Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain boarding an airplane, in Doha, Qatar, on Friday, after a three-day trip to the Gulf
Photo: NYT
Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain is strengthening ties in Europe and the Middle East as the once-special relationship with America sours, ‘The New York Times’ notes.
As President Trump turns the United States into an increasingly grumpy and unreliable partner for Britain, Prime Minister Keir Starmer is looking to diversify his friend group.
Hours after a fragile cease-fire halted the U.S. strikes on Iran this week, Mr. Starmer arrived in Saudi Arabia to begin a three-day visit to the Gulf, where he also courted leaders in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. It was an effort, he told ITV News, “to show that we stand with our allies.” Only toward the end of his Middle East trip did the prime minister talk with Mr. Trump.
That was no accident.
“I’m fed up!”
Mr. Starmer’s new approach, which follows almost a year in which he repeatedly tried to cozy up to Mr. Trump, is part of a broader strategy to move Britain closer to partners in Europe, the Middle East and elsewhere as the relationship with the United States sours.
In the six weeks since the Iran war started, the once-chummy rapport between Mr. Starmer and Mr. Trump has cratered. In the face of repeated taunts and mockery by the president, Mr. Starmer has hardened his approach, saying he will not give in to pressure from the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue to join the fighting in Iran.
“I’m fed up,” he acknowledged during Thursday’s interview, in a rare venting of public frustration. The prime minister, who rarely criticizes Mr. Trump by name, complained that families and businesses in Britain were unfairly subject to wild swings in their energy bills “because of the actions of Putin or Trump across the world.”
Peter Ricketts, a veteran British diplomat who served as the country’s first national security adviser, said this week that Mr. Starmer’s government needed to abandon the idea of a so-called “special relationship” between Britain and the United States, and make deeper ties with other allies around the world.
“We do have to rethink the idea that the U.S. is a reliable, trustworthy ally on which we can depend in the longer term,” Mr. Ricketts said in an interview with BBC Radio. “We’ve got to get closer to the Europeans. We’ve got to work out how we live in a world where American interest has moved away from Europe.”
For his part, Mr. Starmer has made it clear that he is not giving up on closeness to the United States altogether, not least because the economic and security ties are still vital. But in recent weeks, the prime minister has highlighted the need to look beyond America.
In Bahrain, he said that Britain’s economy had struggled in the years following the Brexit vote and the subsequent deal to leave the European Union.
“That’s why, not just on defense and security but also on trade and energy, I want us to be closer to the E.U., to strengthen our economy, to make it more resilient,” he said.
Foreign policy and elections
That is politically difficult for Mr. Starmer, whose Labour Party pledged during the 2024 election campaign not to take major steps toward reversing Brexit or rejoining the European single market. But in his second year in office, he is increasingly testing the limits of that promise with steps to strengthen ties with the bloc.
Last week, Yvette Cooper, Britain’s foreign secretary, convened a meeting of her counterparts from more than 40 countries to discuss efforts to secure the Strait of Hormuz once the fighting in the Middle East was over. The United States did not participate in the meeting or a later gathering of military planners from the same countries.
Some risks
That kind of ambition comes with risks.
“The pressure will now be on Starmer to deliver on what he pledged — that the U.K. would step up to secure the Strait of Hormuz ‘once the fighting has ended,’” said Burcu Ozcelik, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a defense think tank based in London.
“We are there now,” she said, “so the question will be what is the U.K. willing to do? Washington will be watching too.”
read more in our Telegram-channel https://t.me/The_International_Affairs

10:43 12.04.2026 •















