Source · Select Committees · Foreign Affairs Committee
Fourth Report: A brave new Britain? The future of the UK’s international policy
Foreign Affairs Committee
HC 380
Published 22 October 2020
Recommendations
12
Para 15
The Integrated Review must address a lack of clear strategic vision, a lack of confidence,...
Recommendation
The Integrated Review must address a lack of clear strategic vision, a lack of confidence, and lack of coherent implementation that has undermined recent international policy by the UK. The Review should respond, and be seen to respond, to the …
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Foreign and Commonwealth Office
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13
Para 16
The UK intends to prioritise its promotion of trade, and trade policy has the capacity...
Recommendation
The UK intends to prioritise its promotion of trade, and trade policy has the capacity to become a significant aspect of the UK’s international influence. But, if it is not coordinated with other UK priorities abroad, then the elevation of …
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Foreign and Commonwealth Office
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14
Para 17
We recommend that, as part of its problem-solving and burden sharing role, the FCDO prioritises...
Recommendation
We recommend that, as part of its problem-solving and burden sharing role, the FCDO prioritises mediation, conflict resolution, and atrocity prevention. And we recommend that the Government equips the FCDO with an enhanced and institutionalised capability to coordinate with the …
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Foreign and Commonwealth Office
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15
Para 18
Soft power is key to the UK’s international influence.
Recommendation
Soft power is key to the UK’s international influence. It is about much more than culture: the way it is used by some nations suggests it is the entire capability of the state short of war, for others it is …
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Foreign and Commonwealth Office
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16
Para 19
We recommend that the UK convene and catalyse negotiations to reform multinational organisations: seeking to...
Recommendation
We recommend that the UK convene and catalyse negotiations to reform multinational organisations: seeking to maintain their relevance and their benefit for all rather A brave new Britain? The future of the UK’s international policy 21 than a few. Our …
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Foreign and Commonwealth Office
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19
We recommend that: i) The UK use its convening power and thought leadership to seek...
Recommendation
We recommend that: i) The UK use its convening power and thought leadership to seek agreement for regulations relating to frontier sectors such as emerging technologies, the cyber and space domains: mitigating threats by agreeing standards and allowing states instead …
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Foreign and Commonwealth Office
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Conclusions (13)
1
Conclusion
Para 2
The Integrated Review is a timely and necessary response to a world characterised by ever-strengthening interconnection and rapid technological change.
2
Conclusion
Para 3
The world is increasingly riven by global competition rather than cooperation.
3
Conclusion
Para 4
In part, this global competition is driven by geo–political change. But this global competition is also a battle between competing visions and mindsets. And the global competition is increasingly one between different technical systems.
4
Conclusion
Para 5
Such competition has stalled, and to some degree reversed, cooperation through multilateral organisations. The drive towards international arbitration is increasingly challenged by great power rivalry and influence projection. The world lacks consensus-building leadership. Global divides are widening, and there is a risk of the world’s challenges becoming more abundant, more …
5
Conclusion
Para 6
An increasingly assertive and revisionist China has created geo-political friction with a more introspective United States. China and Russia, as leading authoritarian and revisionist powers, have also been more adept than their ideological rivals at realising where their capacity for international influence lies and harnessing the full spectrum of such …
6
Conclusion
Para 7
The UK’s own international policy has been adrift. It has lacked clarity.
7
Conclusion
Para 8
It has also lacked confidence. Our contributors the world over were clear that the UK has recently appeared less ambitious and more absent in its global role
8
Conclusion
Para 9
None of our contributors wanted the UK to stand back or keep quiet. All of them urged the UK to step up, do more, and play a more impactful role in the world. They highlighted the positive contribution that the UK could make to international relations, and the negative implications …
9
Conclusion
Para 10
The UK has good reason to be confident in the capabilities of the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO), which were praised by contributors from around the world.
10
Conclusion
Para 11
The UK has a strong capacity to use its memberships and influence to bring countries together in dialogue. Contributors also admired the UK as a pragmatic country whose thought leadership, and the legal drafting capabilities of the FCDO’s lawyers, can bring the world together through agreed, stable and predictable frameworks. …
11
Conclusion
Para 12
But the UK will have the greatest impact abroad if it uses its range of assets and capabilities coherently. It is unlikely that the merger of the Department for A brave new Britain? The future of the UK’s international policy 19 International Development (DFID) and the Foreign & Commonwealth Office …
17
Conclusion
Para 20
The UK should use its convening power and thought leadership to bring together nimble networks of like-minded nations by agreeing a baseline for cooperation between them. These coalitions would be open, issue-based, fleet-footed, overlapping, and even temporary: a ‘vari-lateral’ system.
18
Conclusion
Para 21
We welcome the Government’s commitment to make global health security and working to counter climate change priorities within the UK’s international policy. Our Committee will examine these subject areas through its inquiries into ‘Environmental diplomacy’ and ‘Global health security’.