UK sanctions policy faces uncertain future, warns Lords committee
The effectiveness of UK sanctions will be undermined unless the UK can quickly agree arrangements for future sanctions policy co-operation with the EU, the EU External Affairs Sub-Committee has stated in a new report.
Without this, the UK could be left with the choice of imposing less effective unilateral sanctions or aligning with EU sanctions it has no influence over.
The report’s key findings include:
Member of the EU External Affairs Sub-Committee, Lord Horam, said: “Sanctions are most effective when imposed in concert with international partners.
“We need swift agreement on how the UK and the EU will work together on sanctions policy after we have left the bloc—and consideration of how wider foreign policy co-operation will be framed.
“It is not yet clear what the Government’s proposed ‘tailored arrangement’ with the EU on sanctions policy would involve. If we don’t agree on a formal mechanism for co-operation, we will have an unappealing choice to make between imposing less effective unilateral sanctions, or aligning with more effective EU sanctions, the design of which we have not influenced.”