‘Starmer’s
big moment’: can PM persuade Trump not to give in to Putin?
The UK
leader has been advised to choose his words carefully at this week’s crucial
White House meeting
Toby Helm
Toby Helm Political editor
Sun 23 Feb 2025 06.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/feb/23/starmer-trump-putin-white-house-meeting
When Keir Starmer is advised on how to handle his crucial
meeting with Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday, he will be told by
advisers from Downing Street and the Foreign Office to be very clear on his
main points and, above all, to be brief.
“Trump gets bored very easily,” said one well-placed
Whitehall source with knowledge of the president’s attention span. “When he
loses interest and thinks someone is being boring, he just tunes out. He
doesn’t like [the French president, Emmanuel] Macron partly because Macron
talks too much and tries to lecture him.”
Starmer will also be advised to flatter Trump when he can,
to say that everyone is so grateful that he has focused the world’s attention
on the need for peace between Russia and Ukraine. But to flatter subtly. And
not to lay it on too thick.
One – unconfirmed – story from Theresa May’s first visit to
see Trump at the White House in 2017 is doing the rounds in Whitehall again
before the Starmer trip, and is being used as a cautionary tale for the current
prime minister.
“When May first went to see Trump, she was told she had to
congratulate him on lots of things,” said one source.
“So she rushed over to him and congratulated him on his new
cabinet appointments, saying: ‘You’ve appointed a great team, Donald.’
“At which point he said: ‘Oh thank you so much, Theresa –
who do you particularly like among them?’ Which left her a bit stumped, so she
just said: ‘Oh, well, all of them, Donald.’”
The lesson being that too much flattery can get you into
trouble if you do not do your homework.
Dealing with, and responding to, Trump in his self-appointed
role as ultra-provocative would-be global peacemaker is requiring other leaders
the world over to perform near-impossible balancing acts when framing their
responses.
Many of the US president’s statements on the Ukraine
conflict, such as those suggesting that Ukraine was responsible for the Russian
invasion and that its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is a dictator, are
regarded by European governments, including the British one, as patently
ludicrous.
Yet at the same time, no one can say so for fear of what the
man who said those things will do next and what revenge he might wreak in
return.
Peter Ricketts, former UK ambassador to Paris, said that
Starmer should himself tune out from Trump’s rhetoric. “He should focus not on
what Trump says but what he does. He needs to get into Trump’s mind that a
rushed deal with [Vladimir] Putin over the heads of Ukraine/Europe is bound to
be a deal that serves Putin’s interests, and that Putin would be seen as strong
and Trump weak.”
Another senior UK source agreed, saying that Starmer needed
to convey to Trump that the only thing that would stop him earning his place in
history would be by getting a great peace that was not seen as a “fair deal”.
“He needs to make Trump think that his success rests on not giving in to Putin,
because if he does he will himself seem weak,” said the source.
While cross-continental mud-slinging has intensified, UK
political leaders have had a painfully difficult few days trying to adapt to
Trump’s barrage of remarks, the latest of which was to say neither Starmer nor
Macron – who will meet Trump at the White House on Monday – have done anything
of note to sort out the war in Ukraine.
Even Nigel Farage, who prides himself on his closeness to
Trump and the Republicans, has had to equivocate and throw up a cloud of
deliberate confusion around his own responses, so he can claim to be both
distancing himself from the US president and validating his interventions at
the same time.
Speaking to Sky News on Thursday about Trump’s statement
that Zelenskyy was a dictator, Farage said: “Take everything Trump says
truthfully, but not literally.”
The Reform UK leader then tried to argue that Trump “doesn’t
literally say Ukraine started the war”, and was instead focused on bringing
peace. When, however, it was put to Farage that Trump had told Zelenskyy: “You
should have never started it [the conflict],” Farage then replied: “OK, he did.
If you’re happy.”
With UK public opinion overwhelmingly critical of Trump’s
comments on Zelenskyy and Ukraine – today’s Opinium poll for the Observer shows
the Trump administration has a -40% approval rating on Ukraine compared with
-2% for the previous Biden administration – the Tory leader, Kemi Badenoch,
also felt the need to part company with Trump, tweeting on X that “President
Zelenskyy is not a dictator”, though she backed him over the need for European
nations to increase defence spending.
About 61% of Tory voters disagree with the Trump
administration on Ukraine, so for Badenoch not to express some reservations
over the US president could have left her in big trouble in her own party.
The Liberal Democrats, meanwhile, looking for more seats and
votes behind the “blue wall” have spotted an opportunity as the anti-Trump
party. Calum Miller, their foreign affairs spokesman, said the Lib Dems had a
duty to stand up for people in his constituency and others who flew Ukrainian
flags in their villages and had taken in Ukrainian refugees.
“It is our role to be their voice in parliament,” he said
“to say that Trump is a narcissist who is not to be trusted.”
Government sources suggested on Saturday nightthat Starmer
would probably try to speak to Macron on Sunday before the French president
flies to Washington, so as to agree the broad outlines of a European position.
But another senior source said the last thing Starmer should
do when he meets Trump is try to speak for the Europeans or represent a
European position.
“Trump has made clear what he thinks of European leaders
[last]week. Starmer needs to be his own man, to say the UK was the first
country to offer to send troops to Ukraine and do its bit.
“If he does that, and succeeds in persuading Trump that it
will look terrible to the world if he allows Putin just to get everything he
wants, it could be a big moment for him.”
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