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BY DOMINIC WIGHTMAN

With invoking Article 50 now out of the way, Britain’s negotiators will be hoping to agree divorce with the EU at the same time as deciding on a trade agreement. Both are huge challenges and Prime Minister Theresa May was right to warn of “bumps in the road” ahead.

While eyes are focused on Europe, now is the time to also look West across the Atlantic and at Donald Trump’s nascent administration in the White House. In late January, Trump spoke of offering the UK a new trade deal and work began immediately on a new negotiating pact to pave the way for a full trade deal to come into force after Brexit. At the time, Theresa May sounded an optimistic note: “this is the first step leading to a future trade deal with the US which could provide huge benefits to our economic muscle and will give businesses additional certainty and confidence.”

While a strengthening of the special relationship and a free trade deal with the United States are both potentially great leaps forward for Britain, Britain’s brave Brexit has also left the United States in a strong position to negotiate terms. If the US economy rises, as expected, over the next years while the trade agreement is being discussed, the US will be in an even stronger negotiating position. However, squeezing her old ally Britain in terms of mere trade would be unwise for the United States, not just relative to soft power, at a time when friends around the world – let alone friends of President Trump – are in short supply.

Instead, there is a more profound win-win on the table here. Thanks to the Trump White House getting it.

Whether we Britons like to hear it or not, Britain is the greatest threat to the United States in terms of national security. Not Russia, in spite of the recent hullabaloo. Canada may well replace Britain soon as the hotbed of Islamist extremism with most access to the US but for now plots like the liquid bomb plot, radical entities flourishing on UK soil and Britain’s West-detesting closed Muslim communities, when combined with the visa waiver system (in spite of ESTA), represent a significant threat to American lives.

While the British could be offered a bargain basement trade deal by the United States, it would be wiser for the Americans to offer the British a veritable cornucopia of a trade deal – most favoured status compared to the EU – but with strings attached.

What might these strings attached be?

As Benjamin Franklin said, “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”

Trade is important but freedom is far more vital. Here, they can compliment each other in a positive trade-off. The United States, by permitting British appeasement of Islamist extremism, is an appeaser herself. This is not a good look.

Fortunately, these are no longer the days of Obama. Kill two birds with one stone now and the increasing numbers of Britons who comprehend the severity of their plight will be forever grateful to their American cousins as together we build a better future for our children and grandchildren.

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