The crack is growing in the special relationship between the US and the UK

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The crack is growing in the special relationship between the US and the UK
Photo: Evan Vucci/AP/TT

This is not Winston Churchill we are dealing with.

The words are Donald Trump's, about Keir Starmer, and were made during a press conference at the White House on Tuesday.

The US President's great dissatisfaction with the British Prime Minister comes after Starmer's initial refusal to allow the US to use British air bases during the attacks on Iran.

"It's taken us three, four days to figure out where we can land," Trump complained before comparing today's British leaders to Churchill.

Very sad

Trump then said in an interview with The Sun , published on Tuesday, that the countries' once strong relationship "was the most solid of them all, but now we have very strong relationships with other countries in Europe."

I mean, France has been amazing, everyone has been amazing. Britain has been completely different.

It's very sad that the relationship is clearly not what it was.

The dissatisfaction mainly concerns the Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean, which Britain is in the process of handing over to Mauritius.

The archipelago is home to the Diego Garcia air base, which the British have leased for at least 99 years - and Starmer did not want the US to use that base in attacks on Iran. Only on Sunday did Britain agree to let the US use British military bases - to carry out "defensive" attacks on Iranian missiles and their launch pads.

As Hugh Grant

Starmer has rarely publicly said anything negative about Trump, nor has he responded to the Churchill comment. His words in parliament on Monday about not joining in the attacks were unusually harsh for the diplomatic lawyer Starmer.

President Trump has expressed his displeasure with our decision not to participate, but it is my duty to determine what is in the best interests of the United Kingdom.

It prompted the Financial Times to call the words "Starmer's 'Love Actually' moment," a reference to the 2003 comedy in which Hugh Grant's prime minister stands up to Billy Bob Thornton's president.

Stephen Doughty, Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign Office, however, denies that there are cracks in the "special relationship", a relationship not least promoted by Winston Churchill and which was of importance when Prime Minister Tony Blair sided with President George W. Bush ahead of the Iraq War in 2003.

"Our relationship with the United States is strong. It has stood the test of time and it continues to stand, and will stand the test of time in the future," he said in parliament on Tuesday, according to AP.

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By TT News AgencyEnglish edition by Sweden Herald, adapted for our readers

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