From the BBC:
“Sir Kim Darroch resigns as UK
ambassador to US”
Sir Kim Darroch has resigned as
UK ambassador to the US, as a row over leaked emails critical of President
Trump's administration escalates. The US president had branded him "a very
stupid guy" after emails emerged where the ambassador had called his
administration "clumsy and inept". Theresa May said Sir Kim's
departure was "a matter of deep regret". He said he wanted to put an
end to speculation about his role and the leak had made it "impossible"
to continue. In a letter to the Foreign Office, Sir Kim said: "Although my
posting is not due to end until the end of this year, I believe in the current
circumstances the responsible course is to allow the appointment of a new
ambassador." The leak was described as "malicious" by Sir Simon
McDonald, permanent under secretary and head of the diplomatic service, who
told Sir Kim: "You are the best of us." Mrs May said he had had the
full backing of the cabinet and had given a "lifetime of service" to
the UK, for which he was owed an "enormous debt of gratitude". "Good
government depends on public servants being able to give full and frank
advice", she said. She spoke of the importance of "defending our
values and principles particularly when they are under pressure". His
resignation has prompted widespread support for Sir Kim while some have
questioned Tory frontrunner Boris Johnson's stance. Mr Johnson had refused to
say, during the Tory leadership debate on Tuesday night, whether he would keep
Sir Kim in post if he became prime minister. Following Sir Kim's resignation,
he said he was "a superb diplomat" and whoever was responsible for
the leak "has done a grave disservice to our civil servants". Foreign
Secretary Jeremy Hunt said Mr Trump had been "disrespectful" to the
UK during the row Europe Minister Sir
Alan Duncan said it was "contemptible negligence" not to support Sir
Kim. "He's basically thrown this fantastic diplomat under a bus to serve
his own personal interests," he said. Fellow Tory leadership candidate and
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said he "profoundly" regretted the
"outrageous" leak that led to Sir Kim's departure. "It should
never have come to this", he added. BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg
said: "Failing to back Darroch last night was the first major act of the
still hypothetical Johnson premiership that led to his resignation." In
the Commons, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn described Mr Trump's comments about
him as "beyond unfair and wrong." In the emails leaked to the Mail on
Sunday, Sir Kim said: "We don't really believe this administration is
going to become substantially more normal; less dysfunctional; less
unpredictable; less faction-riven; less diplomatically clumsy and inept." The
emails, dating from 2017, said rumours of "infighting and chaos" in
the White House were mostly true. Sir Kim thanked those who had offered their
support, both in the UK and the US during a "difficult few days",
adding that it had "brought home to me the depth of friendship and close
ties between our two countries". The government has opened an internal
inquiry into the publication of the memos. Police have been urged to open a
criminal investigation into the leak.
Who is Sir Kim Darroch?
Born in South Stanley, County
Durham, in 1954, Sir Kim attended Durham University where he read zoology. During
a 42-year diplomatic career, he has specialised in national security issues and
European Union policy. In 2007, Sir Kim served in Brussels as the UK permanent
representative to the EU. He was the prime minister's national security adviser
between 2012 and 2015, dealing with issues such as the rise of the Islamic
State group in Iraq and Syria, Russian annexation of Crimea, the nuclear threat
from Iran and the collapse of government authority in Libya. He became
ambassador to the US in January 2016, a year before Donald Trump's presidential
inauguration.
^ Darroch really resigned as Ambassador
to the US because the US announced it would no longer deal with him and if the
US won’t deal with the British Ambassador than it leaves a major hole in the “Special
Relationship.” In a sense Trump and the US forced him to resign - regardless of what the British politicians
back in London are officially saying. ^
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