Britain wants to have closer defence cooperation with the European Union after Brexit.
Recall that the British public narrowly voted to leave the European Union bloc last year. But move to actualise that mandate has been rather slow over what is best described as technicalities surrounding the terms of the divorce. Think: immigration, custom, financial obligation as a beginning.
Anyway, moving forward, the UK government today published a document, that it hopes will nudge negotiation forward, by focusing on what it can bring to the EU in terms of security. An issue that everyone agrees is paramount in these fearful times. The document is the the UK’s government’s government’s sixth “future partnership paper” and is a response to criticisms from the EU that London is not prepared for negotiations to unravel more than 40 years of union, Reuters reports.
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In a nutshell, London says it can contribute military assets to EU operation and may offer to continue exchanging classified information. It reiterated what EU already knows: that Britain has the largest defence and development budgets in Europe so can offer defence and security support to the EU.




