The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Brexit diplomacy: thaw, not Frost

- Editorial

It is usually worth paying more attention to what ministers do than what they say, especially when the subject is Europe. At the start of this week, the Brexit minister, David Frost, told the House of Lords that Britain was unafraid to invoke article 16 – the emergency suspension clause – of the trade and cooperatio­n agreement (TCA) that Boris Johnson signed with Brussels last year. Days later, the government deferred the introducti­on of customs controls on goods being imported from the continent.

The message is consistent to the extent that Lord Frost’s comments and waiving of border regulation both demonstrat­e that the UK was unready for Brexit on the terms it negotiated. But there is a difference be

tween menacing rhetoric that is meant to assert UK power and policy action that surrenders border control.

Mr Johnson’s government is giving European exporters a freedom of access to UK markets that British exporters do not enjoy when shipping wares the other way. That will put some British businesses at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge and burden all with uncertaint­y. It punishes responsibl­e traders who invested in preparatio­n for customs checks, and now wonder why they bothered.

Postponing border checks is a pragmatic measure to avoid any further disruption to supply chains, especially in the run-up to Christmas, by which time it might be harder for the government to blame empty shelves on the pandemic.

Viewed from Brussels, that flexibilit­y looks like a sign that Britain is grudgingly adapting to the facts of life outside the single market. The same is not true of Lord Frost’s article 16 threat. It came across as a pointed riposte to the European Commission vice-president, Maroš Šefčovič, who had visited Belfast a few days earlier and called for a cooling of rhetoric over the Northern Ireland protocol. For the Brexit minister to turn up the heat immediatel­y again shows the limits to pragmatism in Mr Johnson’s cabinet.

This is a deliberate strategy derived from the view that sabre-rattling gets results with Brussels. Lord Frost is an alumnus of the hardline school of Brexit that thinks the EU will grant concession­s if it sees the UK charging eagerly towards a diplomatic conflagrat­ion. According to this theory, showing readiness to rip up the TCA will hasten renegotiat­ion over Northern Ireland. Aside from being misguided (wholesale treaty change is not on the EU’s agenda), that plan is appallingl­y reckless. If Britain starts burning its bridges with Brussels, it risks also setting fire to the Good Friday agreement. Political arson on that scale would bring Washington into the picture – and not on Mr Johnson’s side.

It is easy to see how the UK got hooked on brinkmansh­ip. Brexit is old news in Brussels and would hardly be on EU leaders’ agendas at all unless Britain kept foisting it there. Having Lord Frost as a persistent nuisance is a way to grab attention and get things moving, but it does not change the balance of power between a lone country and a continent. Sabre-rattling over article 16, effectivel­y threatenin­g a full trade war, will not improve the terms of any compromise that is eventually reached. Lord Frost is wasting his time and squanderin­g goodwill in the process.

He is also replicatin­g Mr Johnson’s approach to Brexit before the deal was done. But the treaty is settled. The task now is to rebuild relations that were strained in the years of belligeren­ce before withdrawal was confirmed. Lord Frost is re-enacting battles that the prime minister has fought once before, believing they ended in victory. Under that delusion he is faithfully serving his boss, but not his country.

 ?? Photograph: Matt Dunham/AP ?? ‘Lord Frost is an alumnus of the hardline school of Brexit that thinks the EU will grant concession­s if it sees the UK charging eagerly towards a diplomatic conflagrat­ion.’
Photograph: Matt Dunham/AP ‘Lord Frost is an alumnus of the hardline school of Brexit that thinks the EU will grant concession­s if it sees the UK charging eagerly towards a diplomatic conflagrat­ion.’

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