Does the whole world hate Liz Truss?
(A: No, she’s quite popular in the Baltics, and parts
of the Indo-Pacific.)
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO AND LEONIE KIJEWSKI
AUGUST 23,
2022 4:01 AM
https://www.politico.eu/article/liz-truss-world-prime-minister-united-kingdom/
LONDON —
Around the world, governments are slowly waking up to a new reality: Liz Truss
is about to become U.K. prime minister.
London-based
diplomats are scrambling to report back to their capitals with intelligence on
the Conservative leadership front-runner, as every new poll offers further
evidence that — barring some last-minute disaster — Truss is headed to 10
Downing Street.
In truth,
few foreign powers much like what they’ve seen.
On the
other hand, Truss is quite popular in eastern European states, and parts of the
Indo-Pacific. So it’s not all bad.
Supporters
say Truss’ expected emergence on the world stage is just poorly-timed, with
potential conservative allies in the U.S., Germany and Australia all ousted in
national elections over the past two years.
But her
relations with EU countries are undoubtedly clouded by the bitter row over how
to trade across the Irish Sea after Brexit while keeping both the Northern
Irish unionists and republicans happy.
Hopes in
Brussels and other EU capitals that the new U.K. foreign secretary would prove
an amicable interlocutor evaporated last spring when she unveiled controversial
legislation to allow U.K. ministers to switch off parts of the Northern Ireland
protocol, a key element of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement, leading to
accusations that Britain is preparing to breach international law.
“We have a
negative impression, not based on her intentions but her actions,” a
London-based diplomat from a large EU country said. “A new leader is always a
new opportunity for a reset, but we will have to see if she takes steps towards
rebuilding trust, which is very needed.”
One
Brussels-based diplomat gave an even more disparaging assessment: “Liz Truss
would seem to us to be really, really poor from an EU point of view. What she
has shown, since she’s taken over as foreign secretary, and as she’s taken over
the Brexit negotiations, has just been very negative.”
Virtually
no politician in Dublin has a good word to say about Truss, given her close
association with the protocol bill. “We’ve been burned by six years of
Conservative prime ministers,” said Neale Richmond, European affairs spokesman
for Fine Gael, the most pro-EU of three parties in Ireland’s coalition
government. “I have little faith that the next one’s going to be any better.”
Dublin’s
newspaper of record, the Irish Times, dismissed her as “an ineffectual foreign
minister who campaigned against Brexit and then cheered it.”
Some
politicians remain hopeful that talks with the EU may be easier if Truss became
prime minister — simply because she’s not the outgoing Prime Minister Boris
Johnson
Two senior
diplomats from different countries in southern Europe raised concerns about
Truss’ “impulsiveness” on foreign affairs, warning this could further inflame
tensions.
D.C. confidential
Truss’
sponsorship of the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill has certainly frustrated the
Biden administration and members of the U.S. Congress, as POLITICO reported
last week.
Democrat
powerbrokers, including U.S. President Joe Biden and Speaker of the House of
Representatives Nancy Pelosi, have spoken repeatedly about their fear that
Brexit policies will trash the hard-won peace in Ireland. They want the Good
Friday Agreement preserved at all costs, and for Brussels and London to stop
wasting energy over avoidable conflicts.
Pelosi in
May labeled efforts to rewrite the protocol as “deeply concerning.”
Truss fired
back last week, telling a campaign audience in Northern Ireland that she
wouldn’t be swayed by the House speaker. “I have been very clear with people
like Nancy Pelosi exactly what I think about this,” she said. A member of
Truss’ campaign insisted she has a “good relationship with her American
counterparts.”
Some
politicians remain hopeful that talks with the EU may actually be easier if she
became prime minister — simply because she’s not the outgoing Prime Minister
Boris Johnson, and comes across more like a “dealmaker and reliable partner,”
said Bernd Lange, a German member of the European Parliament who sits in the
EU-U.K. contact group.
But even if
Truss did want a reset with the EU, others doubt her fellow Conservative MPs
would allow it. “The big question is how much she will cater to the Brexiteers
in the party,” a Nordic envoy to London said.
From Australia with love
Officials
and foreign policy experts in Brussels, Berlin and Paris also lament Truss’
reluctance thus far to cultivate close links with key European capitals in the
way she has with one of those furthest geographically from Britain — Canberra.
The U.K.’s
security cooperation with Australia has intensified since Brexit through the
Five Eyes alliance and the AUKUS defense partnership, while Truss has also
sought Canberra’s endorsement of Britain’s accession to the trading club of 11
Pacific nations known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for
Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). Her regular speeches to Australia-based
think tanks have been noted on both sides of the globe.
During her
tenure as British international trade secretary, Truss controversially hired
former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to the U.K. Board of Trade. He, in
return, called her a “worthy successor” to Johnson last week.
Truss
controversially hired former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to the U.K.
Board of Trade | Ryan Pierse/Getty Images
Yet
Abbott’s Liberal Party is now out of power, and Truss faces a challenge to
establish a similarly-close relationship with the new Labor Prime Minister,
Anthony Albanese.
Albanese
has not made his views known on the Tory leadership frontrunner, but party
colleagues have been outspoken. In January, former Australian PM Paul Keating
described Truss’ remarks about possible Chinese activity in the Pacific as
“demented.”
‘Old-school imperialism’
It’s
certainly true that Truss has not pulled her punches when it comes to China. On
the campaign trail, she repeatedly attacked her rival Rishi Sunak’s willingness
to hold talks with Beijing, and even suggested the U.K. should arm Taiwan
against China.
The foreign
secretary has promised to update the U.K.’s 2021 integrated review of security,
defense and foreign policy, with a renewed focus on China and Russia, and build
stronger economic and trade ties with Commonwealth nations to counter Beijing’s
“growing malign influence.”
The Chinese
Foreign Ministry makes little attempt to hide its feelings about Truss’
remarks. “This fully exposes the hypocritical faces of old-school British
imperialism,” ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said. “Imagine Scotland colluding
with foreign forces to secede from the U.K. Can the U.K. keep calm?”
“It seems
that the U.K. has been colonized by the U.S.,” Wang Yiwei, a top academic on
international relations at Renmin University in Beijing, told Global Times.
‘Bloodthirsty’ woman
On Russia,
too, Truss’ rhetoric has been tough, and in early February, she carried her
message directly to Moscow. Her hawkish position made her the target of
vitriolic attacks from senior members of the Russian government. Maria
Zakharova, foreign ministry spokeswoman, described her as “bloodthirsty and
extremely destructive.”
Of
particular relish for the Kremlin was a geographical mistake Truss apparently
made during that trip in response to a craftily-placed question from the
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, swiftly leaked to Russian journalists.
At the end
of her visit, Lavrov said their conversation turned out to be “between the dumb
and the deaf.” In April, Russia banned Truss, together with other members of
the U.K. government, from entering the country.
Igor
Pshenichnikov, an expert at the state-funded Russian Institute for Strategic
Studies in Moscow, called Truss a “Russophobe” who “proceeds solely from the
understanding that Russia must be destroyed.”
Truss’
unwavering support for Ukraine has won her praise in Kyiv | Daniel Leal/AFP via
Getty Images
Wartime leader
But Truss’
unwavering support for Ukraine has won her praise in Kyiv, elsewhere in Eastern
Europe and in the Baltics, where concern about the Soviet invasion remains
paramount.
Here,
diplomats are confident she will continue the policy of close defense
cooperation pursued by Johnson.
“Her
leadership on standing up against Russian aggression towards Ukraine is
something where we are very likeminded,” a Baltic diplomat said. “Overall the
U.K. has stood out as a great leader when it has come to supporting Ukraine …
She has been known as leader in this regard.”
Brushing
aside Brexit and the war, an EU diplomat noted with admiration that her
ambition to become prime minister was already obvious a year ago, and praised
her willingness to engage over an old-fashioned British gin and tonic.
Network of liberty
Truss’
focus on the Indo-Pacific during her tenure at the Foreign Office has won her
friends there too.
She defied
naysayers by striking the first post-Brexit free trade deal with Japan, a
government she prioritized in her ministerial engagements.
Indeed,
Truss’ top foreign policy pitch has been the creation of what she calls a
“network of liberty,” made up of “freedom-loving nations” building security,
energy and trade links designed to end strategic dependencies on China and
Russia.
The policy
has won mixed reviews. Some U.K. civil servants are fearful her approach is too
polarizing in its framing of global geopolitics as democracy versus
authoritarianism, said David Lawrence, research fellow in the U.K. in the World
Initiative at the Chatham House think tank.
The likes
of Japan and Australia are natural partners for the U.K., he said, but nations
such as Pakistan, India or Malaysia might not be so welcoming, thanks to a mix
of post-colonialism grievances and trade links with China.
“Lots of
countries don’t fit neatly into one or the other [category],” he said, “and
it’s almost like you’re forcing them to take sides.”
Zoya
Sheftalovich, Ryan Heath, Shawn Pogatchnik and Stuart Lau contributed
reporting.

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