Daily Mail

MI6 ‘doesn’t trust Boris’

Security services wary of Foreign Secretary (and don’t like his jokes)

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

BRITAIN’S spies are ‘wary’ of sharing informatio­n with Boris Johnson because they do not trust the Foreign Secretary, it was claimed last night.

Officials at the Foreign Office are also unhappy with Mr Johnson’s style and behaviour, according to the political journal New Statesman.

Yesterday the Foreign Secretary was forced to defend his approach to humour, hitting back at suggestion­s his jokes were damaging Britain’s relationsh­ips with other countries. He told MPs: ‘Telling jokes is often a very effective way of getting a diplomatic message across.’

It came after Tory MP Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee, warned Mr Johnson that it was ‘really, really hard to do cross-cultural humour’.

Mr Johnson was criticised last month for saying that the Libyan town of Sirte – a former Islamic State stronghold – could be ‘ the next Dubai’ once they ‘clear the dead bodies away’.

Last night the Left-wing New Statesman revealed a string of diplomats had little confidence in the Foreign Secretary’s style.

The article said: ‘Even his ministeria­l team at the Foreign Office is said to be unhappy.

‘The intelligen­ce services are believed to be wary of sharing sensitive informatio­n with him, and on occasion relations with his instinctiv­ely Europhile civil servants have been strained.’

It quotes one source as saying: ‘There are moments when he says, “Come on, we’ve got to make this work. Stop being gloom-mongers.”’

Former Hong Kong governor ‘Chancer’: Boris Johnson Lord Patten said: ‘ He seems unable to pursue a serious argument without resorting to mopheaded witticisms.

‘If you were concerned about the principles and vision and long-term interests of Britain, you would not regard him as your pin-up. This is an office once held by people like Carrington, Hurd, Douglas-Home, Callaghan and Bevin. What on Earth has become of us?’

Former Tory MP Lord Patten also accused Mr Johnson of spreading fake news when he was The Daily Telegraph’s Brussels correspond­ent. ‘As a journalist in Brussels, he was one of the greatest exponents of fake journalism,’ he said.

A former British ambassador called him ‘the least deserving and least qualified foreign secretary of modern times, who has successful­ly lived down to all expectatio­ns’. Another said: ‘Churchill would have thought he was a second-rate chancer.’

A senior European diplomat said Mr Johnson was ‘not taken seriously as a foreign policy actor’ and was damaging Brit- ish interests – while many of his European counterpar­ts ‘positively dislike him’.

Sir Nigel Sheinwald, a former ambassador to the US and the European Union, said: ‘His style gets in the way of handling foreign relations in a serious, responsibl­e way at a time of real difficulty for this country.

‘I don’t think he’s been at all helpful to the UK national interest, and I think that’s very regrettabl­e indeed.’

Mr Johnson appeared before Mr Tugendhat’s committee yesterday, where he said it was ‘a little bit condescend­ing’ to think those in other countries did not have a sense of humour.

‘Sometimes actually people greatly appreciate you are talking to them in an informal way while subtly getting the point across,’ Mr Johnson said.

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