'Brexit' threatens to undermine
U.S.-Britain special relationship
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[June 25, 2016]
By Matt Spetalnick and Yara Bayoumy
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Britain’s decision
to quit the European Union could send damaging shockwaves through the
bedrock Anglo-American “special relationship,” raising questions about
London’s willingness and ability to back U.S.-led efforts in global
crises ranging from the Middle East to Ukraine.
The loss of the strongest pro-U.S. voice within the 28-nation
bloc, as a result of the “Brexit” referendum, threatens to weaken
Washington’s influence in European policymaking and embolden Russian
President Vladimir Putin to further challenge the West, analysts and
former diplomats say.
The British referendum on Thursday, widely seen as reflecting an
increasingly nationalistic and inward-looking public, also risks the
splintering of the United Kingdom itself, which could further reduce
its role and stature in world affairs.
Britain's departure -- which is not immediate and must be negotiated
with the EU -- could present the next U.S. president with a decision
on whether to turn to other key European partners like Germany and
France, essentially downgrading a special U.S. bond with London
forged in World War Two.
Ivo Daalder, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO and the president of
the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, said Britain’s ability to
press its views and policy preferences with its European allies and
within NATO, where it provided strong political backing to the
United States, will be diminished.
“You clearly have a much weaker Britain whose sway in European
capitals is lessened by the vote,” Daalder said. As a result, he
said, the United States likely will have to work harder to maintain
trans-Atlantic and European unity.
Anything that divides Europe, he added, “is a win for Russia because
that has been a policy of Putin and of Russia.”
A U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said: "This is certain to encourage the Russians to continue and
probably intensify their campaign of supporting far-right
nationalist movements in Western and Eastern Europe as part of their
effort to neuter NATO.”
Phil Gordon, a former senior foreign policy adviser to Obama,
expressed concern that Europe will become inwardly focused on
Britain’s departure and independence movements on the continent,
leaving the United States to shoulder more of the international
burden.
“The more time it spends on doing that, the more resources it spends
on coping with the consequences of that, the less time and money and
political capital it is going to have to help us with global
challenges,” he said.
The administration of President Barack Obama was rattled by the
stunning turn of events, including turmoil in world financial
markets and British Prime Minister David Cameron's subsequent
resignation announcement.
British officials sought to reassure their U.S. counterparts that
Brexit would not portend a withdrawal from world affairs, a U.S.
official said. Some of those officials may not survive the change of
leadership or further British political upheavals that could be
spurred by the vote.
REBUKE TO OBAMA
While Obama insisted on Friday that Britain would remain an
“indispensable partner,” the outcome of the referendum delivered a
clear rebuke to the U.S. president, who made an unusually strong
intervention into British politics against "Brexit" during a visit
to London in April.
Britain's vote to leave the EU threatens not only Obama's security
efforts across the globe but the U.S. economic recovery and the
international trade agenda he is pursuing in his final seven months
in office.
A similar mix of U.S. populist anger and anti-establishment
sentiment has fueled the rise of Donald Trump as presumptive
Republican nominee in the November U.S. presidential election.
"The drivers of Brexit are the same as the drivers of nationalist
movements in western Europe and the U.S.," Clifford Young, President
of Ipsos Public Affairs in the United States, told Reuters.
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Prime Minister David Cameron and President Barack Obama watch a
fly-past by the Red Arrows during a 2014 NATO summit in Wales.
REUTERS/Andrew Winning
Cameron has cooperated closely with Obama in the security sphere.
Britain has been a major military player in U.S.-led campaigns
against Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq, an active ally on
the ground in Afghanistan and a strong supporter of sanctions
against Russia over its role in Ukraine’s separatist conflict.
Heather Conley, director of the Europe Program at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said Britain’s
divorce from the EU, which could take up to two years, would now be
“an all-consuming process” that could distract it from such efforts.
"There's just not going to be an enormous amount of attention of
policy bandwidth given to the migration crisis, fighting ISIS, or
focusing on continued ceasefire violations in Ukraine and
maintaining sanctions against Russia," she said.
“It comes down to when we need the UK and its leadership, whether in
the Security Council or NATO, its attentions will be focused
domestically,” she said.
Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, called
Brexit -- which dealt the biggest blow to the European project of
unity since World War Two -- "a cloud without a silver lining."
"I’m not suggesting that we're about to return to a situation of
conflict in Europe," he said. "But I’m wary that it will tear from
the fabric of prosperity and stability."
While U.S.-British intelligence sharing – one of the closest
relationships of its kind in the world – is expected to withstand
the political turmoil, some experts said counterterrorism
cooperation with European partners could suffer at a time when
Islamic State has targeted European capitals.
“It will make cooperation in Europe on counter terrorism harder as
most of the former British intelligence chiefs predicted before the
vote,” said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA official now at the Brookings
Institution think tank in Washington.
But Michael Morell, a former acting CIA director, rejected that
view, saying counterterrorism cooperation “is too important to let
politics of any kind affect it.”
Adding to U.S. concerns is the threat by Scottish nationalists to
mount a new referendum on independence for Scotland, where nearly
two-thirds of voters voted to stay in the EU. In addition, Northern
Ireland's deputy leader Martin McGuinness called for a vote to unite
the two sides of the Irish border.
The break-up of the United Kingdom would raise questions whether it
should retain its veto in the United Nations Security Council, where
it has been a mostly reliable supporter of U.S. initiatives.
(Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed, Mark Hosenball, Jonathan
Landay, Patricia Zengerle, David Brunnstrom, Roberta Rampton, and
John Walcott; editing by Stuart Grudgings)
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