Liz Truss has the chance to be a better prime minister than Boris Johnson was, not least in the UK’s foreign policy 
      
    
    
      For all the smoke-and-mirrors talk now commonplace about Brexit 
opportunities, there is real potential that Liz Truss could extract from
 the aftermath of that upheaval as well as from the turmoil in the 
world.
But the approach and priorities she revealed during her one year as a
 better UK foreign secretary than Boris Johnson was – although he did 
set a low bar – as well as the past three months campaigning for the 
leadership of her party contain a warning.
She has shown a willingness to aggravate relationships with allies in
 pursuit of the support of her party faithful, and of a vision of 
British independence as well as a tendency to dismiss economic analysis 
when it inconveniently questions her assertions about favoured policies.
At the heart of her political identity is a notion which is both a 
strength and a potentially calamitous weakness – a love of the notion of
 being a disrupter which injects a deliberate unpredictability into her 
approach towards a world in extreme flux.
If she indulges this without good judgment, she could do real damage to Britain’s prospects and standing in the world.
Ukraine and the energy crisis
In foreign policy, Europe should be her starting point and the 
opportunity here for the UK is clear. The war in Ukraine and crisis in 
the cost of energy gives it a role – despite having left the European 
Union (EU) – in talking to EU governments about the future of the 
continent on many fronts.
Johnson’s emphatic support of President Zelensky gave the UK a 
position of moral and strategic clarity which Truss can build on through
 what will be an exceptionally difficult winter for Europe’s 
governments.
At
 the heart of her political identity is a notion which is both a 
strength and a potentially calamitous weakness – a love of the notion of
 being a disrupter
She is in a position to persuade European leaders to remain united in
 Ukraine’s support while planning better how they are going to source 
energy. She could expand on that to help the EU find a way through its 
many other problems, such as upholding democratic values throughout the 
bloc or finding a response to migration.
There is also a chance for the UK to shape Europe’s thinking on the 
development and regulation of digital technology and medicine, energy, 
and the environment.
Truss’s declaration that the UK should now spend three per cent of 
its GDP on defence could help her in taking that kind of role. However 
this campaign declaration is not yet credible, given the pressures on 
the national finances and her silence so far on support for households 
on energy costs.
But that is the opportunity in theory and the signs are this is not 
her approach to Europe. Her provocative and opportunistic comment that 
the ‘jury’s out’ on whether President Macron (and France) was a friend 
or foe shocked both Britain’s allies and opponents.
For those keen to see divisions among democracies, it gave 
unexpected, heady encouragement, and to those within those countries, it
 injected a doubt about shared values which was deeply damaging. The 
chilly poise of Macron’s response – that the UK and France would always 
be allies – showed how far she had departed from normal protocol.
The episode encapsulated one of the sources of unease about the Truss
 style – improvisation under the banner of ‘disruption’ without thought 
of consequences.
Her
 instinctive liking for the US will help Truss in relations with 
Washington at a difficult time, and her apparent intention to designate 
China as ‘a threat’ will support that relationship too
However, she has shown consistency over the Northern Ireland Protocol
 with little sign of compromise, and that alone could cause much 
unnecessary damage to UK interests. It also puts her on a collision 
course with the EU and the UK House of Lords, due to consider 
controversial legislation again in early October after the Conservative 
party conference....
more at Chatham House
      
      
      
      
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