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King Charles III's state visit to the US won acclaim as the monarch charmed President Donald Trump. But can it really rescue US-UK relations from their current dire state? The 'special relationship' – a term first voiced by Chatham House before becoming widely popularized by Winston Churchill – now seems not so special.
Our experts discuss what Britain and Europe should do now that the US wants to bear less of the burden of European defence, whether Prime Minister Starmer is right to stand up to President Trump on Iran, and where all of this leaves the NATO alliance.
On this week's panel, host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Laurel Rapp, director of the US and North America Programme at Chatham House. And by General Sir Richard Barrons, a former Commander Joint Forces Command who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and was one of the leaders of the UK's Strategic Defence Review 2025. He is now a senior consulting fellow with the International Security Programme.
Produced by Podmasters for Chatham House, with thanks to Stephen Farrell.
Read Chatham House's latest:
AI export controls are not the best bargaining chip
Mali attacks show security cannot be delivered by military means alone
Norway can teach the UK about energy security – but the lesson is not more North Sea drilling
Follow Independent Thinking on your favourite podcast apps.
By Chatham House4.7
1717 ratings
King Charles III's state visit to the US won acclaim as the monarch charmed President Donald Trump. But can it really rescue US-UK relations from their current dire state? The 'special relationship' – a term first voiced by Chatham House before becoming widely popularized by Winston Churchill – now seems not so special.
Our experts discuss what Britain and Europe should do now that the US wants to bear less of the burden of European defence, whether Prime Minister Starmer is right to stand up to President Trump on Iran, and where all of this leaves the NATO alliance.
On this week's panel, host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Laurel Rapp, director of the US and North America Programme at Chatham House. And by General Sir Richard Barrons, a former Commander Joint Forces Command who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and was one of the leaders of the UK's Strategic Defence Review 2025. He is now a senior consulting fellow with the International Security Programme.
Produced by Podmasters for Chatham House, with thanks to Stephen Farrell.
Read Chatham House's latest:
AI export controls are not the best bargaining chip
Mali attacks show security cannot be delivered by military means alone
Norway can teach the UK about energy security – but the lesson is not more North Sea drilling
Follow Independent Thinking on your favourite podcast apps.

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