British Ambassador Kim Darroch speaks during a National Economists Club event at the British Embassy in Washington, Friday, Oct. 20, 2017.

British Ambassador Kim Darroch speaks during a National Economists Club event at the British Embassy in Washington, Friday, Oct. 20, 2017. AP Photo/Sait Serkan Gurbuz

Britain’s Options for Its Ambassador: Defend or Dismiss

The U.K. is left with two seemingly impossible choices after President Trump’s assertion that “we will no longer deal with” Sir Kim Darroch.

Whatever Britain gained from feting President Donald Trump during last month’s state visit, it appears to have swiftly lost: This week, President Trump announced that the U.S. “will no longer deal with” Britain’s ambassador to Washington after a leak to a British newspaper revealed that the envoy, in confidential correspondence to his government dating back to 2017, described the White House as “inept” and “uniquely dysfunctional.”

Though Trump stopped short of declaring Sir Kim Darroch persona non grata, his broadside suggests the “special relationship” between the two countries has reached a new low. It also leaves Britain with two seemingly impossible choices: Stand up for Darroch and risk further deterioration in its alliance with the U.S. at a time when it needs it most, or fire him and be seen as kowtowing to the whims of a foreign leader.

Britain appears to be leaning toward the former—for now. After saying that Prime Minister Theresa May maintains “full confidence” in the ambassador, Downing Street reaffirmed that Darroch’s words “do not reflect the closeness of, and the esteem in which we hold, the relationship” with the U.S. At the same time, it noted the importance of ambassadors being able to “provide honest, unvarnished assessments of the politics in their country.”

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This means that the decision of what to do with Darroch, whose post in Washington isn’t due to conclude until the new year, will ultimately fall to whoever succeeds May as prime minister at the end of this month: Boris Johnson or Jeremy Hunt.

The decision won’t be easy for either man. To keep Darroch in his post would mean to potentially undermine Britain’s place in Washington at a time where there’s already plenty dividing the two countries. Despite their long-standing defense-and-security partnership, the U.S. and the U.K. are on opposite sides of arguments over Iran (Washington withdrew from the nuclear deal with Tehran, whereas London and its European partners are trying to save it), Huawei (Britain has allowed the Chinese firm to build part of its 5G network despite U.S. security concerns), and climate change (the U.S. abandoned the Paris Agreement, whereas Britain remains committed to it).

They are even split on issues of British domestic politics. Although a majority of Britons oppose leaving the European Union without a withdrawal agreement, Trump has all but encouraged it—repeatedly criticizing May’s Brexit strategy. He even pledged during his state visit last month to make a “phenomenal” trade deal with Britain once it leaves the bloc—a promise some Brexiteers fear is now at risk if Darroch stays.

Still, the optics of firing Darroch and replacing him with someone the White House finds more favorable—such as arch-Brexiteer Nigel Farage, who Trump previously said would do a “great job” as ambassador—could be just as damaging. (Farage said this week that he wouldn’t be the right man for the job.) Rather than conjuring the image of a strong “global Britain” ready to reaffirm its prominence on the world stage once it leaves the EU, firing Darroch would instead portray the U.K. as a weak, deferential actor that can be bullied by even its closest allies.

It would also undermine the process by which Britain appoints ambassadors—one that is based not on the size of campaign donations (as is often the case in the U.S.), but by the length of distinguished service in Britain’s diplomatic corps. Prior to becoming ambassador to the U.S. in 2016, Darroch was the U.K.’s national security adviser.

Perhaps the biggest question isn’t whether the U.K. will keep its ambassador in Washington, but whether its relationship with the U.S. can survive Trump’s caprice. Darroch argued in this magazine that Britain’s special relationship with the U.S. can endure precisely because it is built on more than just the people working within it—because it transcends “personality clashes or political bumps along the way.”

He may prove to be the exception.

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