Britain’s far-left Labour government will hold off on finalizing a deal with Mauritius regarding the British Indian Ocean Territory, including the British-American military base on Diego Garcia, until the deal receives President-elect Donald J. Trump’s blessing, sources close to the negotiations claim.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer had been attempting to ram through a controversial deal to surrender sovereignty over the Chagos Archipelago to Mauritius, which is aligned with China, before the America First leader’s inauguration. Critics have been baffled by the negotiations. Britain has agreed to give away the islands in exchange for nothing but a 99-year lease on Diego Garcia while paying Mauritius billions of pounds in reparations. However, Mauritius has never controlled the Chagos islands historically, and the native Chagossians—removed from the islands to make way for the military base—are overwhelmingly opposed to Mauritian sovereignty over the islands.
A change in government in Mauritius late last year saw the island nation attempt to extract more concessions from the British. Starmer seemingly willingly frontloaded £9 billion (~$11 billion) in agreed-upon annual payments to Mauritius in the interests of finalizing the transfer while Joe Biden is still in office. However, sources have now told the Financial Times that the British leader is resigned to pausing the deal until Trump signs off on it.
THREAT TO NATIONAL SECURITY.
Nigel Farage, a key ally of Trump, has warned his team is hostile to the deal because Mauritius could—as it has already demonstrated—attempt to alter the terms of the 99-year lease concerning Diego Garcia, or worse, lease another of the Chagos islands nearby to China.
Marco Rubio, Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State, and Mike Waltz, soon to be Trump’s National Security Adviser, are among those unhappy with the deal’s national security implications.
British Foreign Secretary David Lammy, a black identitarian who has attacked Trump as a “neo-Nazi sympathizing sociopath” and “tyrant” in the past, previously assured Parliament the deal has backing from the Pentagon, U.S. intelligence agencies, and others.
U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Caine Storino.