Trade and investment between our two countries has staggering potential to generate jobs, prosperity, and higher living standards for citizens of both.
Disruptive as it may be, Putin’s Russia is not our ideological nemesis, to be defeated like the Soviet Union.
Having led the way in creating an anti-federalist European bloc, our party’s concerns are shared by parties across the continent. This can only help with renegotiation.
The Ministry of Defence is today hosting a reception for the Polish President and numerous veterans.
By honouring their contribution we would strengthen the bonds of friendship between the UK and Poland which endure today.
We should seek to build a relationship with the Russian bear, not antagonise it further.
These brutal and barbaric organisations are poised to assume de facto control of the country, just a few hundred miles across the Mediterranean from the EU.
I’ve seen first hand the contribution that this generation of young Poles is making to Britain – just as an earlier one did during the Battle of Britain.
Our friends fear attack by Russia – we must state clearly that the NATO guarantee of mutual defence still stands.
By wisely using our historic links and the diaspora in the UK, we can benefit from economic and social ties with ‘Emerging Europe’.
Immigrants to the UK must not use safe harbour here to threaten or undermine our allies in the Middle East.
What is crucial, and what the Government’s review will ascertain, is the relationship between the organisation and violent extremism.
The Gulf Co-operation Council could play a useful role.
In this week’s Foreign Affairs column, the MP replies to our columnist Garvan Walshe, who wrote last week that we share no interest or values with the Saudis
A range of significant obstacles would need to be cleared to set about forming such a defence force. None of them is anything to do with Britain’s membership of the EU