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Sunak and Biden meeting at G20 summit overshadowed by war in Ukraine

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak had a meeting with US President Joe Biden but events in Europe dominated the summit in Indonesia.

Sophie Wingate
Wednesday 16 November 2022 11:45 GMT
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak leaves following a press conference after meeting with US President Joe Biden and a phone call to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the G20 summit in Nusa Dua, Bali (Leon Neal/PA)
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak leaves following a press conference after meeting with US President Joe Biden and a phone call to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the G20 summit in Nusa Dua, Bali (Leon Neal/PA) (PA Wire)

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Rishi Sunak said a global economic crisis was being driven by Vladimir Putinā€™s war in Ukraine after a G20 summit dominated by the fallout from the conflict.

The Prime Minister, who held talks with world leaders including Joe Biden on the final day of the gathering in Bali, Indonesia, said ā€œthe persistent threat to our security and global asphyxiation has been driven by the actions of the one man unwilling to be at this summitā€.

His discussions with the US president touched on the situation in Northern Ireland, with the Prime Minister hoping the post-Brexit issues there can be resolved by the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement next year, but did not cover the prospect of a transatlantic trade deal.

Mr Biden, who is proud of his Irish ancestry, has taken a keen interest in the situation around the Northern Ireland Protocol, the post-Brexit trading arrangement which the UK Government is seeking to fundamentally reshape.

Asked if the US president raised concerns about the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, the Prime Ministerā€™s press secretary said: ā€œNot specifically, noā€.

Pressed on whether he did about the Northern Ireland situation in general, she said: ā€œYes.ā€

ā€œThey both expressed their commitment to protecting the Good Friday Agreement,ā€ she said.

She added that the Prime Minister ā€œexpressed his desire to get a negotiated settlement and to ensure that the Good Friday Agreement is protected.ā€

Mr Sunak referred to next yearā€™s 25th anniversary of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement and ā€œensuring that we get a negotiated settlement that protects the Good Friday Agreement by thenā€, she said.

The White House readout of the meeting said the two leaders ā€œaffirmed their shared commitment to protecting the gains of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreementā€.

The UKā€™s stance on the protocol is one of the factors which have led to stalled progress on a trade deal with Washington.

Mr Sunak confirmed that he and Mr Biden did not discuss a trade deal ā€œin particularā€ during their meeting, they did talk about the ā€œeconomic partnershipā€ between the two nations.

But talks between leaders at the G20 were overshadowed by the latest wave of Russian strikes on Ukraine and the circumstances around an explosion in Nato member state Poland which caused two deaths.

An emergency meeting involving Mr Sunak, Mr Biden andĀ like-minded leaders ā€“ including French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Japanā€™s premier Fumio Kishida and Canadaā€™s Justin Trudeau ā€“ was hastily arranged in Bali.

While Russia is a member of the G20, Mr Putin was absent ā€“ although foreign minister Sergei Lavrov led the countryā€™s delegation.

The summitā€™s closing communique stated that ā€œmost members strongly condemned the war in Ukraineā€ but ā€œthere were other views and different assessments of the situation and sanctionsā€.

Dialogue is vital to prevent miscalculations, and is not a sign of weakness

Alicia Kearns, Commons Foreign Affairs Committee

The crisis following the incident in Poland saw carefully-prepared schedules torn up, resulting in the cancellation of a planned meeting between Mr Sunak and Chinaā€™s Xi Jinping.

Mr Sunak had been expected to use the meeting to call for a ā€œfrank and constructive relationshipā€ with Beijing while also raising its human rights abuses, Downing Street said.

The Prime Minister had been warned by critics that he could be seen as ā€œweakā€ for ā€œdrifting into appeasement with Chinaā€, after he appeared to soften his rhetoric to declare the country a ā€œsystemic challengeā€ rather than a ā€œthreatā€.

But Commons Foreign Affairs Committee chairwoman Alicia Kearns said it was ā€œa shameā€ the meeting had been cancelled.

ā€œDialogue is vital to prevent miscalculations, and is not a sign of weakness,ā€ she said.

ā€œThe trust deficit is palpable at this time, and meeting was important to set out our positions and build the ground to prevent miscalculations.ā€

Rishi Sunak met with Indiaā€™s prime minister Narendra Modi as the summit drew to a close, as Downing Street said that the pair ā€œlooked forward to the agreement of a UK-India free trade dealā€.

A Downing Street readout of Mr Sunakā€™s meeting with Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese came amid criticism from some in the Tory Party that the trade deal between the two countries gave too much away.

The pair ā€œlooked forward to the implementationā€ of the UK-Australia free trade agreement, Downing Street said.

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