The Prague Post - Flattery and pragmatism: UK plan to stay on Trump's good side

EUR -
AED 4.219139
AFN 82.403092
ALL 98.729742
AMD 448.134607
ANG 2.070253
AOA 1053.91474
ARS 1254.970392
AUD 1.795401
AWG 2.067623
AZN 1.955086
BAM 1.955399
BBD 2.319124
BDT 139.561364
BGN 1.955517
BHD 0.4329
BIF 3415.399205
BMD 1.148679
BND 1.502013
BOB 7.936957
BRL 6.660499
BSD 1.148664
BTN 97.795974
BWP 15.691917
BYN 3.755929
BYR 22514.114397
BZD 2.307227
CAD 1.590444
CDF 3304.749956
CHF 0.931918
CLF 0.028752
CLP 1103.317632
CNY 8.387982
CNH 8.403399
COP 4915.394026
CRC 577.481508
CUC 1.148679
CUP 30.440002
CVE 110.24238
CZK 25.072245
DJF 204.52735
DKK 7.465474
DOP 68.615921
DZD 151.542932
EGP 58.587475
ERN 17.23019
ETB 153.246751
FJD 2.586021
FKP 0.858412
GBP 0.858844
GEL 3.153125
GGP 0.858412
GHS 17.744274
GIP 0.858412
GMD 82.139786
GNF 9944.959424
GTQ 8.848184
GYD 240.957972
HKD 8.911064
HNL 29.77689
HRK 7.530395
HTG 150.239173
HUF 409.314634
IDR 19346.458909
ILS 4.27133
IMP 0.858412
INR 97.866845
IQD 1504.691257
IRR 48388.115317
ISK 144.894544
JEP 0.858412
JMD 182.052645
JOD 0.81476
JPY 161.087372
KES 149.040759
KGS 99.791537
KHR 4598.816169
KMF 497.958243
KPW 1033.880648
KRW 1636.787929
KWD 0.351162
KYD 0.957154
KZT 595.697771
LAK 24802.399424
LBP 102910.508687
LKR 344.469319
LRD 229.710868
LSL 21.411107
LTL 3.391752
LVL 0.694825
LYD 6.242719
MAD 10.587228
MDL 19.64714
MGA 5106.640987
MKD 61.485085
MMK 2411.701328
MNT 4066.241766
MOP 9.177217
MRU 45.507662
MUR 51.128109
MVR 17.684027
MWK 1991.708666
MXN 22.577579
MYR 5.044427
MZN 73.406341
NAD 21.411107
NGN 1842.400951
NIO 42.271326
NOK 11.892386
NPR 156.482892
NZD 1.915084
OMR 0.442265
PAB 1.148494
PEN 4.257027
PGK 4.752025
PHP 65.020421
PKR 322.416044
PLN 4.279983
PYG 9195.113283
QAR 4.187141
RON 4.976886
RSD 117.215949
RUB 93.42041
RWF 1654.860444
SAR 4.30866
SBD 9.564782
SCR 16.3455
SDG 689.762882
SEK 10.916686
SGD 1.502139
SHP 0.902682
SLE 26.161236
SLL 24087.212054
SOS 656.465302
SRD 42.673568
STD 23775.342459
SVC 10.049938
SYP 14935.071967
SZL 21.39461
THB 38.181525
TJS 12.23279
TMT 4.020378
TND 3.401002
TOP 2.690322
TRY 43.94882
TTD 7.801399
TWD 37.33784
TZS 3084.203974
UAH 47.767199
UGX 4204.137366
USD 1.148679
UYU 48.500048
UZS 14827.957496
VES 92.880635
VND 29848.431766
VUV 138.277951
WST 3.20172
XAF 655.788186
XAG 0.035177
XAU 0.000332
XCD 3.104363
XDR 0.815516
XOF 655.822434
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.713476
ZAR 21.386345
ZMK 10339.514707
ZMW 32.705581
ZWL 369.874268
  • CMSC

    0.1500

    21.86

    +0.69%

  • JRI

    0.2600

    12.39

    +2.1%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    36.42

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    -0.0400

    22.34

    -0.18%

  • RIO

    0.9800

    59.45

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    9.56

    +1.46%

  • NGG

    0.7700

    73.67

    +1.05%

  • BCC

    1.5100

    92.31

    +1.64%

  • RBGPF

    0.1400

    63.59

    +0.22%

  • CMSD

    0.0930

    21.913

    +0.42%

  • BTI

    0.1650

    42.715

    +0.39%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    67.65

    +1.11%

  • VOD

    0.3290

    9.559

    +3.44%

  • BP

    0.4400

    28.52

    +1.54%

  • RYCEF

    0.2100

    9.5

    +2.21%

  • RELX

    0.6600

    52.73

    +1.25%

Flattery and pragmatism: UK plan to stay on Trump's good side
Flattery and pragmatism: UK plan to stay on Trump's good side / Photo: MANDEL NGAN - AFP

Flattery and pragmatism: UK plan to stay on Trump's good side

With its flattering rhetoric, leniency in responding to US trade threats and alignment with Washington this week at a summit on artificial intelligence, the United Kingdom has signalled a willingness to take President Donald Trump's side over Europe.

Text size:

"The UK has no closer ally than America," Britain's newly appointed ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, said on Tuesday, in a video overflowing with superlatives posted on Elon Musk's X platform.

The Labour party grandee, formerly a European commissioner, had told the BBC on Monday that Britain has "to respect and understand what drives (Trump), what his mandate is to do, and how his allies need to adjust sometimes".

David Lammy, Britain's top diplomat, also lavished praise on Trump last month, saying he displayed "incredible grace and generosity" and was "very funny, very friendly, very warm" during their meeting last September.

The comments were somewhat more complimentary than previous remarks by Lammy in which he called Trump a "woman-hating, neo-Nazi-sympathising sociopath".

The conciliatory tone is "likely to be calculated at keeping the UK out of Trump's crosshairs when it comes to tariffs and any other forms of aggressive US foreign policy," said Michael Plouffe, an associate professor at UCL university in London.

Jonathan Portes, an economist at King's College London, said "the UK, as usual, is trying to have its cake and eat it".

"This is perfectly rational and sensible," he added. "It is hoping to avoid the worst excesses of Trump at the same time as it pursues its rapprochement with the EU."

- 'Makes sense' -

The European Union remains by far Britain's largest trading partner, but London has dreamt of a trade agreement with Washington, which Prime Minister Keir Starmer recently called for, since leaving the bloc.

Faced with the frenetic start to Trump's presidency and his unpredictable diplomatic manoeuvrings, Starmer has in recent days made strategic choices to distance himself from the Europeans.

There is no question of Britain joining the EU's countermeasures promised on Tuesday in response to Trump's newly announced 25-percent customs duties on steel and aluminium, which the United States will impose from March 12.

Britain instead says that it is "engaging" with the United States on the details of the tariffs.

"What British industry needs and deserves is not a knee-jerk reaction but a cool and clear-headed sense of the UK's national interest based on a full assessment of all the implications of the US's actions," said British trade minister Douglas Alexander.

London also sided against the EU on the crucial issue of artificial intelligence, teaming up with the United States in refusing to sign the final declaration of the AI summit in Paris on Tuesday.

"We felt the declaration didn't provide enough practical clarity on global governance, nor sufficiently address harder questions around national security and the challenge AI poses to it," said a British government spokesperson.

This "cautious approach to the US" over AI is aligned with Starmer's promise to make the Britain a world leader in the sector, said Plouffe.

It also "makes sense" that Starmer would avoid "antagonism with the state that is home to three of the leading AI providers", he added.

"This may win some favour with Trump" at a time when the digital giants, who have become the Republican's close allies, are locked in regulatory disputes with the EU.

"I think he's done a very good job thus far," Trump said of Starmer in late January. "I like him a lot."

But can the British strategy work in the long term?

"That depends on just how confrontational Trump is with the EU and whether he wants to try to lever the UK away from the EU," Portes said.

"Since nobody -- including him -- knows what he's going to do, I certainly don't," he added.

Y.Blaha--TPP