A British historian has described the United States on its 250th anniversary as a nation both “beautiful and terrible”, urging a recalibration of the transatlantic alliance based on shared democratic values. Professor David Reynolds of Cambridge University, author of a new study on American history, offered his assessment in a lecture at Chatham House, warning that American power has been both a force for global stability and a source of disruption.
“The United States at 250 is a paradox: a beacon of liberty that has often cast shadows,” Reynolds said. “Its founding ideals remain powerful, but its recent political convulsions have eroded trust at home and abroad. The partnership between Britain and America must be renewed, not as a relic of the past, but as a bulwark for the future.”
Reynolds traced the arc of American influence from the Declaration of Independence through its rise as a superpower. He noted that the US has been instrumental in building international institutions, but also in undermining them through unilateral actions. The historian pointed to the current era as one of particular fragility, with domestic polarisation and foreign policy inconsistency testing the resilience of the alliance.
The speech comes at a time when the “special relationship” between the UK and US faces unprecedented strain. London has sought to maintain close ties with Washington, but differences over trade, climate policy, and the war in Ukraine have complicated coordination. Reynolds argued that a renewed partnership must acknowledge past mistakes and focus on common challenges: climate change, technological security, and the rise of authoritarian rivals.
“The US is not merely a power; it is an idea,” Reynolds continued. “But ideas require constant renewal. The UK, with its experience in diplomacy and international law, can help anchor that renewal. We must move beyond transactional relations toward a deeper strategic convergence.”
Reaction from Whitehall has been cautious. A Foreign Office spokesperson said the government “values the deep and enduring relationship with the United States” and looks forward to “strengthening cooperation on shared priorities”. However, officials privately acknowledge that the partnership lacks the ideological cohesion of the Cold War era.
Analysts note that the US remains indispensable to European security but that its domestic divisions make it an unpredictable partner. Reynolds’ assessment echoes a growing consensus among transatlantic experts: the relationship must evolve or risk irrelevance.
“The US at 250 is both a testament to human ambition and a warning against hubris,” Reynolds concluded. “Britain should be a critical friend, not a passive follower. The world needs a strong democracy at the helm, but that democracy must be held accountable.”
The lecture has reignited debate about the future of the alliance, with some calling for deeper European defence integration to reduce dependence on Washington. Others insist that no alternative to American leadership exists. Reynolds suggested that a pragmatic, values-based partnership offers the best path forward, one that recognises the US’s flaws while embracing its potential.
As the anniversary approaches, the question remains whether the US can reconcile its founding principles with its current reality. For Britain, the challenge is to maintain influence without being subsumed by a superpower in flux.










