Thursday, October 24

Biden and Sunak to concentrate on Ukraine and financial safety in British PM’s first White House go to

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Biden is welcoming Prime Minister Rishi Sunak for wide-ranging talks on Thursday because the British chief makes his first White House go to as premier.

The leaders’ Oval Office talks are anticipated to cowl the battle in Ukraine, China, financial safety, worldwide cooperation on regulating the rising area of synthetic intelligence, and extra. Biden and Sunak have already had 4 face-to-face conferences since Sunak grew to become prime minister in October, however the talks in Washington will provide the 2 leaders an opportunity for his or her most sustained interplay so far.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre mentioned the 15-month-old Russian invasion of Ukraine will likely be “top of mind.” The U.S. and U.Okay. are the 2 greatest donors to the Ukraine battle effort and play a central position in a long-term effort introduced final month to coach, and finally equip, Ukrainian pilots on F-16 fighter jets.



Rishi is also seeking to make the case to Biden for U.Okay. Defense Minister Ben Wallace to succeed outgoing NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, who is ready to finish his time period main the 31-member alliance in September. Stoltenberg is slated to fulfill with Biden in Washington on Monday, and leaders from the alliance are set to assemble in Lithuania on July 11-12 for his or her annual summit.

“The two leaders will review a range of global issues including our economic partnership or shared support of Ukraine as it defends itself against Russia’s war of aggression, as well as further action to accelerate the clean energy transition,” Jean-Pierre mentioned. “The president and the prime minister will also discuss the joint U.S.-U.K. leadership on critical emerging technologies as well as our work to strengthen our economic security.”

Sunak’s go to comes as U.S. and British intelligence officers are nonetheless attempting to kind out blame for the breaching of a significant dam in southern Ukraine, which despatched floodwaters gushing via cities and over farmland. Neither Washington nor London has formally accused Russia of blowing up the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam.

Sunak mentioned Wednesday that U.Okay. intelligence providers are nonetheless assessing the proof, however “if it does prove to be intentional, it will represent a new low … an appalling barbarism on Russia’s part.”

“Russia throughout this war has used as a deliberate active strategy to target civilian infrastructure,” he instructed broadcaster ITV in Washington.

The two sides are hoping to show that the U.S.-U.Okay. relationship stays as robust as ever regardless of current political and financial upheaval within the U.Okay. Sunak is certainly one of three British prime ministers Biden has handled since taking workplace in 2021, and the administrations have had variations over Brexit and its affect on Northern Ireland.

There even have been some awkward moments between the 2 leaders within the early going.

Biden, at a White House celebration in October to mark the Hindu vacation of Diwali, famous the elevation of Sunak, who’s the U.Okay.’s first chief of coloration and the primary Hindu to serve within the position, as a “groundbreaking milestone” however he badly mangled the pronunciation of Sunak’s title.

At a March assembly in San Diego with Sunak and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to announce plans to promote Australia nuclear-powered assault submarines, Biden jokingly instructed Sunak “maybe you can invite me to your home in California.” The lighthearted apart resurrected previous political baggage for Sunak, whose political aspirations briefly dimmed as he confronted an ethics investigation final 12 months after it emerged that he had possessed a U.S. inexperienced card two years after being appointed chancellor of the exchequer. Sunak, a former hedge fund supervisor with an MBA from Stanford University, and his spouse personal a house in California.

Nonetheless, there’s a way within the Biden administration that the U.S.-U.Okay. relationship is again on extra secure footing after the generally uneven tenure of Boris Johnson and the 45-day premiership of Liz Truss.

“I think there’s a sense of relief to some degree, not just in the White House, but throughout Washington, that the Sunak government has been very pragmatic and maintained the U.K.’s robust commitment to Ukraine and to increasing defense spending,” mentioned Max Bergmann, director of the Europe, Russia and Eurasia program on the Center for Strategic and International Studies. He added that with Sunak, there’s additionally been “somewhat of a return to pragmatism” on financial points and relations with the European Union post-Brexit.

Sunak opened his two-day Washington go to on Wednesday by laying a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. He met with key congressional leaders, together with Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, in addition to enterprise leaders. He additionally attended a Washington Nationals baseball recreation.

Shortly earlier than departing for Washington, Sunak introduced that a number of U.S. corporations had been making $17 billion (£14 billion) in new financial investments within the U.Okay.

The chairs of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, Republican Rep. Chris Smith and Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley, on Wednesday wrote to Sunak asking him to work with the Biden administration on Hong Kong coverage and push for the discharge of jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai and different activists.

Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai, final month in testimony earlier than the U.S. committee expressed disappointment that the U.Okay. had not condemned his father’s detention publicly and had not taken a stronger stance in advocating for his launch. The elder Lai based the now-shuttered pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily and faces prices beneath Hong Kong’s safety legislation and a colonial-era sedition legislation.

“A robust stance by the U.K. government is critically important, given your oversight of the Sino-British Declaration and the millions of Hong Kongers who hold British citizenship or British National (Overseas) passports,” the lawmakers wrote. “The erosion of Hong Kong’s promised autonomy and the dismantling of a free press and the rule of law are issues of global concern.”

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Associated Press Diplomatic Writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report.

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