Daily Mail

How Brexit helped UK lead way in Ukraine

- From Harriet Line in Dnipro

BREXIT has allowed Britain to play a more powerful role in Nato, according to a former White House adviser.

John Bolton will today say that the UK has taken a stronger stance on the invasion of Ukraine than the United States.

And he believes Britain now has an ‘appropriat­e’ part in the Western military alliance, having ditched the ‘smoothie-making, decisionma­king process’ of the EU.

Mr Bolton, who was national security adviser to Donald Trump, is to make the remarks at the launch of a report on Britain’s role in the world after Brexit.

On the Russian invasion of Ukraine, he will say: ‘Britain has taken a leading role in the West’s efforts to defeat this aggression and to make the point to would-be aggressors around the world.

‘In many respects, I say with some envy, taking a stronger and more effective view than the USA.’

The report, from the Centre for Brexit Policy think-tank, calls for a big increase in defence spending to sustain and strengthen the UK’s ‘special relationsh­ip’ with the US.

Mr Bolton was sacked by Mr Trump after spending much of his 17-month tenure trying to restrain the president on the foreign stage.

He will say closer ties between the UK and US are a ‘high priority’. ‘I am particular­ly glad that one consequenc­e of Brexit is that the UK can have an appropriat­e, fully independen­t role in Nato – not constraine­d by the smoothie-making, decision-making process of the European Union,’ he will say.

‘We can see today all too graphicall­y how important Nato is, with Finland and Sweden breaking decarrived ades of neutrality to apply. We need a strong Britain working closely with the USA and Nato.’

The report, compiled by about 20 politician­s, foreign policy experts and academics, says Britain’s military capability is one of the key pillars underpinni­ng the formal and informal ties that bind the two countries together.

But it says the UK’s ability to ‘do things no other allied government can do’ – which is of value to the US – is being strained by the planned cuts to the size of its armed forces.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has also called for a rise in defence spending thanks to the ‘dangerous world’ that now exists. And he has described the Army’s land fleet as ‘woefully behind its peers’.

Away from the battlefiel­d, the report warns of ‘active anti-American sentiment in the UK’, predominan­tly on the Left, but also on the Right of the political spectrum.

‘There is no doubt that today, anti-Americanis­m is more powerful in the UK than Anglophobi­a is in the USA,’ it says.

‘We should aim for a mature UKUSA special relationsh­ip, one that recognises the indispensa­bility of our alliance, and in which both sides work to refute the lies that seek to poison the alliance.

‘But also one which recognises that both partners have other friends and interests in the world, and that fostering those partnershi­ps actually serves the health of the special relationsh­ip by preventing it from trying to be the be all and end all of policy.’

It says Britain needs to push back ‘far more effectivel­y than it has done to date’ against ‘ misunderst­andings’ of the Good Friday peace agreement, which it claims have caused ‘much harm to Leftwing views of the UK’ in the US.

‘Dangerous world that now exists’

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