Sir Keir Starmer has urged Donald Trump to stand by Ukraine with a security guarantee as he warned a bad peace deal would be a "disaster for everyone". The prime minister is due to meet the US president for talks in Washington DC next week amid fragile relations between America and Europe after Mr Trump launched a verbal attack on President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
The US president called Ukraine's leader a "dictator" on Wednesday and later said Sir Keir and French President Emmanuel Macron, both of whom will visit the White House in the coming days, "haven't done anything" to end the war. Sir Keir said a good peace "can only be won through strength" and Ukraine "must have a voice in negotiations about its future".
And he warned that a "peace deal which does not stop Putin from attacking again would be a disaster for everyone". Writing in The Sun on Sunday, he said Kyiv needs strong security guarantees "so the peace will last" and America "must be part of that guarantee".
This could mean providing air defence and a promise that the US will come to the aid of a NATO country if Russia attacks them, the paper reported. So far, talks aimed at ending the war have been taking place between US and Russian delegations in Saudi Arabia, which have not included the Ukrainians.
UK Defence Secretary John Healey has said "any negotiations about Ukraine cannot happen without Ukraine. We all want the fighting to end, but an insecure peace risks more war". 'Turn the screws' on Russia. The third anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine is on Monday.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy has said he will unveil new sanctions to "turn the screws" on Russia on Monday to coincide with the anniversary. 👉 Follow Trump 100 on your podcast app 👈. Sir Keir also said the UK must increase its defence spending and play a bigger role in NATO.
And he is open to British troops playing a role in any European force in Ukraine after a peace agreement. He added: "This is not something I say lightly.". Sir Keir, along with other European allies and UK opposition parties, has backed Mr Zelensky as a "democratically elected leader".
Also, Washington has warned that Europe must shoulder more of the cost of its own security. Sir Keir is expected to use his upcoming trip to the US to confirm a timeline to raise UK defence spending from 2.3% to 2.5% of gross domestic product (GDP) in a bid to ease tensions.
Follow our channel and never miss an update. It comes amid pressure from defence chiefs and opposition critics including Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, who wrote to the prime minister on Saturday demanding he set out a plan for meeting the target. :: Education secretary Bridget Phillipson, campaigner for global health and education Sarah Brown, and shadow defence secretary James Cartlidge will be discussing all the latest political stories in the UK and around the world on the Trevor Phillips on Sunday show on Sky News from 8.30am.