Lammy declares ‘post Cold War peace is well and truly over’ as he takes aim at Putin - The foreign secretary has used his first major speech of 2025 to go after the Russian leader’s aggression in tear
Former first minister claims it was ‘shameful’ for the Foreign Secretary to meet the Israeli government to discuss a ceasefire
No evidence' that Vladimir Putin wants peace deal to end his Ukraine war, says Foreign Secretary David Lammy - The Cabinet minister also suggested that Donald Trump’s timetable for a peace deal was sl
A POTENTIAL peace deal between Russia and Ukraine could take place in just weeks after Trump gets back to power, David Lammy has revealed. Trump, who is set to take over the White House on January
David Maddox, The Independent David Lammy has declared that the hard-won “post-Cold War peace is well and truly over” as he used his first major
David Lammy has declared that the hard-won “post-Cold War peace is well and truly over” as he used his first major speech of 2025 to take aim at Vladimir Putin and Russian aggression.
David Lammy told the BBC that he believes ... believing there is “no evidence” that Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to come to the table to negotiate. His comments come after a press ...
Two Russian energy giants are set to be sanctioned by the UK and US as the west piles more pressure on Vladimir Putin’s faltering economy.
The mood surrounding Donald Trump’s inauguration on Monday is very different to the first time round. In 2017 there were liberals in the United States and around the world who behaved as if we were in the end times.
The Israeli security cabinet recommended the approval to the ceasefire deal in Gaza, although strikes have continue to kill scores in the Palestinian territory.
The Israeli security cabinet had earlier recommended to the government that it allow the Qatar, Egypt and US-mediated truce to go into effect on Sunday.
The UK has not carried out a single conviction for breaches of Russian sanctions, the National Crime Agency has said. Financial sanctions on Russia were introduced following the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the wider invasion of Ukraine in 2022.