Déjà vu as Brexit overshadows UK’s moment on
world stage
First sausages, now fish. Stop us if you’ve heard this
one before.
BY ESTHER
WEBBER AND RYM MOMTAZ
October 31,
2021 7:11 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/boris-johnson-brexit-g20-rome-cop26-g7-macron-biden/
ROME —
Boris Johnson promised to “get Brexit done.” But it’s becoming clear it will
never be done — at least not if the Brits and the French have anything to do
with it.
A big
dust-up between London and Paris over fish provided a noisy backdrop to the G20
in Rome over the weekend, just as the U.K. prime minister hopes to make a
splash at the British-hosted COP26 climate summit.
It's not
the first time we've been here — at the G7 in June it was sausages.
The U.K.’s
first major foray into global diplomacy after Brexit became an extended
meditation on the Northern Ireland protocol, the mechanism keeping the island
of Ireland in the trade domain of the EU in a bid to avoid a hard border there.
In
Cornwall, on the English seaside, Johnson and U.S. President Joe Biden managed
to move on from a bumpy opening to the June summit — only for Johnson to
receive an ear-bashing from a series of EU leaders over the key Brexit setup.
Then French
President Emmanuel Macron weighed in. At a bilateral meeting, Johnson
reportedly tried to explain his unhappiness with the protocol by asking Macron
what he would do if sausages from Toulouse could not be moved to Paris.
The French
president was said to have retorted that this analogy did not work because
Paris and Toulouse were both part of the same country — comments read as
incorrectly suggesting Northern Ireland is not part of the U.K. London quickly
seized on the “offensive” remarks, while the Élysée insisted Macron had meant
they were not in the same “single geographic area.”
While
Johnson trumpeted a high-level G7 agreement on sending vaccines to the
developing world and progress on climate talks, diplomats’ and aides’ efforts
were concentrated on defusing the row.
Here we go
again
In Rome
this weekend, the saga was repeated almost word for word as the meetings about
coronavirus, climate change and global taxation unfolded against a backdrop of
a full-blown row over post-Brexit fishing rights.
While the
U.K. was not hosting this time, the prime minister and officials still had the
clear self-interest of stressing to G20 nations the importance of agreeing to
joint action to cut emissions and phase out coal ahead of the COP26 meeting in Scotland.
Yet in the
run-up to the gathering, Brexit dominated, with France threatening retaliation,
which could start Tuesday, after French boats were denied post-Brexit fishing
licenses.
An already
awkward situation was made worse after it emerged French Prime Minister Jean
Castex had written to EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, warning
that the U.K.'s failure to cooperate with French demands on its fishing
licenses would hurt the EU as a whole.
Seizing on
that at a post-G20 press conference, Johnson said he was "puzzled to read
a letter from the French PM explicitly asking for Britain to be punished for
leaving the EU."
Despite the
heated rhetoric, hopes of a truce were briefly raised Sunday as Johnson and
Macron met on the sidelines. An Elysée adviser said both sides had agreed to
“stabilize the situation" — but Downing Street immediately dismissed this
version of events.
The prime
minister’s spokesman said: "It will be for the French to decide whether
they want to step away from the threats they've made in recent days about
breaching the Brexit agreement.”
Macron
insisted Sunday that Britain must give ground in the fishing dispute or France
would trigger trade reprisals this week. "What we decided with PM Johnson
is that we would propose a method on what we can in the very short term give in
terms of mutual proofs of goodwill and then over several weeks how we can move
forward. That’s what I call de-escalation," Macron told reporters at the
G20 summit, adding that he "hoped there would be a positive response"
on Monday.
"Now
the ball is in their court. If the British make no move, evidently the measures
announced for November 2 will have to be implemented because they will have
rejected the offer."
The British
government insists Brexit has not overshadowed its big moment on the world
stage. Asked by POLITICO if he had G7 déjà vu, Johnson said: "This time
it's fish rather than sausages … but actually there are bigger fish to fry,
everybody knows that.”
He
maintained he was "not at all" worried about talks being derailed by
Brexit and “the issue is how much more progress can we make [on climate
change].” Seeking to return to his favored theme at the close of the G20,
Johnson ramped up the climate warnings and told reporters: “If Glasgow fails,
the whole thing fails.”
While
relations are at a low, there’s no consensus on the motivations for each side.
Macron has an election coming up, and fishermen are evidently on his mind.
Macron “has
a reputation to maintain” as one of the hardest hardliners on Brexit, one
British diplomat said, while Johnson needs no encouragement to wave the Union
Jack around.
For his
part, Johnson appears to have decided it's worth aggressively holding his
ground in every confrontation over the lasting shape of Brexit. An official
familiar with No. 10 strategy insisted the U.K. is not playing games, and
emphasized that Northern Ireland is a far more urgent priority.
The latest
salvo in the fishing war has at least underlined how far apart the Brits and
French remain, with the future of a resolution on Northern Ireland still very
much hanging in the balance. And after the G20, it may be some time before
Macron and Johnson are left alone in a room again.
David M.
Herszenhorn and Emilio Casalicchio contributed reporting.
This
article has been updated with further details of Emmanuel Macron's comments on
Sunday.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário