The Daily Telegraph

Brexit myopia means the world is passing us by

While we haggle with the EU, from Zimbabwe to the Middle East a vacuum in foreign policy has emerged

- CON COUGHLIN FOLLOW Con Coughlin on Twitter @concoughli­n; READ MORE at telegraph.co.uk/opinion

The entire British political establishm­ent might be fixated with the Brexit negotiatio­ns, but this obsession with our future relationsh­ip with the EU means we are in danger of ignoring a number of important developmen­ts taking place elsewhere in the world.

The political travails of Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, for example, should occasion a spirited debate about whether Britain can take advantage of her difficulti­es to shift the balance of power in Europe in London’s favour. Instead all we have is a mealy-mouthed discussion about whether it means we can save on our Brexit bill.

It is a similar situation in Zimbabwe where, as the architect of the country’s post-colonial political settlement, one would have thought the British government had a crucial role to play in orchestrat­ing the arrangemen­ts for the post-mugabe era. Instead, as former foreign secretary William Hague noted on these pages yesterday, we have been reduced to the status of impotent bystanders as the Chinese, whose entry into the Zimbabwean political landscape is recent and commercial­ly driven, find themselves conducting Robert Mugabe’s demise.

Syria is another example of Britain’s declining influence. After the important contributi­on the British military has made to defeating Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil), London should have a voice in any peace settlement. Yet the proposed peace deal is being hammered out between Moscow and Washington, with British officials reduced to the status of spectators on the sidelines.

Given the importance of the Brexit negotiatio­ns to the nation’s future, it is understand­able that ministers feel they have enough on their plate without having to bother worrying about time-consuming diversions.

Yet by taking a back seat in deliberati­ons on so many issues relating to the non-brexit world, Britain is in danger of seeing a further erosion in its global influence. And it also runs the risk of not taking seriously the adverse impact that some of the more dramatic changes could have on our national wellbeing.

This week’s warning, for example, by Conservati­ve MP Robert Jenrick about the “blind spot” Britain has over Iran, and its malevolent influence in the Middle East, is a case in point. In an article for Telegraph.co.uk, Mr Jenrick said MPS were paying insufficie­nt attention to Iran’s growing military strength, as well as its de-stabilisin­g influence in the region through support for terrorism.

This is an important issue, as it affects Britain’s long-standing ties with moderate Sunni Gulf states, and underestim­ating the threat posed by the region’s Shia superpower could seriously damage our own security considerat­ions.

This failure to grasp the region’s rapidly changing dynamics, moreover, has been evident in London this week where the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), one of Britain’s leading military think tanks, has taken the surprising decision to invite the Qatari foreign minister as a key speaker at a counter-terrorism conference.

Qatar is currently subject to a boycott by neighbouri­ng Gulf states, such as Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the Emirates, over its links to Iran, as well as allegation­s that it is funding Islamist militants with a pronounced antiwester­n agenda.

Among those said to be beneficiar­ies of Doha’s largesse is Abdul Hakim Belhaj, a renowned Libyan extremist who is currently suing MI6 and former foreign secretary Jack Straw over allegation­s that they were involved in his torture when Colonel Muammar Gaddafi was still in power.

Belhaj has now been accused of trying to block the extraditio­n of Hashem Abedi, the brother of Manchester Arena bomber Salman Abedi, whom British police want to question about his alleged role in the suicide attack that killed 22 people and injured scores more.

Given the extent of the charge list against the Qataris, the sensible move would be to ask Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al-thani, the Qatari foreign minister, why his country is playing such a key role in financing and supporting Islamist extremists.

Those are certainly the sort of questions the families of those killed and injured in the Manchester atrocity would like to hear the answers to.

Yet such is the state of confusion in British foreign policy-making circles today that, instead of being held to account for his country’s actions, Mr al-thani has instead been invited to share a stage with such luminaries of the British intelligen­ce establishm­ent as Sir John Scarlett, the former head of MI6, and Paddy Mcguinness, the deputy head of our National Security Council and one of Theresa May’s closest advisers on intelligen­ce issues.

The Qatari foreign minister may well, given his country’s expertise in the matter, have some interestin­g insights to share on dealing with Islamist extremists, but his appearance in London this week says more about the dangerous policy vacuum that currently prevails in Whitehall on any issue that does not relate directly to Brexit.

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