In a development that has left Her Majesty's Foreign Office reaching for the smelling salts and a very large G&T, President Trump has brokered a deal with Iran. Yes, that Iran. The one we have spent a decade tutting at over our morning muesli. The deal, does it shake Britain's global standing? My dear reader, we would first need to have any standing to shake. What we have instead is the international equivalent of a man waving a wooden sword at a tank and hoping for the best.
Let us parse this with the surgical precision of a man on his sixth double gin. The void left by Western disunity is not a void at all. It is a crater. A chasm. A great big yawning mouth of nothing, where our foreign policy used to gambol about in tweed and sensible shoes, before it was run over by the juggernaut of American unilateralism and EU bureaucracy. We are now the man who arrives at the party after the keg has been drained, desperately asking if there is any left in the fridge.
The deal itself is classic Trump: a flash of bravado, a handshake that probably looked very firm on camera, and a vague promise that everyone will be friends now. But what of Britain? We were not at the table. We were not even in the building. We were outside, peering through the window, our breath fogging the glass, wondering if we should have worn our good suit. Our 'special relationship' with America has been downgraded from 'special' to 'we'll call you if we need a cup of sugar'.
And the EU? Our former partners in crime are now more interested in protecting their own car industry and pretending Brexit never happened. They are the ex who has deleted your number but still keeps your favourite book. So where does that leave us? In a state of strategic purgatory, clutching a warm pint of geopolitical irrelevance.
The absurdity of it all is enough to make a man weep into his scotch. The US negotiates with Iran while Britain is left to twiddle its thumbs and hope that no one notices the gaping hole where our influence used to be. Our diplomats are probably still filling out forms in triplicate, asking permission to have an opinion. Meanwhile, the rest of the world is moving on. China is building islands. Russia is hacking things. And Britain is arguing about the proper way to brew tea.
This is not a disaster. It is a farce. A beautifully crafted one, with a cast of characters who seem utterly convinced that they are still the stars of the show, even as the lights dim and the audience leaves. The void left by Western disunity is not just a strategic problem. It is a metaphysical one. We have forgotten who we are. We are no longer the empire on which the sun never set. We are a damp little island, bobbing along in the wake of larger ships, hoping that our history will be enough to keep us afloat.
So raise a glass, dear reader. To Britain's global standing. It is not shaken. It has been spiked, stirred, and forgotten on a bar somewhere. But at least we still have gin.








