In an
exclusive interview the UK’s former Ambassador to the US, Sir Kim Darroch,
tells Newsnight’s Emily Maitlis he does not regret criticising Donald Trump in
briefings later leaked to the media, in which he described the president’s
government as "dysfunctional" and ”inept" in private letters.
Collateral Damage by Kim Darroch review –
insulted by Trump, abandoned by Johnson
The former British ambassador to the US is rude about
Theresa May, assertive on Brexit and refreshingly free of self pity
Luke
Harding
Wed 9 Sep
2020 09.00 BSTLast modified on Wed 9 Sep 2020 13.51 BST
Kim Darroch
recounts the events which led to his resignation as UK ambassador in Washington
in droll style. In July 2019 he was sitting in his muggy office, looking
forward to a holiday, when his chief of staff appeared at the doorway. “We’ve
got a problem. There’s been a leak,” she said.
The Mail on
Sunday had got hold of confidential diplomatic cables written by Darroch for
Theresa May’s government. They painted a frank and mostly unflattering picture
of the Trump administration. At first Darroch thought he could tough out what
he dubs, with ominous uppercase, “the Leak”. “I reckoned the blowback should be
manageable,” he writes.
The paper,
however, had got hold of a highly restricted memo written in mid-2017 by
Darroch to Sir Mark Sedwill, the UK’s national security adviser. It described
the Trump White House as “uniquely dysfunctional”. The president “radiated
insecurity”. Something might emerge, he soothsayed, to bring about Trump’s
downfall and disgrace.
Events
thereafter followed a predictable pattern: the story was big news, an angry
Trump declared Darroch a non-person, and Boris Johnson – in a TV debate between
Tory leadership candidates – cravenly refused to back him. And so Darroch fell
on his sword. “It was hard not to feel a certain injustice in my
circumstances,” he writes, in a meek cry of “cruel world”.
Still,
Darroch’s memoir is refreshingly free of self-pity. It is a highly readable and
entertaining account of his diplomatic life and times. His ascent to the top
mandarin job is atypical: no contact with Mum after his parents’ divorce,
mediocre degree in zoology from Durham, an early spell in the Foreign Office’s
slow stream, a posting in Tokyo.
But it is
Darroch’s European connections that made him a target for Brexiters, one of
whom – you imagine – knifed him in the back. (Scotland Yard is investigating. A
year on, it hasn’t found the culprit.) He served as European adviser to Tony
Blair and in 2007 became ambassador to the EU. This in turn led him to a post
as national security adviser to David Cameron and from there to America.
He arrived
in DC in January 2016, just as Trump was swatting aside his Republican party
rivals for the nomination. Darroch swiftly recognised Trump as a formidable
campaigner – and an underestimated one, viewed by his base as anti-politician
and messiah. In a cable the following month he told London that Hillary Clinton
was damaged goods and said it was conceivable Trump might win.
When he did
get elected the British embassy was nonetheless stunned, and found itself
scrambling to catch up. Darroch sought out Steve Bannon, Jared Kushner, Wilbur
Ross and other members of Trump’s court. He buttonholed the man himself at a
ball. At the inauguration, Darroch listened to a speech he calls “primordially
angry in tone”. He fixed an early visit by May to the White House.
As well as
cultivating the often weird denizens of Trump world, Darroch hosted visiting
ministers. He is surprisingly generous about Johnson, his future nemesis, whom
the Americans liked. He is less flattering about May. Her decision to invite
Trump for a state visit was “unnecessary and premature”, her triggering of
Article 50 a blunder. And he is withering about May’s special advisers Nick
Timothy and Fiona Hill – a gormless duo, in his telling.
Darroch is
not a Brexit fan. Nor is he a pro-Brussels super-state maniac, as his rightwing
critics suggest. He is honest about the “factors” that made Brexit possible.
These include large-scale immigration, profound regional inequality, identity
politics and social media – all things that played a role in Trump’s rise.
Plus, the EU was disastrously inflexible in the referendum run-up, he says,
refusing to budge on freedom of movement.
As
ambassador, Darroch had to sell Brexit to his American interlocutors,
regardless of personal feeling. He told them it was going well, even though it
wasn’t. He describes the 18 months up until May’s resignation as the hardest of
his career. Meanwhile, the spectre of Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation
hung over the White House – a place of leaks, medieval court politics and what Darroch
describes as Game of Thrones-style feuding.
Collateral
Damage is rich in insight but short on revelation. Darroch isn’t able to
explain why Trump is so fawning towards Vladimir Putin – a “genuine mystery”,
as he puts it. His tentative explanation is a bit “meh”: Trump likes strongmen.
Inevitably
Darroch settles a few scores. After his resignation he rang Johnson, who
offered crocodile tears and said he had “absolutely no intention” of making the
ambassador quit. Yeah, right. Darroch makes clear that Johnson’s failure to
back him was a factor in his decision. He fantasises about visiting the leaker
in prison. Overall he is more grateful than angry for his privileged view on
dark times.
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