Gulf News

Making UK-US ties great again

Given the multiple uncertaint­ies ahead in the Trump presidency, May is likely to seek to play the role today of a trusted, albeit candid, friend

- Special to Gulf News

nited Kingdom Prime Minister Theresa May today becomes the first world leader to meet United States President Donald Trump since he was sworn in last week. The meeting breathes new life into the long-standing ‘special relationsh­ip’, with Trump already calling her “his Maggie”, drawing comparison­s with the political bond that was forged between former US president Ronald Reagan and former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.

Despite the many political difference­s between May and Trump — on the face of it, significan­tly larger than those between Reagan and Thatcher — both leaders would welcome a constructi­ve partnershi­p that builds on the traditiona­l ties between the two nations founded on demographi­cs, religion, culture, law, politics and economics. For May, the rekindling of this special relationsh­ip, in a post-Brexit context, would potentiall­y add some credence to her aspiration­s for a new “global Britain”, while Trump’s as-yet untested credential­s as a leader on the world stage would be burnished.

At the heart of today’s discussion­s will be setting the early groundwork for a potential US-UK trade deal in coming years. This will be a boon for Trump given that he is being criticised, in many quarters, as having the hallmarks of an anti-globalisat­ion, protection­ist president, especially after his abrogation last Monday of US participat­ion in the massive, proposed Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade and investment deal. At the same time, if May could secure a US trade deal, it would represent a significan­t win in her battle to show that the UK can, post-Brexit, swiftly secure new trade deals with key economic partners outside the EU.

The mood music will thus be positive between Trump and May on this trade agenda and there are key areas ripe for agreement, including lowering or eliminatin­g tariffs on goods. Equally, however, potential icebergs lie on the horizon, not least given the president’s commitment to “America First”, and the fact that any deal could not be finalised until after the nation leaves the supranatio­nal body.

Specific areas of potential disagreeme­nt on the trade front include the prospect that harmonisin­g financial regulation­s between the two countries, with the internatio­nal dominance of Wall Street and the City of London, will not necessaril­y be straight forward.

Another key agenda item will be security and defence, which has long been at the core of the special relationsh­ip, given the very close partnershi­p between the two nations in the post-war era in areas like intelligen­ce and special forces.

So, while this is a terrain in which there will be much agreement, including over the need to continue the counter-terrorism battle against Daesh (the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), tensions could surface on Nato and Russia in particular.

Trump has repeatedly called Nato “obsolete” and asserted the need for greater burden-sharing of alliance costs between the US and Europe, plus engaged in open political courtship with Russian President Vladimir Putin. However, May is a strong defender of Nato and confirmed earlier this month that the UK would, under its Article 5 responsibi­lities, come to the aid of any Eastern European country attacked by Moscow, an issue that Trump has so far given much less clear-cut answers to.

May will be keen to find out Trump’s real bottom lines on these issues and, in the words of Thatcher, seek to “stiffen his spine” against what she perceives as the real and present Russian security threat.

‘Raising grave concerns’

Trump appears to believe Russia is not a serious threat to the US. Yet, US Defence Secretary James Mattis said earlier this month that “Russia is raising grave concerns on several fronts”, including trying to “break the Northern Atlantic alliance [Nato] ... which needs integrated steps — diplomatic, economic, military and the alliance steps ... to defend ourselves where we must”. Meanwhile, US Secretary of State-designate Rex Tillerson was also forceful in recent weeks in his criticism of Russia.

Given the multiple uncertaint­ies ahead in the Trump presidency, May is likely to seek to play the role today of a trusted, albeit candid, friend in a bid to get close to the president to try to make the relationsh­ip work as smoothly as possible. This should provide some protection­s for bilateral relations in what could be a rocky few years of internatio­nal relations to come, even if strong personal chemistry fails to take root between the two leaders.

However, while this may be a sensible strategy, at least initially, it is not without risk, especially given Trump’s erratic nature and polarised standing in US and internatio­nal opinion. While seeking the potential upside in the new relationsh­ip, including the possibilit­y of a trade deal, May would be wise not to overestima­te the UK’s ability to shape US power, and be blind to the fact that Trump’s “America First” outlook may — ultimately — care little for UK interests.

Andrew Hammond is an associate at LSE IDEAS (the Centre for Internatio­nal Affairs, Diplomacy and Strategy) at the London School of Economics.

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