Women peacekeepers gather in New Delhi for first Global South summit

Women peacekeepers gather in New Delhi for first Global South summit
UN Women Peacekeepers pose for a picture at the “Women in Peacekeeping: A Global South Perspective” in New Delhi, India, on February 24, 2025. (MEA India)
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Updated 25 February 2025
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Women peacekeepers gather in New Delhi for first Global South summit

Women peacekeepers gather in New Delhi for first Global South summit
  • Global South countries are top contributors of troops to UN peacekeeping missions
  • India pioneered in providing female peacekeeping troops in Liberia operation in 2007

NEW DELHI: Women peacekeepers have gathered in the Indian capital for the first-ever summit of UN blue helmets representing the Global South.

Hosted by the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, Ministry of Defense, and the Center for United Nations Peacekeeping, the two-day conference, “Women in Peacekeeping: A Global South Perspective,” brought together 35 women peacekeepers from 35 countries representing the developing world.

Global South countries are the top contributors of troops to UN missions. India, alongside Bangladesh, Nepal, and Indonesia, has the biggest number of peacekeeping troops.

Women peacekeepers were sent to the field for the first time during the UN Operation in the Congo in 1960. However, their involvement at that time was limited to non-combat positions such as medical personnel, administrative staff, and nurses.

India became a pioneer in providing women peacekeeping troops when it deployed an all-female Formed Police Unit to Liberia in 2007. Today, women make up over 20 percent of its 5,000 deployed military observers and staff officers. 

“The participation of women in peace operations makes it more diverse and inclusive,” Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar told the participants during the conference’s opening session on Monday.

“It is essential that we continue to increase the representation of women in peacekeeping. This is not only a matter of quantity but equally of quality. Women peacekeepers often have unique access to local communities, acting as role models for women in conflict zones.”

The peacekeepers were also received by President Droupadi Murmu at her official residence, Rashtrapati Bhavan.

Those taking part in the conference told Arab News how important it was for them to gather and share their experiences.

“We learn (from) all the thoughts, ideas that each of us has — by their own experience. For me it is powerful,” said Lt. Marinliz Irene Chicas, a peacekeeper from El Salvador.

Maj. Mariam Thermite from the Republic of Guinea Armed Forces, who has served in the UN Mission in South Sudan and in the engineer corps in Western Sahara took part in the New Delhi meeting to share her insights.

“We need to improve women’s qualifications,” she said. “Women are very important in peace keeping ... These missions are very important for (the affected) women and children, and without women we can’t (access them).”

The UN Security Council Resolution 1325, adopted in 2000, recognized the importance of female participation in peacekeeping and called for the inclusion of women in all levels of decision-making and peace processes as critical to such operations.

Women’s participation ensures that peacekeeping missions consider the security needs of all populations, including marginalized groups. Female peacekeepers help address issues such as the specific vulnerabilities faced by women and children in conflict areas.

“There is a degree of trust between military women and the (affected) population,” Maj. R Salhi from the Tunisian Armed Forces told Arab News.
“Men cannot reach in the field (where) women can. For example, in the interaction with populations, investigations especially ... dealing with populations and families, children — the easiest way to contact these people is through women.


Why 2025 is a pivotal time for quantum science and applications

Why 2025 is a pivotal time for quantum science and applications
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Why 2025 is a pivotal time for quantum science and applications

Why 2025 is a pivotal time for quantum science and applications
  • UNESCO declared 2025 the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology to celebrate a century of breakthroughs
  • Saudi Arabia’s Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution is leading the Kingdom’s quantum research, aligning with Vision 2030

LONDON: It is quite possible you haven’t noticed that 2025 is the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology — or IYQ, for short. Yet it is something hordes of scientists are very excited about, as is UNESCO, which came up with the idea.

What the UN’s science and culture organization has failed to do, however, despite planning events around the world “aimed at increasing public awareness of the importance of quantum science and applications,” is explain on its dedicated IYQ website exactly what it is.

To be fair, that’s not an easy question to answer.

The word “quantum” — Latin for “how much” — is an adjective that finds itself placed in front of a whole range of nouns including “physics,” “computers,” “mechanics,” “engineering,” “theory” and many more.

In these contexts, explains James Cruise, head of quantum computing at Cambridge Consultants, the word quantum refers to the smallest possible unit of something.

For instance, quantum physics studies the behavior of matter and energy at extremely small scales, such as atoms and subatomic particles.

“We’re getting better and better at controlling our world, and what’s going on now is we’re controlling the very, very tiny,” he said.

“We controlled electricity for our electrical and digital revolutions, and mechanical control drove the Industrial Revolution, and now we’re controlling the quantum mechanical realm, understanding how these really tiny particles behave to drive a new technological revolution based on that control.”

His field is quantum computing, which allows certain problems, such as cracking cryptography, to be solved ridiculously quickly — although “quickly” doesn’t really do the process justice.

“We are looking at tackling problems which would take millennia to solve, and being able to do them in days,” he said.

One example is the analysis of chemical processes, important in the development of new drugs, “which is very hard to simulate.”

“There are a lot of molecules and a lot of very complicated equations to solve, and at the moment, when we use computers in chemistry, we just can’t get accurate simulations, because this would take millennia to do all the necessary calculations.

“But with a quantum computer, you could actually do those simulations really quickly, in a day, or a week.”

Earlier this week, Microsoft announced a major breakthrough in quantum computing with the development of a new chip powered by the world’s first topoconductor — a material capable of creating a new state of matter that is neither solid, liquid, nor gas.

The company claims this innovation could dramatically accelerate the timeline for building practical quantum computers, reducing it from decades to just a few years.

Unlike traditional quantum computing approaches, Microsoft’s topoconductor-based chip enables quantum systems to fit on a single, palm-sized chip, potentially paving the way for more stable and scalable quantum hardware.

But how does quantum computing actually work? For many, the “guru” of all things quantum is Hartmut Neven, vice president of quantum engineering for Google Quantum AI.

In a recent TED Talk, he tried to explain for a lay audience the theory behind quantum computing. It started well enough.

“Today’s computers, like a laptop or a server at the Google data center, operate on the binary logic of zeros and ones,” he said.

“A quantum computer replaces the binary logic with the laws of quantum physics. That gives it more powerful operations, allowing it to perform certain computations with way fewer steps.”

So far, so understandable. But not for long.

“So where does this superpower come from? Quantum computing is the first technology that takes seriously the idea that we live in a multiverse. It can be seen as farming out computations to parallel universes.

“The equations of quantum mechanics tell us that at any time, any object, myself, or the world at large, exists in a superposition of many configurations.”

Skip over the mysterious “how,” then, to Neven’s example and the bottom line that quantum computers are on course to be seriously fast at previously impossible computational tasks.

He invites the audience to envision a massive filing cabinet with a million drawers. An ordinary computer would have to open on average half a million drawers to find a particular item filed in one of the drawers, “but if you had access to a quantum algorithm, it would only be 1,000 steps to find the item.”

Although Neven and Google are leading the field, they have yet to convert the theory of quantum computing into real-life practical applications. But they are well on the way. They have passed the second of six milestones they need to reach, and expect to have built “a large, error-corrected quantum computer by the end of the decade.”

Neven predicts that such computers will unlock a host of breakthroughs in multiple fields, such as designing more effective, more targeted medicines or lighter, faster-charging batteries for electric cars or aircraft, or even finally making reality the long-pursued dream of producing energy from nuclear fusion reactors.

Thanks to quantum science, your smartphone or watch, he predicts, may one day be able to warn you of the presence of dangerous viruses in the air or detect “free radicals,” the unstable atoms linked to cell death and illness, in your body.

“In conclusion,” said Neven, wrapping up his TED Talk, “we are making steady progress towards building the world’s first useful quantum computer and applying its enormous power to important challenges.

“A quantum computer will be a gift to future generations, giving them a new tool to solve problems that today are unsolvable.”

So if quantum technology is still at the “dream big” stage of development, why is UNESCO celebrating it this year in particular?

“The reason we’re celebrating this year is because the theory of quantum mechanics has been around for a century,” said Cruise.

“We are also at the point where the theory is now coming to fruition and actually seeing uses, and we’re building real-use cases and technology based upon this.”

Nominating 2025 as the centenary of the discovery of quantum science and technology is not without controversy. It was, after all, in 1922 that Danish physicist Niels Bohr was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work — a decade earlier — on the structure of atoms, “based on quantum theory,” the study of how everything operates at an atomic level.

Bohr is regarded as one of the fathers of quantum theory — a parenthood he shares with Max Planck and Albert Einstein, both of whom also received Nobel Prizes for their work on quanta.

Planck received his Nobel in 1918, “in recognition of the services he rendered to the advancement of physics by his discovery of energy quanta.” Einstein was awarded the prize in 1921 “for his services to theoretical physics, and especially for his discovery (in 1905) of the law of the photoelectric effect.”

Today, whether a century or more on from those pioneering discoveries, the potential of quantum technology to deliver a whole range of potentially transformative applications is being recognized and seized upon around the world — and Saudi Arabia is among the leaders of the pack chasing these golden prizes.

In 2021, in a pioneering collaboration with the World Economic Forum, Saudi Arabia launched the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, hosted by the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology in Riyadh.

In December, C4IR Saudi Arabia published a report that spelled out the potential benefits of quantum technology, highlighted existing progress in the Kingdom and set out a roadmap for a vision of a “quantum economy” which “aligns with the bold goals of Vision 2030, positioning the Kingdom as a global key player in technological innovation and economic diversification.”

In her foreword to the report, the center’s managing director, Dr. Basma Al-Buhairan, wrote that the Kingdom “stands at the dawn of the quantum revolution — a transformative force that will reshape computation, communications and sensing across every industry.”

The report highlighted how quantum technology would “drive innovation across multiple sectors, creating new industries and economic growth” and leading to the development of new products, markets and jobs.

The list of fields in which quantum technology is predicted to have a transformative influence is wide, including energy efficiency, cyber defense, climate modelling, traffic management, machine learning, nanotechnology, cryptography, and the development of new materials and medicines.

Saudi universities are already offering a range of quantum-related programs, ranging from a course in quantum computation and security at Imam Abdulrahman bin Faisal University to a master’s in theoretical quantum optics at Jazan University, and quantum-related research is under way at multiple institutions.

The number of quantum-related publications, conferences and journals produced by Saudi universities and research institutes has increased dramatically from just a handful 15 years ago. In 2023 alone there were 100 conferences and more than 180 journal publications in the Kingdom.

Saudi Arabia, as Dr. Al-Buhairan concluded, “is strategically positioned to become a global quantum technology hub” and “aims to harness this technological revolution’s potential to foster economic growth, enhance national security, and improve citizens’ quality of life.”

In a call to arms, she urged “all partners and collaborators to continue this journey with us, exploring quantum technology’s vast possibilities and ensuring Saudi Arabia remains at the forefront of this exciting field … to realize the full potential of a quantum-enabled future.”


Bangladesh army chief warns country ‘at risk’ from infighting

Bangladesh army chief warns country ‘at risk’ from infighting
Updated 25 February 2025
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Bangladesh army chief warns country ‘at risk’ from infighting

Bangladesh army chief warns country ‘at risk’ from infighting
  • Bangladesh has been riven by a surge of crime as well as protests this month where crowds smashed buildings connected to ex-PM Hasina’s family
  • Last week, rival student factions clashed on a university campus, in a serious discord between groups instrumental in the uprising against Hasina

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s army chief on Tuesday blamed infighting for deteriorating law and order, warning that the gains of the student-led revolution that toppled the government last August were at risk.
The South Asian nation has been struggling to stem a surge in violent crime, with the security forces arresting thousands this month targeting gangs allegedly connected to the party of ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina.
“If you can’t move beyond your differences and continue meddling and fighting among yourselves, the independence and integrity of the country will be at risk — I warn you,” said General Waker-Uz-Zaman, without singling out any group by name.
“Since stakeholders are busy accusing each other, miscreants find the situation favorable. They believe they can get away with anything,” he said at an army memorial event.
Bangladesh has been riven by a surge of crime, as well as protests this month where crowds smashed buildings connected to Hasina’s family.
Last week rival student factions clashed at a university campus, a sign of serious discord between groups instrumental in driving the uprising against Hasina.
Security forces have arrested more than 8,600 people since it launched “Operation Devil Hunt” on February 8, which the government has accused of being Hasina loyalists and of wanting to “destabilize” the country.
“The anarchy we have witnessed is manufactured by us,” Waker said.
Bangladesh has a long history of military coups.
While it was Waker who took charge after Hasina fled by helicopter to India on August 5, he had also urged the people to back Nobel Prize-winning microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus.
Yunus, 84, vows to institute far-reaching democratic reforms and hold general elections in late 2025 or in early 2026, and Waker had sworn in the interim government.
“At the beginning, I said it would take 18 months to hold an election,” Waker said.
“We are on that path. Professor Yunus is doing his best to keep us united. Let’s help him.”
Key student protest leader Nahid Islam resigned on Tuesday from the government cabinet — where he headed the telecoms ministry — ahead of the expected launch of a new political party on Friday.
Yunus has said he inherited a “completely broken down” system of public administration and justice that needs a comprehensive overhaul to prevent a future return to autocracy.
Waker said security forces accused of a raft of allegations “of enforced disappearances, murder, and torture must be investigated.”
“Punishment must be ensured,” he said. “Otherwise, we will be trapped in the same cycle.”
The armed forces were granted judicial powers like the police — including making arrests — after the revolution.
But Waker, a career infantry officer who has spent nearly four decades in the military, serving two tours as a UN peacekeeper, said he just wanted a break.
“I just want to bring the country and the nation to a stable point and then take a vacation,” he said. “After that, we will return to our barracks.”


Pope Francis met at hospital with Vatican No. 2, took major governing decisions

A person places a drawing of Pope Francis at the base of the statue of late Pope John Paul II outside Gemelli Hospital.
A person places a drawing of Pope Francis at the base of the statue of late Pope John Paul II outside Gemelli Hospital.
Updated 25 February 2025
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Pope Francis met at hospital with Vatican No. 2, took major governing decisions

A person places a drawing of Pope Francis at the base of the statue of late Pope John Paul II outside Gemelli Hospital.
  • The audience signaled that the machinery of the Vatican is still grinding on even though doctors have warned that the prognosis for the 88-year-old Francis is guarded

ROME: Pope Francis was well enough to meet with the Vatican secretary of state to approve new decrees for possible saints, the Vatican said Tuesday, in announcing some major governing decisions that suggest he is getting essential work done and looking ahead despite being hospitalized in critical condition with double pneumonia.
The audience, which occurred Monday, signaled that the machinery of the Vatican is still grinding on even though doctors have warned that the prognosis for the 88-year-old Francis is guarded.
Decisions on saints and a formal meeting of cardinals
The Vatican’s Tuesday noon bulletin contained a series of significant decisions, most importantly that Francis had met with Cardinal Pietro Parolin and Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra, the Vatican “substitute” or chief of staff. It was the first known time the pope had met with Parolin, who is essentially the Vatican prime minister, since his Feb. 14 hospitalization.
During the audience, Francis approved decrees for two new saints and five people for beatification — the first step toward possible sainthood. Francis also decided to “convene a consistory about the future canonizations.”
Francis regularly approves decrees from the Vatican’s saint-making office when he is at the Vatican, albeit during audiences with the head of the office, not Parolin. A consistory, which is a formal meeting of cardinals, to set the dates for the canonizations is a necessary ceremonial step in that saint-making process, but the announcement of it was also forward-looking, given his illness.
No date was set for the meeting. But it was also at a banal consistory to set dates for canonizations on Feb. 11, 2013, that Pope Benedict XVI announced, in Latin, that he would resign because he couldn’t keep up with the rigors of the papacy. Francis has said he, too, would consider resigning after Benedict “opened the door” and became the first pope in 600 years to retire.
Giovanna Chirri, the reporter for the Italian news agency ANSA who was covering the consistory that day and broke the story because she understood Latin, said that she didn’t think Francis would follow in Benedict’s footsteps, “even if some would want it.”
“I could be wrong, but I hope not,” she told The Associated Press. “As long as he’s alive, the world and the church need him.”
Francis’ English biographer, Austen Ivereigh, said that it was possible, and that all that matters is that Francis be “wholly free to make the right decision.”
“The pope has always said that the papacy is for life, and he has shown that there is no problem with a frail and elderly pope,” Ivereigh said. “But he has also said that should he ever have a long-term degenerative or debilitating condition which prevents him from fully carrying out the exercise of the papal ministry, he would consider resigning. And so would any pope.”
Francis’ ideas about resignation
Francis has said that if he were to resign, he would live in Rome, outside the Vatican, and be called “emeritus bishop of Rome” rather than emeritus pope given the problems that occurred with Benedict’s experiment as a retired pope. Despite his best efforts, Benedict remained a point of reference for conservatives before he died in 2022, and his home inside the Vatican gardens something of a pilgrimage destination for the right.
Francis has also written a letter of resignation, to be invoked if he became medically incapacitated.
Speculation about a possible resignation has swirled ever since Francis was hospitalized, but the Vatican hierarchy has tamped it down. Parolin himself told Corriere della Sera over the weekend that such speculation was “useless” and that what mattered was Francis’ health.
In addition to the audience with Parolin, the Vatican released Francis’ message for Lent, the period leading up to Easter, in yet another forward-looking sign. In a subsequent bulletin, Francis named a handful of new bishops for Brazil, a new archbishop for Vancouver and modified the law for the Vatican City State to create a new hierarchy.
Many if not all of these decisions were likely in the works for some time. But the Vatican has said that Francis has been doing some work in the hospital, including signing documents.
The pope slept well
On Tuesday morning, the Vatican’s typically brief morning update said: “The pope slept well, all night.”
The previous evening, doctors had said he remained in critical condition at Rome’s Gemelli hospital with double pneumonia, but reported a “slight improvement” in some laboratory results. In the most upbeat bulletin in days, the Vatican said Francis had resumed work from his hospital room, calling a parish in Gaza City that he has kept in touch with since the war there began.
Doctors have said the condition of the Argentine pope, who had part of one lung removed as a young man, is touch-and-go, given his age, fragility and preexisting lung disease before the pneumonia set in.
But in Monday’s update, they said he hadn’t had any more respiratory crises since Saturday, and the flow and concentration of supplemental oxygen has been slightly reduced. The slight kidney insufficiency detected on Sunday wasn’t causing alarm at the moment, doctors said.
Allies and ordinary faithful hopeful
Francis’ right-wing critics have been spreading dire rumors about his condition, but his allies have cheered him on and expressed hope that he will pull through. Many noted that from the very night of his election as pope, Francis had asked for the prayers of ordinary faithful, a request he repeats daily.
“I’m a witness of everything he did for the church, with a great love of Jesus,” Honduran Cardinal Óscar Rodríguez Maradiaga told La Repubblica. “Humanly speaking, I don’t think it’s time for him to go to Paradise.”
At Gemelli on a rainy Tuesday morning, ordinary Romans and visitors alike were also praying for the pope. Hoang Phuc Nguyen, who lives in Canada but was visiting Rome to participate in a Holy Year pilgrimage, took the time to come to Gemelli to say a special prayer for the pope at the statue of St. John Paul II outside the main entrance.
“We heard that he is in the hospital right now and we are very worried about his health,” Nguyen said. “He is our father and it is our responsibility to pray for him.”


UN figures show 2024 deadliest year for children crossing English Channel

UN figures show 2024 deadliest year for children crossing English Channel
Updated 25 February 2025
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UN figures show 2024 deadliest year for children crossing English Channel

UN figures show 2024 deadliest year for children crossing English Channel
  • International Organization for Migration: ‘More safe and regular routes are urgently needed’
  • IOM: Record number of 82 people dead, including 14 minors, likely an underestimate

LONDON: A record number of children died in the English Channel trying to reach the UK last year, with the route witnessing its highest-ever fatality figures.

The Missing Person’s Project of the UN’s International Organization for Migration recorded 82 people dying in the Channel — one of the world’s busiest sea lanes — of whom 14 were minors.

The 82 deaths in 2024, which officials say are likely an underestimate of the true total, are more than three times the number from the previous year.

In the period spanning 2018 to 2024, child deaths in the Channel never exceeded five fatalities in a single year.

Not all of the children who died making the crossing in 2024 have been identified. However, those named include 14-year-old Obada Abd Rabbo from Syria and his compatriot Mohamed Al-Jbawi, 16, both of whom died on Jan. 14.

Several Iraqi children are also known to have died making the trip, including 7-year-old Rola Al-Mayali, who was on a boat carrying her and her family which capsized in a canal approaching the Channel.

Seven-year-old Sara Al-Ashimi, also from Iraq, drowned on April 23. The youngest victim — Maryam Bahez, who was just a month old — died on Oct. 17 after falling from her father’s hands in an overcrowded boat. Her family was from Iraqi Kurdistan.

The IOM warned that even children who survive the journey are often left vulnerable when arriving in the UK, with many separated from their parents.

Christa Rottensteiner, chief of mission for the IOM in the UK, told The Guardian: “The record high number of children who died in the English Channel last year is a wake-up call that more needs to be done. 

“For those whose nationality is known, you can see that they are from war-torn countries or extremely volatile contexts.

“More safe and regular routes are urgently needed, and the right support need to be in place for separated children looking for their families.”

Dr. Wanda Wyporska, CEO of Safe Passage International, told The Guardian: “Crossing the Channel in these small and overcrowded boats is a terrifying experience no child should have to go through.

“Young people we support have shared heartbreaking descriptions with us. They thought they were going to die, have been hospitalised with painful petrol burns from broken engines, and were petrified of falling into the water as they couldn’t swim. 

“We know children are often deeply traumatised from this journey, and it can take a long time for them to be able to talk about their frightening ordeal in these boats.

“It’s horrifying so many children have died on this unnecessary journey. This is a clear consequence of the lack of safe routes which would save children’s lives.”


Ahead of Starmer meeting with Trump, UK to raise defense spending to 2.5 percent of GDP by 2027

Ahead of Starmer meeting with Trump, UK to raise defense spending to 2.5 percent of GDP by 2027
Updated 25 February 2025
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Ahead of Starmer meeting with Trump, UK to raise defense spending to 2.5 percent of GDP by 2027

Ahead of Starmer meeting with Trump, UK to raise defense spending to 2.5 percent of GDP by 2027
  • UK currently spends 2.3 percent of gross domestic product on defense
  • Prime Minister Keir Starmer is due to meet President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday

LONDON: Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledged Tuesday to raise UK defense spending to 2.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2027, saying Europe is in a new era of insecurity that requires a “generational response.”
The announcement came two days before Starmer is due at the White House to try to persuade US President Donald Trump to maintain American support for Ukraine and the NATO alliance.
“We must stand by Ukraine, because if we do not achieve a lasting peace, then the economic instability and threats to our security, they will only grow,” Starmer told lawmakers in the House of Commons.
“And so as the nature of that conflict changes, as it has in recent weeks, it brings our response into sharper focus, a new era that we must meet as we have so often in the past, together, and with strength.”
The UK currently spends 2.3 percent of gross domestic product on defense, and the government had previously set a 2.5 percent target, without setting a date.
Starmer told lawmakers that the increase amounts to an additional 13.4 billion pounds ($17 billion) a year. He said the goal is for defense spending to rise to 3 percent of GDP by 2035.
To pay for it, overseas development aid will be slashed from 0.5 percent to 0.3 percent of national income, he said.
Starmer said that his announcement amounted to the “biggest sustained increase in defense spending since the end of the Cold War,” and necessary because “tyrants like (Russian President Vladimir) Putin only respond to strength.”
The announcement came as European countries scramble to bolster their collective defense as Trump transforms American foreign policy, seemingly sidelining Europe as he looks to quickly end the war in Ukraine.
Trump has long questioned the value of NATO and complained that the US provides security to European countries that don’t pull their weight.
Starmer is due to meet with Trump at the White House on Thursday.
The prime minister has offered to send British troops to Ukraine as part of a force to safeguard a ceasefire under a plan being championed by the UK and France, but says an American “backstop” will be needed to ensure a lasting peace. Trump hasn’t committed to providing security guarantees for Ukraine, saying Monday after meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron at the White House that “Europe is going to make sure nothing happens.”
Starmer’s center-left government is seeking closer defense cooperation with Europe, as part of a “reset” with the European Union after years of bitterness over Brexit.
He also wants good relations with Washington, even as Trump, who advocates an “America First” foreign policy platform, disparages allies, threatens tariffs on trading partners and labels Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky — but not Putin — a “dictator.”
“We must reject any false choice between our allies, between one side of the Atlantic and the other,” Starmer said. He said that he would tell Trump: “’I want this relationship to go from strength to strength.’“