Lest we forget, the EU has helped bring peace to Europe
As Europe remembers the horrors of war this weekend, we must reflect on Brexit’s effect on our ability to safeguard peace in the future.
British diplomacy is being marginalised by Brexit
Brexiters promised opportunities for global influence after Brexit. Our allies cutting us out of key decisions is a sign of things to come.
Hunt’s Soviet jibe ignores years of EU peace and prosperity...
EU has provided framework for democracy for countries escaping dictatorships. Hunt’s comments are “unworthy” of foreign secretary.
No deal would be a huge geo-strategic mistake
Foreign secretary is right to warn of risks. Crashing out would undermine relations with EU, relevance to US and damage UK itself.
The Trump soap opera and Brexit
The US president said all the wrong things about Nato, Russia and Brexit. His word on future trade relations is simply unreliable.
UK heading for security train wreck after Brexit
Unless the government drops some of its red lines, security is bound to suffer both here and across the Channel.
It’s only Putin who’ll get a ‘Brexit dividend’
Hammond will today expose May’s lie. Truth is Brexit will leave us without money for schools, homes, farmers - and looking at defence cuts.
May should fess up: Brexit will make fighting crime harder
EU’s Brexit negotiator gives UK a reality check. Thanks to PM’s red lines, we will lose access to arrest warrant and criminal data.
Trump’s Nato bluster risks all our security
Reckless tweets by the president linking Nato commitments to trade threatens UK security. Whatever Brexiters say, he is not our friend.
Brexit boon for criminals and terrorists fleeing UK justice
Just because May says UK will stay in European Arrest Warrant doesn’t mean we can. Brexit is throwing away valuable crime-fighting tool.
War of words ups post-Brexit security risk
Brexit means Brexit, but UK won’t accept that makes security cooperation harder. Does Brexit mean putting UK and EU citizens at risk?
Brexit is about security too, stupid
A furtively published “framework” for future security co-operation begs fundamental questions of finance and dispute resolution.