he
also told Radio 4's Today programme: "You would never have any
honest report from any ambassador in the world if you said: 'Well, if any of
their communications are released, we'll then have to remove them from their
position.'"
"That
is well understood by US diplomats... I think there will be a strong enough
relationship between a new prime minister and the president to have that
conversation," he added.
An
ex-British ambassador to the US and a close friend of Sir Kim's said there was
a "possible range of villains" who potentially could have made the
leak.
Sir
Christopher Meyer told Today: "It was clearly somebody who set out
deliberately to sabotage Sir Kim's ambassadorship, to make his position
untenable and to have him replaced by somebody more congenial to the
leaker."
Speaking on Monday
following Mr Trump's initial comments on the leaked emails, Downing Street
said the prime minister did not agree with Sir Kim's assessment but had
"full faith" in him.
Police were
urged to open a criminal investigation into the leak in addition to an
internal inquiry launched by the government.
Tom
Tugendhat, chairman of the foreign affairs committee, told MPs he had made the
request in a letter to the Met Police.
The Met said
it had received Mr Tugendhat's request but had not received an official
governmental referral of allegations in relation to the Official Secrets Act.
Such a
referral would be required for a criminal investigation to be considered, a Met
spokesman said.
Downing
Street's response is a classically formal "thanks, but no thanks". A
stiff brush-off in riposte to the US president's digital tirade, which was
extraordinary even by his standards.
With the
current prime minister almost out of the door, and the UK ambassador in Washington
leaving too, the remarks are unlikely to change much directly, and this allows
Number 10 to try to shrug off the criticism.
Less
officially, though, there is real frustration. One senior Tory warned that
"we cannot bow down to this form of lunacy" where the leader of
another country tries to use online swagger to seek revenge on one of the UK's
diplomats - not least from one of our most important allies.
Confidential
emails from the UK's ambassador, leaked to the Mail on Sunday,contained a
string of criticisms of Mr Trump and his administration, describing the White
House as "clumsy and inept".
Sir Kim, who
became ambassador to the US in January 2016 about a year before Mr Trump took
office, questioned whether this White House "will ever look
competent" but also warned that the US president should not be written
off.
The emails,
dating from 2017, said rumours of "infighting and chaos" in the White
House were mostly true and policy on sensitive issues such as Iran was
"incoherent, chaotic".
The US
president responded to Sir Kim's comments published in the Mail on Sunday
article by saying "we're not big fans of that man and he has not served
the UK well".
But on
Monday Mr Trump escalated his response with a series of tweets criticising Mrs
May and her handling of Brexit.
"What a
mess she and her representatives have created," the US president said.
"I do
not know the ambassador, but he is not liked or well thought of within the US.
We will no longer deal with him."
He said that
it was "good news" for the UK that it would soon have a new prime
minister.
The US state
department declined to comment on Mr Trump's remarks, but the ambassador was
disinvited from a dinner held at the White House on Monday night for the Emir
of Qatar.
By saying he
won't deal with Sir Kim Darroch any more, Donald Trump is apparently all but
declaring the ambassador to be persona non grata. That is the formal legal
process by which a host government expels a foreign diplomat.
The key
question now is what the president means by the word "deal". If the
royal "we" used by Mr Trump means that his entire administration will
no longer deal with Sir Kim or any of his staff then the British government may
have to decide to fast track the retirement of their man in Washington.
Sir Kim, who
is an honourable man and was stepping down anyway in a few months, may decide
to resign. If, however, Mr Trump merely means he won't deal personally with Sir
Kim then the ambassador may stay on until the new prime minister can make his
own appointment.
This all
presents the British government with an awkward dilemma - to buckle under US
pressure and bring Sir Kim home, risking accusations of abject weakness, or to
stand firm and defend their ambassador for doing his job and telling the truth
as he sees it, risking even further damage to the UK-US relationship.
FROM bbc.com/news/uk
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