Sitting by the phone, waiting for him to call? The UK, France and telephone diplomacy
The
tragic events in Syria over the last couple of days, where reported use of
chemical weapons has sparked a major international crisis, has seen commentary
on the manner that Presidents Trump and Macron have spoken regularly. There
have been suggestions online that the way in which these two have spoken is in
marked contrast to the UK Prime Minister and that this somehow reflects a lack
of UK influence on the international response.
The
role of the Prime Minister in Government is twofold – it is partly to set the
leadership and direction for the Country during their time in office. They will
provide an overall vision of what policy they wish HMG to deliver, with
Ministers in Departments working to agreed strategies and goals to help meet
this vision. They also serve as an influence instrument of last resort, able to
intervene in a situation to persuade others to take courses of action to help
meet wider Government goals.
The diary
of a leader is incredibly busy – it is a 24/7 job that requires an extensive
office staff working issues and all competing for the coveted reward of ‘diary
time’ (e.g. getting the Prime Minister to carry out a meeting, call or
commitment on their behalf). Every moment spent on that commitment is time that
cannot be spent on other roles – hence the constant battle to balance the many
demands on the diary.
Calls between
senior leaders happen in a highly scripted manner – one only has to watch the
scene in ‘A Very British Coup’ as the UK Prime Minister deviates from his carefully
planned script during a call with the US President in order to discuss the
football, to realise that they happen for specific reasons. It is rare, if not
impossible, for leaders to ring up for ‘social chats’ or on the spur of the
moment – these are set piece events that require significant co-ordination
across Government to ensure they are effective.
During
an international crisis there is a need for nations to work in close alignment
and discuss policy options and ensure other nations not only understand their
views, but that these are communicated between interlocuters and considered
during policy planning sessions. Knowing that Country X feels strongly on
specific issues but is prepared to do a specific course of action is essential
if you are planning a combined response.
However
the reality is that if you enjoy a genuinely close or ‘special’ relationship between
countries, then you need very few senior calls between heads of state to happen
to ensure that your policy positions are communicated. Instead the
conversations have already happened at working level, been reflected in policy documents
and senior decision makers such as Ministers or the Prime Minister or President
are aware of how another state is thinking and will respond. The mark of a
truly close alliance is when you don’t need to schedule repeated calls between
heads of Government to set out your views on the situation because your civil
servants and military officers have already communicated it to the right people
in the system.
The UK
enjoys an exceptionally close relationship with the US across a range of issues
in Government, particularly in the field of Defence and International Security.
It is common for many UK personnel to build lifelong friendships and close
working relationships with their US counterparts (and Australian, Canadian and Kiwis
too), built from a position of mutual trust and respect. This means that when a
crisis hits, the bureaucracy is already able to liaise and share assessments,
opinions and views on policy at working level.
By
contrast scheduling several calls between Heads of State strongly implies that
the working relationship and mutual trust at desk level does not exist. While
there may be some bilateral exchanges, it implies that effective communication
and sharing of information is not going on. More importantly it implies that
you are having to wheel out the big guns to make asks of access and share views
on the situation.
This
may sound a minor point, but if in a crisis you need to speak twice in two days
at head of state level to co-ordinate a response, then your two governments have
a less than optimally close working relationship between officials. If they
did, then the information would be in the system and there would be no need to
lobby and exchange views.
Macron
speaking to Trump twice does not suggest that Macron is more influential than
May, rather it suggests that the French Government is being forced to rely on its
biggest hitter to influence the US system to deliver requests and ensure the
President is aware of their views. By contrast the UK/US relationship means that
this sort of access is perhaps more of a given, without having to rely on the
PM to do it.
![]() |
What Next?
Whatever
response is considered as part of the planning for Syria, it is inevitable that
there will be people who will see this as some kind of ‘influence war’ between
the UK and France to see who is more important in Washington, and then use the
internet to debate at length whether the Special Relationship is dead.
The reality
is more straightforward. Military operations in coalitions are complex to
organise, require a lot of deconfliction, co-ordination and effort to ensure
that the right targets are struck, that the right ISTAR and logistics support
is available and that there is minimal risk to friendly forces.
The UK
has a range of assets that could be used – speculation has been focused on
Storm Shadow and TLAM operations as one means of response. But this is not a
willy waving contest to score points on the internet. Any operation will match available
capabilities to the delivery of the desired effect. It could be that a proposed
package does not require UK or French kinetic involvement. Or it could be that
France provides kinetic support, whilst the UK provides critical logistics and
ISTAR capability.
It is
easy to predict now that if this happened, the internet would be alive with
posters claiming that somehow the UK was ‘irrelevant’ – even if the missions
could not go ahead without access to UK Air to Air Refuelling or access to
airbases. You do not have to strike to be a critical player in a coalition.
One of
the key challenges for NATO is persuading member states to invest in mutually
complementary capabilities, not all focusing on having one cool thing in
abundance. The reality is that it takes
a lot of different enablers to deliver kinetic effect, and that the UK is a
world leader in many of these fields and has exceptional experience in working
with allies in complex airspace to do this.
If the
UK decides to support any form of retaliation, then the capabilities, access
and wider diplomatic, political and influence enablers that it possesses will be
critically important in assuring success in the campaign.
What
Does All This Mean?
Despite
what some may think, the UK is not suddenly adrift and friendless in Washington
and nor is the Five Eyes community about to be superseded by the French. Not
speaking to POTUS for 48hrs does not mean that London has no influence, on the contrary
it is inevitable that the key decision takers and policy makers have been
constantly speaking to their US (and other) allies for some time now.
International
Relations may be seen in some corners of the internet as a kind of ranking
contest, but in reality it is about being able to use the levers at your disposal
to influence and inform the thinking and decision making process of other
states. The UK is very well placed to enjoy outstanding access into the US
system without having to wheel in the Prime Minister to speak to POTUS every
time civil servants need to compare views with Washington opposite numbers. Very
few other countries can claim likewise.
Similarly
after nearly 75 years of working closely together on military operations all
over the world, the UK and US are able to recognise that not every operation necessarily
needs the UK to be front and centre. The potent force enablers, ISTAR,
logistics and other supporting elements available in the event of a crisis will
be just as vital, and just as (if not more) appreciated than a squadron of fast
jet aircraft duplicating an already extant in theatre capability.
We sit
on the verge of potentially very interesting times. Let us not be distracted by a game of ‘top Trumps’
over who is speaking to Donald most frequently. Lets instead focus on ensuring
that if called upon, the UK is able to help play an appropriate part in working
with other civilised nations to tackle the nightmare of barbaric atrocities inflicted
by other less civilised nations and their despotic allies.
Excellent insight as usual. On Newsnight Julian Lewis was firmly of the view that the UK should not be drawn into military action as the opposition in Syria is effectively controlled by Al-Qaeda. In his opinion, we would simply be swapping 'monsters for maniacs'. Meanwhile, in the DT Con Coughlin is yet again beating his war drum and claiming that it is 'make or break time' for Britain. In other words, we must seize the opportunity to prove ourselves by backing the US. The point is, are punitive or beefed-up 'punitive+' actions (i.e. more than previously but nothing like enough to have any real effect beyond the symbolic) likely to do more harm than good?
ReplyDeleteI still do not see any reliable evidence for a NBC strike in Ghouta by the Syrian Government. My ancient Int Corps intelligence reliability matrix puts it at very doubtful at best. The extreme partiality of the MSM especially the BBC is worrying to say the least.
ReplyDeleteThere's no correct answer to Syria, just bad options. Not intervening when civilians are being attacked is hard to stomach but intervention is unlikely to topple the regime and comes with the risk of escalation with Iran and russia. Another good article from Sir H.
ReplyDeleteYet again the way you explain the inner workings of gov/ MOD is fasinating and always balanced, if only our media could explain such situations with as much clarity to the general public . Thanks again. Ex RN myself . 1999-2013.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed over read your blog post. Your blog have nice information,
ReplyDeleteI got good ideas from this amazing blog.
เนื้อเพลงประกอบซีรีย์
เนื้อเพลงลูกทุ่ง
Grammar
นานาสาระ