Britain is ‘ready to act’ after Donald Trump told Nato to shoot down R | Politics | News


Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has said Britain is โ€œready to actโ€ after Donald Trump urged Nato countries to shoot down intruding Russian planes. In a stark warning, she criticised Moscow for its โ€œprovocative and recklessโ€ violations of Nato air space in recent weeks during a speech to the United Nations.

Her comments came as the US President appeared to change his tone on Ukraine – insisting Kyiv can win back all territory it has lost and mocking Russia’s military capabilities. Asked during a meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky in New York whether he thought Russian planes in Nato airspace should be shot down, Mr Trump said: โ€œYes I do.โ€

Ms Cooper told the UN Security Council meeting on Tuesday night: โ€œUkraine’s security is our security, and all of us depend on upholding the UN Charter.

โ€œRussiaโ€™s actions seek to undermine democracy, secure conflict and spread instability far beyond Europeโ€™s borders.

โ€œIn recent weeks, weโ€™ve seen provocative and reckless violations of Nato air space in Estonia, Poland and Romania, against which Nato stands firm, and we will be ready to act.โ€

Nato has said it will respond to Russian aerial incursions with โ€œmilitary and non-military toolsโ€.

In a statement, the alliance condemned the incursion by three MiG-31 jets on Friday, describing it as โ€œpart of a wider pattern of increasingly irresponsible Russian behaviourโ€.

Former prime minister Boris Johnson has said the UK and its allies lack โ€œthe will and the leadership and the sense of urgencyโ€ to do more to help Ukraine.

He asked why frozen Russian assets are still not being used to fund the war effort, why the UK is still buying uranium from Russia, why it has not sanctioned Russian energy company Rosneft and why it has not imposed secondary sanctions on those still buying hydrocarbons from Russia.

Mr Johnson said: โ€œIโ€™ll tell you why. Itโ€™s because weโ€™re still apprehensive about the consequences, and because we still fundamentally lack the will and the leadership and the sense of urgency to get this done.โ€

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