No 10 says Trump was ‘wrong to diminish role’ played by British troops in Afghanistan
Downing Street has said that Donald Trump was “wrong” to downplay the role played by British troops in Afghanistan.
Asked about the comments at this morning’s lobby briefing, the PM’s spokesperson said:
The president was wrong to diminish the role of Nato troops, including British forces, in Afghanistan following the 9/11 attacks on the US.
Article 5 of the Nato treaty was invoked for the first time and British forces served alongside American and other allied troops in sustained combat operations.
457 British service personnel lost their lives in Afghanistan and many more were wounded. Many hundreds suffered life-changing injuries from their service alongside the US and our allies in Afghanistan.
Their sacrifice and that of other Nato forces was made in the service of collective security and in response to an attack on our ally.
We are incredibly proud of our armed forces and their service and sacrifice will never be forgotten.
But the spokesperson did not back calls for the president to apologise and, asked if Keir Starmer would be raising this with Trump when they next speak (as Stephen Kinnock suggested this morning – see 8.56am), the spokesperson just said that details of any calls would be set out in the normal way.
And there seem to be no plans to haul in the US ambassador, as the Liberal Democrats are proposing. (See 11.28am.)
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The Liberal Democrats are pleased with their win in the Cotswolds council byelection. (See 2.33pm.) It is in the North Cotswolds constituency where the Conservative Geoffrey Clifton-Brown has been MP in that seat, and in its predecessor seats, since 1992. At the last election Clifton-Brown had a majority of 3,357 over the Lib Dems.
A Lib Dem source said:
The writing is on the wall for Conservative MPs in marginal seats like this as the Tory vote continues to collapse. Kemi Badenoch is still chasing Reform and taking her party further to the right in a desperate to stop more defections, alienating millions of former Conservative voters in the process.
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Privatisation not the problem for England’s water, says author of review
The privatisation of water in England is not the reason for its failings, Sir Jon Cunliffe, the architect of the government’s water plan has said, as he warned there was no one “simple solution” such as nationalisation. Helena Horton has the story.
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There were five council byelections last night. As usual, Election Maps UK have the results.
Reform UK gained a seat from Labour in Wales.
Leeswood (Flintshire) Council By-Election Result:
➡️ RFM: 22.3% (New)
🙋 Ind: 19.2% (-5.6)
🙋 Ind: 18.8% (+4.3)
🌹 LAB: 12.1% (-48.5)
🏘️ FPV: 11.0% (New)
🔶 LDM: 9.5% (New)
🌳 CON: 4.7% (New)
🙋 Ind: 2.4% (New)
Reform GAIN from Labour.
Changes w/ 2022.
— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) January 23, 2026
The Lib Dems gained a seat from the Greens in the Cotswolds.
The Rissingtons (Cotswolds) Council By-Election Result:
🔶 LDM: 37.5% (New)
🌳 CON: 31.3% (-11.5)
➡️ RFM: 25.8% (New)
🌍 GRN: 5.5% (-51.7)
Liberal Democrat GAIN from Green.
Changes w/ 2023.
— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) January 23, 2026
The Conservatives held two seats, in Norfolk and Cheshire.
Central Wymondham (South Norfolk) Council By-Election Result:
🌳 CON: 31.1% (-4.6)
🌍 GRN: 25.9% (-3.7)
➡️ RFM: 20.7% (+15.1)
🔶 LDM: 12.0% (New)
🌹 LAB: 10.4% (-18.8)
Conservative HOLD.
Changes w/ 2023.
— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) January 23, 2026
Willaston & Thornton (Cheshire West & Chester Council By-Election Result:
🌳 CON: 53.8% (-7.1)
🌹 LAB: 17.2% (-9.3)
➡️ RFM: 16.1% (New)
🔶 LDM: 7.1% (+2.4)
🌍 GRN: 5.8% (-2.2)
Conservative HOLD.
Changes w/ 2023.
— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) January 23, 2026
And the SNP held a seat in Fife.
Glenrothes West and Kinglassie (Fife) By-Election Result [1st Prefs]:
🎗️ SNP: 44.3% (-5.3)
➡️ RFM: 27.5% (New)
🌹 LAB: 15.7% (-16.8)
🌳 CON: 6.9% (-4.7)
🔶 LDM: 4.7% (+0.9)
🧑🧑🧒🧒 SFP: 0.9% (New)
No Ind (-2.6) as previous.
SNP HOLD.
Changes w/ 2022.
— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) January 23, 2026
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Lord Dannatt, who was head of the army between 2006 and 2009, has said that Donald Trump’s comment about Nato allies’ conduct in Afghanistan is “manifestly not true”.
In an interview, Dannatt said:
I couldn’t believe when I heard this report yesterday that the man could be, frankly, so stupid and so outrageous as to make those comments …
The only explanation I can offer is that this tumultuous week that started with his land grab of Greenland and finished up with him achieving rather less than he wanted … he decided to chuck a few hand grenades in order to divert attention from his less than successful week.
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‘Just wrong’ – Yvette Cooper hits back at Trump
Yvette Cooper, the current foreign secretary, has posted this message on a tweet reposting Al Carns’ message to Donald Trump. (See 10.49am.)
Proud to have @AlistairCarns as our Armed Forces Minister.
British & NATO troops fought side by side with our American friends in Afghanistan. To suggest otherwise is just wrong.
Our whole country honours their courage and sacrifice and we honour and respect that of our allies.
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Trump’s comments ‘totally unacceptable and deeply disrespectful’, says former Tory foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt
Jeremy Hunt, the former Tory foreign secretary, has told Radio 4’s the World at One that Donald Trump’s comment about Nato allies in Afghanistan was “totally unacceptable, factually wrong, and deeply disrespectful to the families whose loved ones paid the ultimate price”.
Hunt said that, in terms of the proportion of troops who died, British losses in Afghanistan were even higher than US losses. “We were in one of the most dangerous regions, Helmand,” Hunt said. “And so that that is that’s what makes it even worse – it’s just plain wrong.”
Asked if he thought the government should cancel the king’s state visit to the US later this year in the light of Trump’s comment, Hunt said this was a difficult decision. But he also said that, “despite extreme provocation”, it was important for Britain to maintain good relations with Washington, not to abandon the Atlantic alliance and to “keep America locked in to the defence of Europe”.
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The SNP has said that Keir Starmer will be “acting like some kind of tin-pot dictator” if he blocks Andy Burnham from being a candidate in the Gorton and Denton byelection. (See 11.05am.) In a statement, Pete Wishart, the SNP’s deputy leader at Westminster, said:
It reeks of desperation that the prime minister is having to stitch up a selection process to cling onto power – and underlines the chaos in the bitterly divided Labour party.
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Conservative councillors from around the country have told PoliticsHome that they have been offered senior council roles, or selection as parliamentary candidates, if they defect to Reform UK. In her story, Matilda Martin quotes several councillors who have been on the receiving end of these offers, and she also quotes John Cope, chair of the Conservative Councillors’ Association, who told her:
Councillors across the country have reported being approached with offers of funding, roles, and cabinet positions if they join Reform. The running joke is that more parliamentary seats have been promised than actually exist.
Reform UK told Martin that it was not paying anyone to defect, and that no one in the party could guarantee that someone would be selected as a Reform parliamentary candidate.
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Adam Price, the Danish screenwriter who wrote Borgen, the drama about a Danish PM, has written an article for the Guardian about the Greenland crisis. This is what he says about Donald Trump’s comments about Nato allies.
It is bizarre how accustomed we have become to a US president who openly lies, distorts facts and is utterly ignorant about history. (Leaving aside that he confused Iceland with Greenland in his speech.) Trump claimed that Europeans alone benefit from Nato and said he doubted anyone would come to the aid of the US. Yet the only country that has ever called for help invoking Nato’s Article 5 is the US after 9/11. Europe immediately responded. Denmark, along with the UK and other Nato allies, sent troops to Afghanistan. Denmark lost more soldiers per head than any other country in the coalition apart from the US. How utterly insulting for the families, still mourning their dead, to hear the ingratitude of a US president so ignorant of their loss.
And here is the full article.
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A reader BTL has been asking what Nigel Farage has been saying about Donald Trump’s Afghanistan comments. It is not often that readers are asking for more Farage but, since the question has been posed, Farage has decided to speak out this morning on his social media feed – about his record supporting businesses in Clacton. He has not said anything on that platform (or anywhere else, it appears) about the latest statement from his US friend.
Farage did criticise Trump on Wednesday, saying that the US president was being “not quite fair” when he said America had not got anything back from Nato. Farage said that countries like Britain and Denmark had lost the same number of troops per head of population as the US in the wars since 9/11. But Trump’s latest comment is markedly more offensive, and Farage has not yet addressed it.
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The Conservative peer and diehard Brexiter Daniel Hannan has joined those criticising Donald Trump over his Afghanistan comments. He posted this on social media last night, and this a few hours ago.
Our problem now is not TDS; it’s TD.
TDS is Trump derangement syndrome, a term used by the rightwingers in the US to suggest that Trump’s critics are obsessive and wrong. Hannan seems to be saying the president really is deranged.
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Shabana Mahmood to unveil plans drastically cut number of police forces in England and Wales
Major policing reforms expected to drastically cut the number of forces across England and Wales would be “complex to deliver” and risk separating police forces from communities they serve, a policing body has warned. PA Media says:
Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, is poised to unveil the largest overhaul of policing in decades on Monday, in an effort to tackle what government sources called “an epidemic of everyday offences”.
The changes will see the overall number of forces slashed from their current level of 43, and tasked with focusing on serious and organised crime along with complex investigations such as homicides.
At the lower level, each town, city and borough will be formed into a “local policing area” – with neighbourhood officers focused on local crime such as shoplifting and anti-social behaviour.
Mahmood has previously said that the structure of 43 forces in England and Wales is “irrational”, and police chiefs have already called for radical reform of the set-up, backing a system with fewer, larger forces.
But reacting to the expected move, the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC) said the creation of regional forces would be expensive, time consuming and has the potential to “derail” the ambition of reforms.
PCCs Matthew Scott and Clare Moody said: “The public want neighbourhood policing. There is no evidence to suggest the public would welcome bigger forces and in terms of public accountability, it also risks creating a separation between police forces and the local communities they serve.
“It makes responding to local policing and crime needs more difficult and removes the link between local taxpayers and the police they increasingly directly fund through the policing precept.”
They added financial savings from creating larger force areas “could be outweighed by very significant set-up costs”.
Mahmood is understood to believe the current system, which sees each of the 43 forces pay for separate headquarters and administrative staff, wastes money that could be spent on fighting crime.
Sources said the reforms would save money by merging back-office functions, freeing up resources to be invested in more police officers.
The changes are also intended to even out differences in performance between police forces, with ministers believing smaller forces lack the resources to tackle major incidents.
A government source pointed to Wiltshire police, which needed support from 40 other forces to respond to the Salisbury poisonings in 2018, as well as vast differences in charge rates for some offences.
They said: “Under this new structure, all forces – regardless of where they are – will have the tools and resources they need to fight serious crime. Where you live will no longer determine the outcomes you get from your force.”
But the changes will take time to come into effect, with the mergers only expected to be completed by the end of the next parliament in the mid-2030s.
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No 10 says Trump was ‘wrong to diminish role’ played by British troops in Afghanistan
Downing Street has said that Donald Trump was “wrong” to downplay the role played by British troops in Afghanistan.
Asked about the comments at this morning’s lobby briefing, the PM’s spokesperson said:
The president was wrong to diminish the role of Nato troops, including British forces, in Afghanistan following the 9/11 attacks on the US.
Article 5 of the Nato treaty was invoked for the first time and British forces served alongside American and other allied troops in sustained combat operations.
457 British service personnel lost their lives in Afghanistan and many more were wounded. Many hundreds suffered life-changing injuries from their service alongside the US and our allies in Afghanistan.
Their sacrifice and that of other Nato forces was made in the service of collective security and in response to an attack on our ally.
We are incredibly proud of our armed forces and their service and sacrifice will never be forgotten.
But the spokesperson did not back calls for the president to apologise and, asked if Keir Starmer would be raising this with Trump when they next speak (as Stephen Kinnock suggested this morning – see 8.56am), the spokesperson just said that details of any calls would be set out in the normal way.
And there seem to be no plans to haul in the US ambassador, as the Liberal Democrats are proposing. (See 11.28am.)
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Donald Trump’s latest comments outraging British public opinion are a problem for Nigel Farage. Farage has spent the last 10 years boasting about his friendship with Trump, the two leaders are ideologically aligned and Reform UK has made clear that, in some respects at least, it would model itself on what the Trump administration has done if it formed a government.
But being associated with Trump is a problem. According to a report by Bethany Dawson for Politico about the findings from a focus group in Stevenage featuring women who are considering switching from Labour to Reform UK, “concern about Farage’s relationship with Donald Trump is rife”. Dawson says:
Wider polling by More in Common, the think tank which organized the focus group held on Monday night, found 25 percent of women see Farage’s support for Trump as the top reason not to vote Reform. That compared to 21 percent of the men surveyed between Jan. 10 and 13.
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US ambassador should be summoned for reprimand over Trump’s comments, Lib Dems say
The US ambassador should be summoned to the Foreign Office for a reprimand over Donald Trump’s comments, the Liberal Democrats are saying. James MacCleary, the Lib Dem defence spokesperson, said:
Trump’s lies about the British soldiers who laid down their lives in Afghanistan are disgraceful. The president shows his true colours in denigrating the best of us – those who gave the ultimate sacrifice.
Keir Starmer must summon the US ambassador over this insult to our brave troops.
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John Healey delivers implicit rebuke to Trump, saying more than 450 British ‘heroes’ died in Afghanistan
John Healey, the defence secretary, has posted a message on social media that amounts to an implicit rebuke to Donald Trump over his comments about the contribution made by Nato allies in Afghanistan. Healey said:
NATO’s Article 5 has only been triggered once. The UK and NATO allies answered the US call. And more than 450 British personnel lost their lives in Afghanistan.
Those British troops should be remembered for who they were: heroes who gave their lives in service of our nation.
By comparison with some of the comments made by other parliamentarians today, this is very mild. But in government circles (almost regardless of which party is in power) there is always a strong reluctance to disagree with the US government in public.
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Updated at 09.11 EST
Letting Labour HQ rig candidate selection in Manchester byelection would be ‘disaster’, says Red Wall MPs’ leader
The Labour MP Jo White has also said this morning that Labour HQ should not block Andy Burnham from being a byelection candidate in Gorton and Denton. (See 11.05am.) White is MP for Bassetlaw and leads the Red Wall caucus in parliament, which represents Labour MPs who won seats in the north and the Midlands that were traditionally Labour but that turned Tory in 2019, after Brexit. White said:
Let the North decide who their Labour candidate should be for the Gorton and Denton by election. A London stitch up will be a disaster for Labour.
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Updated at 06.15 EST
