1/ The Foreign Secretary seemed keen to dodge the hard questions when he appeared before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee – but here’s what we managed to learn anyway… ⬇️
2/ He doesn’t know how many British nationals have been left behind in Afghanistan. It could be 100. It could be 400. He isn’t sure.
3/ But he can say that the security guards at the British Embassy, who we owe a duty to, were left behind in the chaos.
4/ He can’t remember when he last spoke to the Afghan Foreign Minister, the Pakistani Foreign Minister, any regional country or any British ambassador in the region in the months before the Taliban seized Kabul.
5/ In fact, since he became Foreign Secretary he’s never been to Afghanistan or Pakistan.
6/ He seemed surprised to learn that his own Department’s Principal Risk Report warned that the Taliban were advancing and the situation was deteriorating on 22 July. Had he actually read it?
7/ He was asked nine times when exactly he went on holiday. Was it before or after the US warned of the Taliban’s advance? Was it before or after a crisis centre was set up? He wouldn’t say.
8/ 900 troops flew into danger to deal with the crisis that unfolded on his watch. Would he like to apologise to them? Turns out he wouldn’t.
9/ He had 18 months to plan. But with Britain weakened in the world and facing greater threats from terrorism, a humanitarian crisis and thousands left behind, his only regret is going on holiday.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
1/ Today Parliament decides whether to boycott the Beijing Winter Olympics. The Government talks tough about China but when it comes to the crunch, they have no values and no strategy.
Let’s take a look…
Former Chancellor George Osborne became the first British Minister to visit Xinjiang, hailing a “golden era” of Sino-British relations while turning a blind eye to the human rights abuses taking place right under his nose... bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-pol…
The Conservatives are asleep at the wheel when it comes to national security. Let’s have a look at just how careless they’ve been this year…
In February, the Home Office admitted that more than 15,000 records were wrongly deleted from the Police National Computer theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/f…
In March, sensitive information from the MoD was exposed when documents were transferred to personal email accounts news.sky.com/story/ministry…
1/ Boris Johnson's record of failure threatens to derail the most important G7 in a generation. How has he managed to get us in such a mess?
Broken promise 1️⃣: Negotiated the “ingenious” Northern Ireland protocol and then called it “unsustainable” and refused to implement it. theguardian.com/politics/2021/…
Broken promise 2️⃣: Said he wanted to create a “fair taxation system” then watered down groundbreaking global tax reforms costing Britain 131 million a week. inews.co.uk/news/g7-global…
18 months after receiving the Russia Report, the government still hasn’t implemented any of its recommendations
In that time, the Tories have taken more than £1m in donations from Russia-linked sources
The report called for action to clean up dirty money & protect our democracy
Alexander Temerko has given more than £700K to the Conservative Party.
He ‘forged a career at the top of the Russian arms industry and had connections at the highest levels of the Kremlin’ and spoke of how he would ‘plot’ with his friend Boris Johnson:
Temerko’s company Aquind has donated more than £470,000.
Former Business Secretary Alok Sharma dined with executives from the company whose energy project he was due to approve, before eventually recusing himself.
The Integrated Review is riddled with inconsistencies and contradictions. There is a yawning gap between this government's words and its action
Russia: the government says it’s the most acute threat to Britain’s security, so why has it failed to implement any of the recommendations of the Russia Report?
Saudi arms sales: The government is the ‘penholder’ for Yemen, responsible for drafting UN resolutions to support the peace process, so why is it continuing to sell arms to Saudi Arabia? theguardian.com/world/2021/feb…