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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Pippa Crerar Political editor

Starmer delivers masterclass in hedging his bets after Venezuela raid

The UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, leaning to one side during a TV interview.
Keir Starmer’s government is apparently wary of rocking the boat when it comes to the UK’s relationship with the US. Photograph: Jeff Overs/BBC/PA

Keir Starmer has got used to walking a diplomatic tightrope with Donald Trump. But the US president’s Venezuelan adventure, whisking its leader out of the country after a late-night raid, has pushed that cautious approach to its limits.

The clues were all there. Ever since Trump confirmed that he had authorised the CIA to conduct covert operations in Venezuela against drug traffickers – and blockaded oil tankers – the military campaign had been mounting.

But despite the US president’s threats to oust Nicolás Maduro, some on the UK side had put them in the same “unbelievable” category as Trump’s promise to bring peace to Ukraine on his first day in the White House, or plans to develop a “Gaza Riviera”.

When the dramatic raid did finally happen, with Trump saying the Venezuelan had been seized for “narco-terrorism”, the UK prime minister took 16 hours to respond publicly, and even then it was a masterclass in hedging his bets.

“We regarded Maduro as an illegitimate president and we shed no tears about the end of his regime,” Starmer said, but then – as might be expected from a former human rights lawyer – reiterated his support for international law.

The UK government has continued this approach since: say as little as possible that might offend Trump; leave it to the US to explain the legal justification for the move; and, in the words of one aide, “recognise that it’s not our fight”.

Labour’s political opponents on its progressive wing – the Lib Dems and the Greens – have piled pressure on the government to condemn the US action.

Downing Street gives short shrift to the idea – suggested most forcibly on its own side by Emily Thornberry, the chair of the foreign affairs committee – that a lack of western condemnation might embolden China and Russia.

“Comparisons between the developments over the weekend and the full scale invasion of a sovereign, democratic state is a bad comparison,” Starmer’s spokesperson said.

Even the Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, took a stronger line, suggesting Trump had indeed violated international law by capturing Maduro (but adding that “it may be a good thing” if it made Russia and China think twice).

The government is – apparently – unwilling to rock the boat when a multibillion-pound trade deal and peace in Ukraine are at stake. “We’re taking the realpolitik route,” one insider said.

But some senior government officials, including in the Foreign Office, are uncomfortable at the extent of what they see as fence-sitting as the UK’s unreliable ally over the Atlantic wreaks yet more havoc on the international order.

“Nobody thinks Maduro was a good guy, or that he should have been in power,” one said. “But effectively kidnapping a head of state to achieve regime change sets you on a dangerous path.”

Some on the political side have also privately voiced concerns. “If we let this happen without condemning it then where does it stop? Colombia? Cuba? Even Greenland? Where does Trump strike next?” one minister questioned.

Downing Street insiders – perhaps conscious of alarm over Trump’s actions among Labour MPs – insist the UK would take a more robust approach if a European ally were ever threatened.

Starmer has publicly backed the Danish prime minister after she demanded the US stop its threats to forcibly take over Greenland, which is largely autonomous but remains part of the Danish kingdom, for security and mineral resources.

The foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, later told MPs: “The future of Greenland is a matter for the Greenlanders and the Danes – and no one else.”

Starmer – who has been trying to call Trump since Friday night’s attack – is due to finally speak to the US president after a meeting of the “coalition of the willing” in Paris on Tuesday. Their tone is likely to be emollient.

The prime minister has told colleagues that one day, there may come a time when he finally needs to take a tough stance against Trump – but this does not yet appear to be that moment.

“Any decision like that comes with a choice,” Starmer told them, according to sources. “Are we willing to risk damaging our most important economic and national security partnerships as a result? We need to weigh up the cost to our own interests.”

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