Britain’s ambassador to Washington resigned on Wednesday after Donald Trump labeled him “stupid” and “wacky” following the release of confidential memos from the envoy in which he branded the U.S. president’s administration inept.

Memos from Kim Darroch were leaked to a British Sunday newspaper, infuriating Trump who launched a
stinging Twitter attack on both the envoy and British Prime Minister Theresa May who had given him her full support.
In a growing spat between the two close
allies, Trump said he would no longer deal with Darroch and called May
“foolish”. In his resignation letter, Darroch said his position was no longer
tenable.
“Since the leak of official
documents from this Embassy there has been a great deal of speculation
surrounding my position and the duration of my remaining term as ambassador,”
he wrote.
“I want to put an end to that
speculation,” he added. “ The current situation is making it impossible for me
to carry out my role as I would like.”
In his confidential memos
dating from 2017 to the present, Darroch, 65, had said reports of in-fighting
in the White House were “mostly true” and last month described confusion within
the administration over Trump’s decision to call off a military strike on Iran.
“We don’t really believe this
Administration is going to become substantially more normal; less
dysfunctional; less unpredictable; less faction-riven; less diplomatically
clumsy and inept,” Darroch wrote in one cable.
May told parliament that ministers had
expressed their backing for Darroch, a career diplomat who was due to leave his
post anyway at the end of the year.
“I have told him it is a
matter of great regret that he has felt it necessary to leave his position as
ambassador to Washington,” she said. “The whole cabinet rightly gave its full
support to Sir Kim on Tuesday.”
The souring of relations
between Britain and the United States comes at a particularly unwelcome time
for London, which is mired in the details of how and when to leave the European
Union, a departure currently scheduled for Oct. 31.
Britain is hoping to strike a major
post-Brexit trade deal with Washington as one of the upsides of leaving the
bloc.
May herself is due to step
down as prime minister by the end of July and while one of the two contenders
to replace her, foreign minister Jeremy Hunt, had said Darroch should keep his
job, the other, frontrunner Boris Johnson, had pointedly declined to do so.
No comments:
Post a Comment