Category: Foreign Affairs

  • Grant Shapps – 2024 Speech at the World Defense Show

    Grant Shapps – 2024 Speech at the World Defense Show

    The speech made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Defence, in Saudi Arabia on 4 February 2024.

    60 years ago, the skies above Riyadh bore witness to a remarkable demonstration as a supersonic aircraft shot into the atmosphere at twice the speed of sound.

    Just two years later and 40 of those iconic English Electric Lightning jets were heading to Saudi Arabia where they became as revered an icon of the skies over here as they were back in the UK.

    Yet that special flight also seemed to send our own partnership into the stratosphere.

    1964 saw the first British military mission to the Saudi Arabian National Guard, and 14 years after that we brought across a project team which has been supporting you with advice, information and communications service ever since.

    So that one pioneering flight demonstrated ours is a partnership built from the strongest of frames. An understanding of the value of Defence, an appreciation of the merits of innovation, and a desire to keep working together.

    And how fitting then that 60 years on, here at this fantastic World Defense Show, we are once again celebrating a partnership that’s putting on the afterburners.

    Not only can we reflect on a mutual commitment to combat air that’s taken us from Lightning, to Tornado, to Typhoon – with hundreds of UK military personnel now committed to Saudi programmes.

    But we have also stepped up the pace on the ground as well, with our Defence Cooperation Plan catalysing deeper cooperation between our Land Forces.

    However, my purpose in attending this great exhibition is not to reminisce about our past, nor even to reflect on our present, it is to talk about our future.

    Because if the incredible story of the Lightning tells us anything, it’s that when an opportunity arises in our mutual interests, we know how to seize it together.

    And frankly, when I look around me, I see opportunity abounds.

    Yours is a nation buzzing with energy. Creating new cities out of sand, redefining sport by hosting the World Cup in E-sports. Spearheading the charge towards a greener future.

    Yet if there’s one event that seemed to encapsulate your sense of ambition, it was what happened last year, when Saudi fighter pilot and astronaut, Ali Al-Qarni, and his crew member, Rayyanah Barnawi, became the first two Saudi astronauts to visit the International Space Station.

    Proof – if it were needed – that you are nation in fast forward.

    You’ve bottled lightning, and now you’re accelerating towards the future with increasing velocity.

    The UK wants to be on that journey with you. But there’s only one thing that can pull us back down to earth.

    Instability.

    For decades our prosperity and progress has been underpinned by the international rules-based order, yet today we live in a far more dangerous world. Our once reliable order is under threat from the likes of big state aggressors and from rogue states, whose terrorist proxies are hell-bent on destroying our freedom and damaging our wealth.

    So now is the time to tighten our ties.

    How? First by working together – in the words of your conference, to be equipped for tomorrow.

    Once upon a time we showcased a jet in your skies. Today we’ve brought more than 30 of our finest UK firms to your show, including a Wildcat helicopter, delivered by one of our Royal Air Force’s A400M transport aircraft.

    Demonstrating our skills not just in the air, but on land, sea, cyber and space. Our delegation are experts in power and engines, in critical components and complex weapons, in state-of-the-art surveillance and next generation electronic warfare.

    Our people know everything there is to know in mine counter-measures and military suspension and durable materials, 3D sensors, sonars, and uncrewed systems.

    But my second point is that we are looking for much more than a transient transaction.

    We want to build an even deeper industrial partnership.

    Saudi Arabia quite rightly wants to develop its own defence industrial base – and we want to help you get there – developing mutually beneficial capability programmes to support regional security.

    Already we have a deep industrial partnership stretching across air, land, sea and cyber.

    To take just one example, BAE’s workforce here in Saudi Arabia is almost 75 per cent Saudi.

    Which brings me to my third and final point: Both our nations share pressing strategic priorities.

    We both seek to calm conflicts. We both desire de-escalation. And even as Saudi Arabia aims for the stars, so its influence on terra firma is increasing too.

    It has a critical role to play in this region as interlocutors, as mediators and as leaders.

    So I see us doing more together to help shore up our international rules-based order. Doing more to ensure adherence to international humanitarian law. Doing more to prevent a breakdown in regional security, so we guarantee the safety and security of all people.

    Sixty years ago, we brought Lightning to this great Kingdom and helped transform our partnership.

    Sixty years on, we’re now looking to elevate our relationship to even greater heights.

    I, for one, am a strong believer that Lightning can strike twice.

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2024 Speech at Asia House Annual Outlook

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2024 Speech at Asia House Annual Outlook

    The speech made by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Minister for the Indo-Pacific, at Asia House in London on 23 January 2024.

    It is a real pleasure to be here again for the launch, gosh in a blink of an eye isn’t it, the 2024 Outlook. And it really doesn’t seem like a year since I was standing at this lectern, predicting I think as I was, ‘months of change ahead’. But I wasn’t entirely wrong because it has indeed been a busy year and an awful lot has happened.

    Now we did know even then that we were going to be looking at an unpredictable year, but I’m not sure that any of us would have anticipated the scale of events that has impacted economies over the last year, from the continuing challenges around climate change, to cybersecurity, from the conflicts in Ukraine which continue to create huge strains and of course in Gaza, US-China competition, the really substantial impacts we’re seeing through BRICS expansion and of course the Saudi-Iran deal.

    And not wishing to be a predicter I think 2024 is probably going to be equally unpredictable. As you mentioned we have got elections in 60 countries, over 2 billion people going to the polls. Which is an extraordinary thing when you think about that sort of voice being spoken from citizens across the world. It is actually a global first – from Bangladesh and Taiwan in the last few weeks to India, Indonesia, South Korea, Sri Lanka… our own UK general election at some point, I can give you no insider information, and of course at the end of the year the USA’s Presidential election.

    So I think Lord Green is right to talk about ‘turbulence’ in the coming year. But there will be 2 things that will remain consistent in 2024. One of those is Asian growth, and the other one is the UK’s commitment to be at the heart of that.

    So we’re going to be continuing to seek those deeper partnerships with all these amazing countries across the Indo-Pacific, and with the regional network in partnership with ASEAN, the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) and the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF), amongst others.

    I had the great pleasure to attend the IORA Ministerial in Colombo in October last year, and indeed the Pacific Islands Forum in the Cook Islands in November. I spend a lot of time on planes these days, some of which work better than others. I think what I’ve heard time and again from my counterparts, in spite of their very diverse interests, was a desire for the kind of stable world order that will support economic growth and genuinely allow sustainable development. Because that stable world order in which we can all win that race for climate security, and of course the health security. And a stable world order that gets that prosperity that every country needs back on track.

    Now the Foreign Secretary has called this an ‘age of insecurity’, and that insecurity can fan out both by land and by sea. And of course the recent situations in the Red Sea are a blunt reminder of what that looks like.

    Something that became particularly stark in 2023 is that Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific security are clearly inseparable. Understanding that, and for that reason, that’s why the UK and so many of our partners want to be part of sustaining a free and open Indo-Pacific. Simply put, it is in our interests for the Indo-Pacific to be secure and stable. And it is in the interests of the region’s people to build a free, fair future, where top quality trade rules are respected, trade routes can stay open, data and energies can flow freely, and countries have free choices.

    So the UK’s deployment of HMS Diamond in support of Operation Prosperity Guardian, an international taskforce to protect commercial shipping in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, is perhaps a clear example of the UK’s intent. On maritime security, I’m looking forward to continuing engagement with the AUKUS partnership this year, as well as working with some key Indo-Pacific partners to assure global waters are safer for everyone.

    The UK knows that security and trade will form a virtuous circle in our relationships throughout Asia. In 2023 we saw a number of notable successes for this approach, as we signed our Accession Protocol to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership – CPTPP – that was in July. Now joining CPTPP is going to give UK businesses an extraordinarily exciting enhanced access to the Malaysian market for the first time, and it puts the UK at the heart of a dynamic group of free trading countries, which are in the right place, and at the right time.

    And we of course have our Free Trade Agreements with Australia and New Zealand came into force last year, with an expectation to increase bilateral trade by 53 and 59% respectively over the long term.

    And in May we announced the expansion of British International Investments (BII as it’s known) to the Indo-Pacific, which is going to invest up to £500 million of climate finance. And we’ve also agreed the UK-Singapore Green Economy Framework MoU.

    These are pillars if you like in the UK’s continuing growth and development of that commitment to the Indo-Pacific. More widely in support of regional security and stability, we’ve agreed a Reciprocal Access Agreement with Japan in January last year. The UK is the first European country to agree an RAA with Japan, which is enabling both countries to undertake longer, larger, more frequent and more complex joint exercising. And we are also sharing our cutting edge technology through the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP for short), to strengthen our deterrence and defence and the signing of the GCAP treaty with Japan and Italy in December was a really important milestone for that.

    We’ve also been strengthening important bilateral relationships, with a new Strategic Partnership with Singapore, and the Downing Street Accord with the Republic of Korea. The Downing Street Accord commits both sides to deeper cooperation on defence and security, on trade and investment, on science and technology and on wider global issues together.

    Now all of these relationships require a degree of trust. Trust that there are certain rules of engagement that the parties agree to follow. 2023 saw an important moment in this regard, as the UK, China and 27 other countries signed the Bletchley Declaration at the AI Safety Summit, to voice our mutual concern at the dangers of unfettered AI development, and to work together on safety research. This work is a cornerstone of the UK’s leadership in digital transformation, as we carve out our role in a new technical world this year.

    2023 also saw publication of the UK Government’s Integrated Review Refresh, which set out the UK’s approach to global threats more widely, as well as our approach to the UK-China relationship. As Permanent Members of the UN Security Council together, each with a powerful global reach, the UK’s relationship with China has enormous potential to overcome some of the greatest global challenges together. So I welcomed China’s attendance at the AI Summit and also the UK-China engagement on climate change at COP28.

    The COVID pandemic taught us that it is prudent to reduce dependencies in our critical supply chains, but we do believe that a positive trade and investment relationship with China is also critically important for both our countries’ interests. So we must maintain open channels to discuss all areas of our relationship, including where we have concerns. That includes the deterioration of freedoms in Hong Kong and the need to preserve peace in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait. These are matters of global interest. And so following Taiwan’s recent elections, I hope that those on both sides of the Strait will renew efforts to resolve differences through constructive dialogue. It is important that engagement between the UK and China continues to grow throughout 2024, and I am very pleased to be joined here today by our esteemed colleague, His Excellency.

    Looking to the opportunities to come, Outlook 2024 rightly notes the importance of digital transformation to support economic growth. We know that AI and other critical technologies have the potential to transform our societies and improve the lives of millions. So we will build on the AI Safety Summit and continue to spur collective international action to navigate both the opportunities and the risks of this new frontier. We seek to ensure public safety, to drive commercial benefits and to promote values in line with our democratic ideals, assisting businesses in the process.

    On trade, we’ve continued negotiations on our UK-India Free Trade Agreement: a deal to boost our current trading relationship, already worth £38 billion, and we are working to upgrade the UK-Korea FTA as announced during the recent State Visit, to enhance our existing £18 billion trade relationship with South Korea.

    And of course, our ambition is to complete the required domestic procedures to join CPTPP as soon as possible, with the aim of completing that in the second half of this year. This is all before we mention the long-term benefits that membership of CPTPP presents for the UK: that stronger voice to shape global standards in areas like digital trade, more resilience and security in our supply chains, and more opportunities for jobs and growth right across the UK.

    And as Asia House correctly foresees, this will likely be a turbulent year. Therefore, 2024 also needs to be a year of patient diplomacy, as we continue to put in place these long term frameworks that will build the range of partnerships required to protect UK prosperity and security and to support global efforts to tackle those shared challenges. Whether those frameworks are FTAs, defence and security arrangements or innovative approaches to mitigating the impacts of climate change.

    So it is my great honour, as Minister for the Indo-Pacific, and our superb team of Ambassadors and High Commissioners around the world, to understand our partners’ priorities and to respond to them and work with you. We will encourage and work with our brilliant businesses, our investors, our entrepreneurs and their counterparts across the region to maximise these opportunities, for 2024, and for the long-term. Thank you.

  • David Cameron – 2024 Speech at the Holocaust Memorial Day Reception

    David Cameron – 2024 Speech at the Holocaust Memorial Day Reception

    The speech made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, at King Charles Street in London, on 23 January 2024.

    Introduction

    Your Excellency, distinguished guests, today we honour the 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust – humanity’s darkest hour.

    We reflect on subsequent genocides, in Rwanda, Cambodia, Bosnia and Iraq. And we recommit to rid the world of the prejudice and hatred that persists today.

    Let me begin by thanking those who work so hard to support this work, including the Holocaust Memorial Day and Holocaust Educational Trusts, who both do so much to sustain memories and understanding.

    I would also like to thank Ambassador Hotovely for joining me to host today’s event and for her remarks.

    There are lots of days in your life that you remember. I remember the birth of our first child. I remember the death of our first child.

    But there are 2 other days that I will never forget. One was a winter’s day 9 years ago where I had the privilege of visiting Auschwitz.

    It’s an extraordinary thing to go through. And, of course, you are struck by this massive architecture of murder, these famous archways, the mechanics of deaths, the scale of murder.

    But what really hits you is when you see those displays of the luggage, the suitcases piled high. The children’s toys taken from the children before they were killed. The hair taken from those that went into the gas chamber.

    These are things you never forget when you see them. And it’s so important that children have the opportunity today to see first hand what this architecture of mass murder is all about.

    That’s why it’s important to say, ‘never again’ and to hear this testimony. That’s why the work you do is so important.

    But there is another day that I will never forget, and that was the attacks on 7 October last year.

    Not long after the event, I stood in Kibbutz Be’eri. The first thing that strikes me is what a place of peace it is. Built out of nothing in the desert, inhabited by people who went to make a life and a future for themselves and their families.

    But then you go house to house, and you can see the bullet holes in the walls. The blood on the floors. The cupboards where children hid before they were pulled out and murdered in front of their parents. The appalling death and destruction on what was, let’s remember, the deadliest assault on Jewish people since the holocaust.

    And since then, not only have those people had to live with that tragedy. Not only have they had to live with the fact that there are still 130 more hostages in Gaza whose fate we are so worried about and who we want to see released so badly.

    But there has been this upsurge in antisemitism here in Britain as well as elsewhere.

    So, in my view, it has never been more important to say so clearly that we stand with Jewish people. We stand with the state of Israel, We stand with their right to defend themselves as they go through this terrible ordeal with the legacy of the holocaust. And that’s why it’s so important we are gathered here today.

    Diplomacy and freedom

    We gather today in the Foreign Office, with me standing before you as Foreign Secretary, to recognise that diplomacy is a profession dedicated to building bridges. To strengthening alliances. To promoting peace and freedom.

    The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and the Holocaust

    And this is a department with its own history. Today we are all telling stories about this period in history, and I want to tell you a quick story about what this department did.

    Many British diplomats saved lives in the face of hatred and tyranny. I want to share with you one example.

    From 1938, a brave team of Foreign Office and church officials in Vienna took huge risks, provided travel documents and baptismal certificates for Jews who were desperate to cross Austria’s borders to safety.

    Reverends Hugh Grimes and Reverend Frederick Collard carried out hundreds of baptisms every day. Officials led by Thomas Kendrick and George Berry worked around the clock to exploit every possible loophole to issue travel permits and passports.

    It was a dangerous business. Two members of this group – Kendrick and Collard – were harshly interrogated by the Nazis. The Jewish-born verger of Christ Church was sent to Auschwitz, where he died.

    But thanks to the courage of some 25 individuals, tens of thousands of lives were saved.

    Until recently, their devoted efforts were unknown. But the FCDO were determined they should not be forgotten. So last March, relatives of survivors joined us, faith groups and Lord Pickles, in unveiling a plaque at the British Embassy, opposite Christ Church.

    Kindertransport

    British officials also played a role in that great rescue operation led by Jewish organisations 85 years ago.

    That operation saved thousands of children from Nazi persecution in Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia.

    I’ll never forget meeting one in Number 10 Downing Street when she showed me the little pocketbook that her father had written when she got off her train. It just said, ‘be a good daughter to the country that gives you hope’.

    But while many children found safety here, they paid a high price – the murder of their parents, who were not allowed to accompany them. Freedom, for those children, was indeed fragile, and tinged with what must have been deep and abiding sadness.

    So, we are equally determined this story – in all its complexity – is not forgotten. Last year, during the first State Visit of his reign, His Majesty the King and German President Steinmeier paid tribute at a memorial to the Kindertransport in Hamburg.

    The present day

    I share these stories as we must truly grasp their lessons for today. These are once again dangerous and volatile times. We and our partners must show strength and unity if we are to defend freedom.

    In March, the UK assumes an important mantle, the Presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance.

    We will use this opportunity to explore the circumstances of the Holocaust, and highlight the nature of societies that allowed mass murder to take place. And crucially we want to emphasise that these things take place in plain sight, and we must shine a spotlight on all those who had a part to play.

    We want all generations to grapple with the legacy of the past, and recognise its relevance in the present. Because with memory of the Holocaust soon to pass from our living history, we must never allow it to slip from our consciousness.

    After the horrors of 7 October, we must renew our vow – never again. That is our solemn duty – today, tomorrow and always.

    Thank you.

  • Grant Shapps – 2024 Speech on Defending Britain from a More Dangerous World

    Grant Shapps – 2024 Speech on Defending Britain from a More Dangerous World

    The speech made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Defence, at Lancaster House in London on 15 January 2024.

    Thirty-five years ago, Margaret Thatcher gave a short speech here in Lancaster House.

    She spoke of her optimism about the changes taking place between East and West. Barely two weeks later the Berlin Wall fell.

    It was the dawn of a new era. Existential threats were banished. And a new global feel good factor spread to Defence.

    This was the age of the peace dividend. The notion that while our defences should be maximised at times of tension they could be minimised in times of peace.

    Conflict didn’t disappear of course. But with no great power menacing the continent, peace gave the impression of being just around the corner.

    Yet, not everyone got the memo. In fact our adversaries were mobilising.

    The belligerent autocratic state was making a comeback – having got away with the illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, Putin launched his brutal invasion of Ukraine eight years later.

    And as Russia continues its illegal campaign in Ukraine, China is assessing whether the West loses its patience.

    Today, Russia and China have been joined by new nuclear, and soon to be nuclear, powers.

    North Korea promising to expand its own nuclear arsenal.

    And then there is Iran, whose enriched uranium is up to 83.7%, a level at which there is no civilian application.

    Back in the days of the Cold War there remained a sense that we were dealing with rational actors.

    But these new powers are far more unstable, and irrational.

    Can we really assume the strategy of Mutually Assured Destruction that stopped wars in the past will stop them in future, when applied to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard or North Korea?

    I am afraid we cannot.

    Particularly since there is now another new worrying consideration: Our adversaries are now more connected with each other.

    For example, we have seen how Iranian proxies are causing havoc from Israel to the Red Sea.

    That Russia has what the two countries describe as a “no limits partnership” with China – with whom they conduct regular joint exercises.

    Meanwhile, Putin is relying on Iranian drones and North Korean ballistic missiles to fuel his illegal bombardment in Ukraine.

    With friends like these, the world is becoming more dangerous and has done in recent years.

    But the other threats that plagued the start of the 21st century haven’t gone away.

    The spectre of terrorism and threats from non-state actors, as October 7 showed, still haunts the civilised world.

    Put it all together, and these combined threats risk tearing apart the rules-based international order – established to keep the peace after the Second World War.

    Today’s world then, is sadly far more dangerous.

    With the UN reporting that we are facing the highest number of violent conflicts since the Second World War.

    Now some argue these threats are not existential to the UK.

    And yet, what happens elsewhere, quickly happens here.

    In the past few years we’ve seen terror attacks on the streets of London, attempted assassinations in Salisbury, theft of Intellectual Property, attempted interference in our political processes, a cost-of-living crisis, brought to you by Putin, that’s hurting families here at home.

    And now, our trade. 90 per cent of which comes by sea, is the target of terrorists.

    Proving that not only do our adversaries have the intent to target us but they have a widening array of weapons with which to wreak havoc.

    In our online world our adversaries don’t need to jump in a tank board a sub or strap into a fighter jet to hurt us.

    Cyber warfare simply means hacking into our networks and watching the economic carnage unfold.

    Last year, almost a third of businesses in the UK suffered a cyber breach or attack. And the total cost to the UK economy runs into billions.

    We know significant numbers of these attacks come from Russia and China where they are also developing satellite killing technology, capable of degrading us from space.

    Even mass migration can be cynically used against us as a weapon of war, as Poland, Norway, and Finland have been experiencing.

    In other words, nation states plus non-state actors with greater connections between them plus more creative weapons all adds up to more trouble for the world.

    Over the last decade this government has made great strides to turn the Defence tanker around.

    The refreshes of the Integrated Review and Defence Command Paper have been instrumental in ensuring Britain is defended in this more dangerous world.

    We’ve uplifted our defence spending – investing billions into modernising our Armed Forces and bringing in a raft of next generation capabilities, from new aircraft carriers to F35s; from new drones to Dreadnought submarines; from better trained troops; to the creation of a national cyber force.

    And when the world needed us, we have risen to the moment.

    Giving Ukraine our unwavering support and galvanising others to their cause, including with our biggest ever funding package, announced last week.

    Taking action, we work to stamp out the global ambitions of Daesh.

    We’ve acted at the forefront of global responses to maintain regional stability after October 7th by sending a Royal Navy Task Group, a company of Royal Marines, surveillance planes and lifesaving aid to Gaza.

    And taking a lead role within global forces to protect freedom of navigation in the Red Sea.

    Not only that but we’ve strengthened Britain’s place in the world with expanded partnerships from the Gulf to the Indo-Pacific.

    We’re playing a major part in stirring the West into a renewed commitment to defence, using our 2014 NATO summit in Newport to bring Alliance nations together to stop the rot, by committing to spending 2 per cent of GDP on Defence.

    Today, for the very first time this government is spending more than £50bn a year on Defence in cash terms, more than ever before.

    And we have made the critical decision to set out our aspiration to reach 2.5% of GDP spent on defence.

    And as we stabilise and grow the economy, we will continue to strive to reach it as soon as possible.

    But now is the time for all allied and democratic nations across the world to do the same.

    And ensure their defence spending is growing.

    Because, as discussed, the era of the peace dividend is over.

    In five years’ time we could be looking at multiple theatres involving Russia, China, Iran and North Korea.

    Ask yourselves – looking at today’s conflicts across the world – is it more likely that the number grows, or reduces?

    I suspect we all know the answer – it’s likely to grow. So, 2024 must mark an inflexion point.

    For Ukraine, this will be a year when the fate of their nation may be decided.

    For the world, this will be the greatest democratic year in history with nearly half of the world’s population going to the polls.

    And for the UK it must also be a moment to decide the future of our national defences. The choice is stark.

    Some people, especially on the left, have a tendency to talk Britain down.

    They believe Britain can no longer have the power to influence world events.

    That we should somehow shrink into ourselves and ignore what’s happening beyond our shores.

    I passionately believe these unpatriotic, Britain belittling doom-mongers are simply wrong.

    Their way would lead us sailing blindly into an age of autocracy. So we must make a different choice.

    And the history of our great island nation shows us the way.

    Britain has often accomplished the seemingly impossible before. Our history is littered with moments when we faced down the threat and triumphed.

    But looking ahead, we are in a new era and we must be prepared to deter our enemies, lead our allies, and defend our nation.

    In terms of deterrence, it’s about the UK gaining a strategic advantage over our enemies.

    The foundation of that advantage is, of course, our nuclear enterprise.

    At a time of mounting nuclear danger, our continuous at sea deterrent provides the ultimate protection.

    And that’s why we are spending around £31bn to bring in next generation Dreadnought submarines and upgrade our deterrent.

    In a more contested world, we need to bring that same goal of deterrence to our conventional forces – so we have made modernisation a critical priority.

    Taking the long-term capability decisions we need to transform our Armed Forces into a formidable deterrent.

    Enabling them to maintain the UK’s strategic advantage and empowering them to be able to deliver the outcomes we need in multiple theatres at once.

    The growing success of that work was powerfully shown last week when, in less than 24 hours, the UK was able to both take action to defend ourselves against the Houthis and uplift our support to Ukraine to new record levels.

    If Putin thought we’d be distracted by the events in the Middle East then last week, because of the long-term decisions this government has taken, his hopes were surely dashed.

    In a complex world, no nation can afford to go it alone, so we must continue strengthening our alliances so the world knows they cannot be broken.

    Defence is in many ways the cornerstone of our relations across the world.

    Our world leading Armed Forces, cutting-edge industrial base and willingness to support our allies is the reason why Britain is the partner of choice for so many.

    And among our partnerships, NATO remains pre-eminent. 75 years after its foundation, today NATO is bigger than ever.

    But the challenges are bigger too.

    That’s why the UK has committed nearly the totality of our air, land and maritime assets to NATO.

    But, in 2024, I am determined to do even more.

    Which is why I can announce today that UK will be sending some 20,000 personnel to lead one of NATO’s largest deployments since the end of the Cold War, Exercise Steadfast Defender.

    It will see our military joining forces with counterparts from 30 NATO countries plus Sweden, providing vital reassurance against the Putin menace.

    Our carrier strike group will be out in full force, with our magnificent flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth leading the way.

    And flying from her decks will be the fifth generation F35 lightning jets, accompanied by a fearsome phalanx of frigates, destroyers and helicopters.

    We’ll also have a submarine patrolling the depths and one of our Poseidon P8 aircraft conducting surveillance from the skies above, and more than 400 of our brilliant Royal Marines will be training in the Artic Circle, contending with some of the toughest environments anywhere on the planet.

    On land, we’ll be deploying over 16,000 soldiers, led by our 7th Light Mechanised Brigade Combat Team which superbly led our recent response in Kosovo.

    All of which, makes this our largest deployment of land forces to NATO for 40 years.

    But NATO is only part of our rich tapestry of partnerships.

    And this government has taken bold decisions to embark on the partnerships we need to defend ourselves from a more dangerous world.

    We are rapidly building our AUKUS partnership.

    And last month I signed our Global Combat Air Partnership (or GCAP) with Japan and Italy.

    These projects are not just about building nuclear powered subs, sixth generation fighter planes, and innovating in all forms of Defence.

    They are about sharpening our strategic edge so we can maintain our advantage over our adversaries.

    They are precisely the deep relationships needed to preserve national and regional security.

    And they’re emblematic of the way we will work in the future.

    But it’s not enough to deter. We must lead. Standing up for our values around the world.

    And Ukraine is a test case.

    This year, its future may well be decided.

    Valiant Ukrainian warriors have had incredible success pushing back invading Russian forces, retaking 50 per cent of the territory stolen by Russia, opening up a maritime passage in the Black Sea.

    But the West must not let them down.

    British leadership has already had a galvanising effect.

    We’ve convened some 10 countries to help Ukrainians train here in the UK.

    And today I can announce that our programmes have now trained over 60,000 Ukrainian troops since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2014.

    Last month, I launched a new maritime coalition with Norway to defend Ukraine’s maritime flank.

    Since then, over 20 partner nations have joined that coalition.

    But the international community cannot let this support slip.

    Putin believes the West lacks staying power.

    And since the future of the world order is at stake, we must prove him wrong.

    Rewarding his war with victory would only increase the risk of escalation.

    Not only because he’s hell bent on rebuilding the Russian empire.

    But because it would signal weakness to other would-be aggressors.

    That is why on Friday the Prime Minister signed the historic UK-Ukraine Agreement on Security Cooperation.

    The start of a 100-year alliance that we are building with our Ukrainian friends.

    It sees us increasing our military support to £2.5bn – taking the total of UK military aid to more than £7bn. With even more gifted directly from the UK’s equipment inventory.

    £200m will be pressed into producing and procuring thousands of drones, including surveillance and long-range strike drones.

    This continues the UK’s proud record as a leading donor – always being the first to get Ukraine exactly what they need.

    The UK was the first to provide Ukraine with weapons training, the first to provide NLAW anti-tank missiles, the first to give modern tanks, the first to send long range missiles.

    Now we will become the largest provider of drones too.

    These will be manufactured here in the UK in tandem with international partners, helping to enhance our unmanned vehicle capabilities at home too.

    But our new agreement with Ukraine is about so much more than money.

    It formalises our support in everything from intelligence sharing and cyber security to medical and military training.

    And it sees us taking the first giant step towards a century long partnership.

    Britain understands that the battle in Ukraine is existential, it proves there is no such thing as an isolated conflict.

    And that to shore up the international order, we must be able to act globally.

    So, just as we were there to help evacuate British citizens from Sudan last year, just as we are working with partners to ensure the territorial integrity of our Commonwealth ally Guyana, we have also been a critical part of the US-led international operation to protect freedom of navigation in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.

    Some 15 per cent of the world’s shipping passes through these narrow shipping lanes.

    But the Houthis have persistently violated the law by menacing commercial vessels in the region.

    In the Red Sea we have seen how our brilliant Royal Navy had to act to defend itself against the intolerable and growing number of Houthi attacks.

    And earlier this month the world sent a very clear message to the Iranian-backed Houthis.

    End your illegal and unjustified actions. Stop risking innocent lives. Cease threatening the global economy.

    We could not have been clearer with our warnings, which they chose to ignore.

    And enough was enough.

    So last Thursday, the Prime Minister and I authorised RAF precision strikes using four RAF Typhoon FGR4s and supported by two Voyager air refuelling tankers.

    The result is the Houthis have been dealt a blow.

    Our decisive response in the Red Sea and our uplift in support for Ukraine offer a direct blueprint for how the UK must continue to lead in the future.

    Offering our unwavering support to our allies, and in times of struggle galvanising global responses to any malign actor seeking to break the rules based international order, and acting decisively when the moment calls for us to defend ourselves.

    So, deter and lead, which brings me to the final essential element of being prepared. Defending our nation.

    If we are to defend our homeland, we must ensure our entire defence eco-system is ready.

    Firstly, we must make our industry more resilient to empower us to re-arm, re-supply and innovate far faster than our opponents.

    There’s a huge opportunity here for British industry.

    The UK has long been a by-word for pioneering technologies.

    We gave the world radar, the jet-engine and the world wide web.

    We’ve not lost that spark of creativity.

    On the contrary, today the UK is one of only three $1 trillion tech economies.

    But just imagine what we could do if we managed to better harness that latent inspiration, ingenuity and invention for the Defence of our nation?

    Just think about the game-changing tech we could supply to our brave men and women.

    From the pilots ready to scramble at a moment’s notice to the soldiers protecting NATO’s flanks from Putin’s fury.

    To the sailors deployed across the seven seas to secure our prosperity.

    To our absolutely essential Royal Marine Commandos, without whom we could not properly defend our nation.

    To those you will never see and never know but who are out there, giving their all, on your behalf.

    They are the cornerstone of our defence and we owe them an unimaginable debt of gratitude.

    Which is why my commitment to getting them what they deserve is iron cast.

    After all, our greatest resource has always been the men and women who work tirelessly to protect our great nation.

    But to defend our nation from the increasing dangers of tomorrow, they must have what they need to do the job.

    That’s why this Conservative government has always and has already taken vital steps to increase defence spending, approving the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War – injecting a further £5 billion last year to replenish our stocks and modernise our nuclear enterprise.

    Delivering the largest cash terms defence budget ever. Spending over £50 billion on the defence of our nation.

    And just last week, not only maintaining our support to Ukraine but increasing it to its highest level ever.

    To some the costs may seem steep – but Britain cannot afford to reverse the spending gains we have made.

    And under this Conservative government we never will.

    And we will use our influence to ensure other allies and friends, faced with this new reality, and match our commitment.

    So, we find ourselves at the dawn of a new era. The Berlin Wall a distant memory.

    And we have come full circle.

    Moving from a post-war to a pre-war world.

    An age of idealism has been replaced by a period of hard-headed realism.

    Today our adversaries are busily rebuilding their barriers.

    Old enemies are reanimated. New foes are taking shape. Battle lines are being redrawn.

    The tanks are literally on Europe’s Ukrainian lawn.

    And the foundations of the world order are being shaken to their core.

    We stand at this crossroads – whether to surrender to a sea of troubles, or do everything we can to deter the danger.

    I believe that, in reality, it’s no choice at all.

    To guarantee our freedoms, we must be prepared.

    Prepared to deter – the enemies who are gathering all around us. Lead our allies in whatever conflicts are to come.

    Defend our nation whatever threat should arise. This is what Britain has always done.

    And it is what we must do again if we, like Margaret Thatcher speaking here 35 years ago, are once more to dream of a future without walls.

  • David Cameron – 2024 Statement on the Taiwan Elections

    David Cameron – 2024 Statement on the Taiwan Elections

    The statement made by David Cameron, the Foreign Secretary, on 13 January 2024.

    The elections today are testament to Taiwan’s vibrant democracy. I offer warm congratulations to the people of Taiwan on the smooth conduct of those elections and to Dr Lai Ching-te and his party on his election. I hope that the two sides of the Taiwan Strait will renew efforts to resolve differences peacefully through constructive dialogue, without the threat or use of force or coercion.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech to the Ukrainian Parliament

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech to the Ukrainian Parliament

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at the Ukrainian Rada on 12 January 2024.

    Mr President, Mr Prime Minister, Mr Chairman, Honourable Members of the Rada…

    I come from the world’s oldest Parliament to address the world’s bravest.

    And it is an honour to do so.

    Every Parliamentarian serving in a democratically elected chamber treasures the ideal of freedom.

    Your courage is defending it.

    Even as the enemy came within 20 kilometres of this Chamber…

    …with many of you personally targeted…

    …you refused to be daunted.

    You continued to sit and do your duty – as you have throughout this war.

    Because this is where you express the sovereignty and independence…

    …for which your people are prepared to sacrifice everything.

    This is where you are keeping alive the cause of democracy…

    …in defiance of the gravest threat we have faced this century.

    So on behalf of Britain and all your allies:

    Thank you.

    Slava Ukraini.

    President Zelensky, you are an inspiration, and, Volodymyr, I am proud to call you a friend.

    President John F Kennedy said of the great Winston Churchill that he:

    “Mobilised the English language and sent it into battle.”

    Volodymyr, you have done the same…

    …and English isn’t even your first language!

    No leader this century has done more to unite liberal democracies in the defence of our values.

    Thank you.

    Above all, let me pay tribute to the people of Ukraine.

    I first came to Ukraine ten years ago, in the year of the Maidan protests.

    I remember the sense of nervous hope…

    …as Ukraine looked towards a future as a sovereign European democracy.

    And in each of my visits since this war began…

    …even amidst all the rubble and destruction…

    …the people I’ve met are more determined than ever to realise that dream.

    The soldiers who even now fight to the last breath for every inch of ground.

    The pilots making stunning blows against Russia’s Black Sea fleet.

    The gunners beating impossible odds to defend your skies.

    The engineers who defeated darkness during the most difficult winter in your history.

    And the ordinary people of Ukraine, who have endured…

    …more than anyone should ever have to bear.

    Rockets and bombs deliberately aimed at homes and hospitals, shelters, and schools.

    Torture, rape, children kidnapped.

    You have met this depravity with bravery and defiance.

    With your unique, unbreakable Ukrainian spirit.

    And all of us in the free world, salute you.

    We meet today at a difficult moment in the struggle for Ukraine’s freedom.

    As always during conflict, there will be difficult moments.

    But we must prepare for this to be a long war.

    But I believe there is hope for us in the echoes of Britain’s own history.

    If 1940 was our finest hour…

    ….and Ukraine’s was two years ago as you resisted the Russian invasion…

    …then perhaps today is more like 1942.

    That was a point in the middle of the war…

    …when progress on the battlefield was hard…

    …the defence industry was under severe strain…

    …and populations were becoming weary.

    It must have been hard to see the light ahead.

    But they stood firm.

    And although they did not know it then…

    …for all the setbacks and difficulties that still lay before them…

    …that was the moment the tide began to turn, and victory became assured.

    I believe that the same will be true of this moment.

    In the end, history tells us that democracies who endure will always prevail.

    Putin cannot understand…

    …that while you can kill individuals and destroy buildings…

    …no army can ever defeat the will of a free people.

    And that is why Ukraine will win.

    Think of what you have already achieved.

    Putin believed he could subjugate Ukraine by force in a matter of weeks.

    Instead, with every rocket he fires the Ukrainian people become ever more determined…

    …and their sense of nationhood becomes stronger still.

    Russia’s military vastly outnumbers Ukrainian forces.

    Yet you have already regained half of the occupied territory.

    You have held the East, reopened vital shipping lanes to help feed the world…

    …and increasingly made Crimea a vulnerability for Russia, not a strength.

    These victories show: Russia can be beaten in its war of aggression.

    It’s on track to lose nearly half a million men.

    Putin has faced an attempted coup…

    …been indicted as an international war criminal…

    … presides over an economy severely weakened by sanctions…

    …and has succeeded in persuading countries across Europe…

    …to significantly increase their defence spending.

    He is now reduced to begging Iran and North Korea for weapons…

    …and desperately sacrificing hundreds of thousands more men…

    …in the hope that Ukraine will yield, or its friends might walk away.

    Well, Ukraine will not yield.

    And the United Kingdom will never walk away.

    From the very beginning…

    …the British people spontaneously flew the Ukrainian flag – and I tell you that it flies still.

    They felt moved to show solidarity with people they’ve never met…

    In a country most have never visited…

    Because of our shared faith in freedom, fairness and democracy.

    We welcomed Ukrainian refugees with open hearts.

    We trained tens of thousands of their Ukrainian comrades in arms.

    we led the way in delivering…

    Helicopters, ships, tanks, and armoured vehicles…

    Air defences and electronic weapons systems…

    Planeloads of anti-tank missiles like the NLAWs and Javelins…

    Storm Shadows to reach behind enemy lines and defend against aggression in the Black Sea.

    Humanitarian and economic support.

    And the strongest set of sanctions ever to debilitate Russia’s economy.

    I’m proud that we’ve provided over £9bn of support so far.

    But I want to go further still.

    Today, President Zelensky and I agreed a new partnership between our two countries…

    …designed to last a hundred years or more.

    Our partnership is about defence and security.

    It is about the unique ties between our people and cultures.

    It will build back a better and brighter future for Ukraine.

    To attract new investment in jobs and homes…

    To fund English language training for the Ukrainian people…

    …as you make English the language of business and diplomacy.

    And it will hold Russia accountable for their war crimes.

    Because Russia must pay to rebuild what they have destroyed.

    Perhaps above all, it will support Ukraine to complete the historic journey you have chosen…

    …to becoming a free, independent democracy at the heart of Europe.

    Ours is the unbreakable alliance:

    The nezlamni allianz.

    First, we will help you win the war.

    Russia thinks that they will outlast us; that our resolve is faltering.

    It is not.

    In each of the last two years, we sent you £2.3bn of military aid.

    This year, we are going to increase that…

    …with the biggest single defence package so far…

    …worth £2.5bn.

    This package will include:

    More air defence equipment, more anti-tank weapons, more long-range missiles…

    Thousands of rounds more ammunition and artillery shells…

    And training for thousands more soldiers…

    Now in total, the UK will have provided almost £12bn of aid to Ukraine.

    So be in no doubt:

    We are not walking away.

    Putin will never outlast us.

    We are here for Ukraine –as long as it takes.

    But the best way to make sure Ukraine has the weapons it needs…

    …is to help Ukraine to produce those weapons themselves.

    So our second action is to work with you to massively increase defence industrial production.

    I believe this will be a source of huge economic strength and value for Ukraine in the future.

    So even as the UK donates more equipment…

    …we will help make you the armoury of the free world.

    British companies like BAE Systems and AMS are already supporting your armed forces from within Ukraine.

    And we will go further.

    Starting today with £200m to manufacture thousands of new drones…

    …both here in Ukraine and in the UK.

    This is the single largest package of drones given to Ukraine by any nation.

    Thirdly, today’s agreement supports your historic choice to join NATO.

    Because I believe that Ukraine’s rightful place is in NATO.

    But this isn’t just about how NATO benefits Ukraine.

    It’s about how Ukraine benefits NATO.

    Your understanding of modern war comes not from a textbook but the battlefield.

    Your armed forces are experienced, innovative, and brave.

    Ukraine belongs in NATO and NATO will be stronger with Ukraine.

    Last year’s Vilnius Summit made important steps towards membership.

    And I want us to be even more ambitious at the Washington Summit this June.

    And we made you a solemn promise…

    …along with 30 other countries…

    …to provide new, bilateral security assurances.

    Today, the UK is the first to deliver on that promise.

    President Zelensky and I have just signed a new security agreement.

    If Russia ever again invades Ukraine, the UK will come to your aid with swift and sustained security assistance.

    We will provide modern equipment across land, sea, and sky…

    Sanction Russia’s economy…

    And work closely with allies to do so.

    You will not have to ask.

    You will not have to argue for what you need.

    The UK will be there from the first moment to the last.

    I believe this is the greatest moment in the history of our relationship.

    With unprecedented security guarantees…

    …it defines our future as allies, working together for the security of Europe…

    …and sitting side by side among the free countries of the world.

    In the words of the great Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko…

    …you have broken your heavy chains and joined…

    The family of the free

    Because in the end, this is about even more than security.

    It is about Ukraine’s right as an independent nation to determine your own future.

    And it is about the right of all nations – enshrined in the UN Charter – to determine their own future.

    As Churchill said, there are two kinds of nationalism:

    “The craze for supreme domination by weight or force” – which he called “a danger and a vice”.

    Or the nationalism that comes from “love of country and readiness to die for country…

    …love of tradition and culture…

    …and the gradual building up…of a social entity dignified by nationhood”.

    He called this: “the first of virtues”.

    I can think of no better description of the two sides of this war.

    Or a better description of the battle that will define our age.

    Because while this war may have begun in the deluded mind…

    …of a man in thrall to the mirage of a long-dead empire…

    …if Putin wins in Ukraine, he will not stop here.

    That’s why President Biden, the EU, allies in NATO, the G7 and beyond…

    …have seen the century-defining importance of this fight and they have rallied to your cause.

    And we cannot – and will not – falter now.

    Because aid to Ukraine is an investment in our own collective security.

    Only a Ukrainian victory will deter Putin from attacking others in the future…

    …and prove our enemies wrong…

    …when they say that democracies have neither the patience nor resources for long wars.

    This is the choice before us.

    These are the stakes.

    Waver now – and we embolden not just Putin, but his allies in North Korea, Iran, and elsewhere.

    Or rally to Ukraine’s side and defend our common cause…

    …of democracy over dictatorship, freedom over tyranny, the rule of law over anarchy.

    That is what you are fighting for.

    And to echo Churchill:

    We must give you the tools – and I know that you will finish the job.

    Let me conclude with this final thought.

    On one of the earliest days of the invasion…

    In the darkness just before the dawn…

    As Russian bombs fell on Kyiv…

    President Zelensky stood outside the House with Chimaeras…

    …and sent a simple, defiant message to the world:

    Miy tut.

    We are here.

    Today, as the world asks will your allies waver…

    Will our resolve weaken…

    Will our belief in your success falter…

    My reply is the same:

    Miy tut.

    We are here.

    As a symbol of our nezlamni allianz…

    …I bring you today the United Kingdom’s flag…

    …signed by our country’s entire Cabinet…

    …to stand here until the day of your victory and beyond…

    …as a sign to the world that we are here…

    …and we will always be with you.

    Miy tut.

    Slava Ukraini.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Comments at Joint Press Conference with President Zelenskyy

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Comments at Joint Press Conference with President Zelenskyy

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 12 January 2024.

    Volodymyr, thank you for the very kind honour you’ve just bestowed on me and for inviting me here today.

    It is an honour to stand with you…

    …and to send a message on behalf of the United Kingdom…

    …and indeed your allies around the world:

    Ukraine is not alone.

    And Ukraine will never be alone.

    Putin might think he can outlast us – but he is wrong.

    We stand with you today, tomorrow, and for as long as it takes.

    Because this war is about Ukraine’s right to defend itself and determine your own future.

    And the Ukrainian people’s historic choice…

    …to be an independent democracy at the heart of Europe.

    Your quest for freedom has inspired and moved the British people.

    And for the free nations of the world, aid to Ukraine is also an investment in our own collective security.

    Because if Putin wins in Ukraine, he will not stop there.

    And our opponents around the world believe that we…

    …have neither the patience nor resources for long wars.

    So waver now, and we embolden not just Putin…

    …but his allies in North Korea, Iran, and elsewhere.

    That’s why the United Kingdom – and the free world – will continue to stand with Ukraine…

    …as we have since the very beginning of this war.

    Judge our commitment to Ukraine’s freedom not by our words, but by our actions.

    The UK was the first to train Ukrainian troops.

    First in Europe to provide lethal weapons.

    First to commit western battle tanks.

    First to provide long-range weapons.

    But we need to do more.

    Our actions right now will determine the path of the war…

    So, far from our resolve faltering, the United Kingdom is announcing today…

    …the biggest single package of defence aid to Ukraine since the war began, worth £2.5bn.

    This will include:

    More air defence equipment…

    More anti-tank weapons…

    More long-range missiles…

    Thousands of rounds more ammunition and artillery shells…

    Training for thousands more Ukrainian servicemen and women.

    And £200m to build thousands more drones…

    …the single largest package of drones given to Ukraine by any nation.

    In total, since the war began, the UK will have provided almost £12bn of aid to Ukraine.

    And I’m proud that today, President Zelensky and I…

    …have signed a new security agreement…

    …that will form the core of a partnership between our two countries…

    …that will last a hundred years or more.

    This is the first in a series of new, bilateral security assurances promised to Ukraine by 30 countries…

    …at last year’s Vilnius Summit.

    And it says that if Russia ever invades Ukraine again…

    …the UK will come to your aid with swift and sustained security assistance.

    We will provide modern equipment across land, sea, and sky…

    Sanction Russia’s economy…

    And work closely with allies to do so.

    You will not have to ask.

    You will not have to argue for what you need.

    The UK will be there from the first moment to the last.

    And of course, we continue to support Ukraine’s journey to NATO membership.

    You belong in NATO and NATO will be stronger with you.

    I pay tribute to all those whose significant efforts made today’s agreement happen…

    …from the Office of the President, to the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defence, and many others besides.

    President Zelensky and his team serve not only their country but the cause of peace and justice.

    The UK Parliament applauded your courage, resilience, and sincere love of for your country.

    Even at a time of war, you are reforming Ukraine for the better.

    And with your leadership, Ukraine will prevail.

    Volodymyr, the UK stands with you.

    I believe this is the greatest moment in the history of our relationship.

    It extends security guarantees from the UK to Ukraine that are unprecedented.

    It defines our future as allies, working together for the security of Europe.

    And it says that Ukraine’s place is, without doubt, among the free nations of the world.

    Be in no doubt:

    We are not walking away.

    Ours is the unbreakable alliance.

    The nezlamni allianz.

    And just as we stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine…

    …so those same principles guide our actions around the world.

    Let me say a brief word about the situation in the Red Sea.

    Overnight, the Royal Air Force carried out strikes against two Houthi military facilities in Yemen.

    I want to be very clear that these were limited strikes, carefully targeted at launch sites for drones and ballistic missiles.

    Over recent months, the Houthi militia have repeatedly attacked commercial ships in the Red Sea… risking innocent lives and causing huge economic disruption.

    In December, we launched Operation Prosperity Guardian with our allies to bolster maritime security.

    On 3 January, 14 counties issued a clear warning that attacks must cease.

    On 10 January, the UN Security Council passed a resolution condemning the attacks… and highlighting the right of nations to defend their vessels and preserve the freedom of navigation.

    Yet the attacks have continued.

    British and American warships have been targeted.

    That’s why we’ve taken this further, limited action today… in self defence, consistent with the UN Charter.

    In the face of this aggression, we will always stand up for the rule of law.

    Thank you.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Strikes Against Houthi Military Targets

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Strikes Against Houthi Military Targets

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 12 January 2024.

    The Royal Air Force has carried out targeted strikes against military facilities used by Houthi rebels in Yemen.

    In recent months, the Houthi militia have carried out a series of dangerous and destabilising attacks against commercial shipping in the Red Sea, threatening UK and other international ships, causing major disruption to a vital trade route and driving up commodity prices. Their reckless actions are risking lives at sea and exacerbating the humanitarian crisis in Yemen.

    Despite the repeated warnings from the international community, the Houthis have continued to carry out attacks in the Red Sea, including against UK and US warships just this week.

    This cannot stand. The United Kingdom will always stand up for freedom of navigation and the free flow of trade. We have therefore taken limited, necessary and proportionate action in self-defence, alongside the United States with non-operational support from the Netherlands, Canada and Bahrain against targets tied to these attacks, to degrade Houthi military capabilities and protect global shipping.

    The Royal Navy continues to patrol the Red Sea as part of the multinational Operation Prosperity Guardian to deter further Houthi aggression, and we urge them to cease their attacks and take steps to de-escalate.

  • Lord Benyon – 2024 Statement on the Democratic Republic of Congo Presidential Elections

    Lord Benyon – 2024 Statement on the Democratic Republic of Congo Presidential Elections

    The statement made by Lord Benyon on 11 January 2024.

    Minister of State Rt Hon Lord Benyon gave a statement on the process and outcome of the 2023 DRC presidential elections.

    Statement by Minister of State Rt Hon Lord Benyon:

    I would like to congratulate President Tshisekedi on his re-election as President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    The United Kingdom commends DRC voters for their participation in the Presidential elections and their determination to exercise their democratic rights. We also welcome that voting was broadly peaceful and that elections took place on time.

    We also acknowledge issues raised by electoral observation missions regarding the electoral process. I urge the Government of DRC to address these issues transparently and for all candidates to raise complaints or seek redress about the electoral process through peaceful means and engagement with the proper legal and constitutional channels.

    The United Kingdom remains a committed partner to the people of DRC, and I look forward to working constructively with President Tshisekedi and his government in this second term. We fully support the President’s ambition to secure long term peace and prosperity for both DRC and the region and look forward to strengthening our bilateral relationship even further, particularly in trade and investment given the DRC’s participation in the upcoming UK African Investment Summit. I also encourage the President and his government to work with the region to find a peaceful solution to the ongoing conflict and humanitarian challenges in the east of the country and an early return to the regionally led peace processes.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on the Earth

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on the Earth

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 1 January 2024.

    My thoughts are with all those affected by the earthquakes in Japan which have caused such terrible damage.

    Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is a great friend of the UK and we stand ready to support Japan and are monitoring developments closely.

    British nationals in the affected areas should follow the advice of the Japanese authorities.