United Kingdom–United States relations
United Kingdom |
United States |
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British–American relations encompass many complex relations ranging from two wars to the closest forms of cooperation, over the span of four centuries, beginning in 1607 with England's first permanent colony in North America at Jamestown, Virginia, to the present day.
The two nations are bound together by shared history, an overlap in religion and a common language and legal system, and kinship ties that reach back hundreds of years, including kindred, ancestral lines among English Americans, Scottish Americans, Welsh Americans, and Scotch-Irish Americans. Today large numbers of expatriates live in the other country.
Through times of war and rebellion, peace and estrangement, as well as becoming friends and allies, the UK and the USA cemented these deeply rooted links during World War II into what is known as the "Special Relationship", described in 2009 by British political commentator Christiane Amanpour as "the key trans-Atlantic alliance",[1] which the U.S. Senate Chair on European Affairs acknowledged in 2010 as "one of the cornerstones of stability around the world."[2]
Today, the relationship with the United States represents the "most important bilateral partnership" in current British foreign policy,[3] and the American foreign policy affirms its relationship with the United Kingdom as its most important bilateral relationship,[4][5] as evidenced in aligned political affairs, mutual cooperation in the areas of trade, commerce, finance, technology, academics, as well as the arts and sciences; the sharing of government and military intelligence, and joint combat operations and peacekeeping missions carried out between the United States Armed Forces and the British Armed Forces. The UK has always been the biggest foreign investor in the USA and vice versa.
The two countries combined make up a huge percentage of world trade, a significant impact of the cultures of many other countries and territories, and are the largest economies and the most populous nodes of the Anglosphere, with a combined population of over 370 million as of 2010. Together, they have given the English language a dominant role in many sectors of the modern world.
There is a maritime boundary between the British dependent territories of the British Virgin Islands and Anguilla, and the United States' dependent territories of the US Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.[6][7]
According to a 2013 BBC World Service Poll, 74% of Americans view the United Kingdom positively, with only 14% expressing a negative view. However, British views of the U.S. are much more sharply divided, with 46% viewing the U.S. positively and 46% viewing the U.S. negatively.[8]
Country comparison
United Kingdom | United States | |
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Population | 63,181,775 | 314,256,000 |
Area | 243,610 km2 (94,060 sq mi) | 9,526,468 km2 (3,803,290 sq mi)[9] |
Population Density | 255.6/km2 (661.9/sq mi) | 33.7/km2 (87.4/sq mi) |
Capital City | Westminster | Washington, D.C. |
Largest City | London – 8,174,100 (13,709,000 Metro) | New York City – 8,244,910 (18,897,109 Metro) |
Government | Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy | Federal presidential republic |
Official languages | English | None |
Main religions | 61.5% Christian, 35.4% No Religion, 2.7% Muslim, 0.95% Hindu, 0.57% Sikh, 0.45% Jew, 0.26% Buddhist.[10] | 78.4% Christianity, 16.1% Non-Religious, 1.7% Judaism, 0.7% Buddhism, 0.6% Islam, 0.4% Hinduism[11] |
Ethnic groups | 92.1% White, 4.4% Asian, 2% Black, 1.2% Multi-racial, 0.4% Other | 74% White American, 14.8% Hispanic and Latino Americans (of any race), 13.4% African American, 6.5% Some other race, 4.4% Asian American, 2.0% Two or more races, 0.68% American Indian or Alaska Native, 0.14% Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander |
GDP (nominal) | US$2.452 trillion (US$38,891 per capita) | $15.094 trillion ($48,386 per capita) |
GDP (PPP) | $2.308 trillion ($36,605 per capita) | $15.094 trillion ($48,386 per capita) |
Military expenditures | $62.7 billion | $711.0 billion[12] |
Military Troops | 300,000 | 2,927,754 |
English Speakers | 59,600,000 | 267,444,149 |
Labour/Labor Forces | 31,250,000 | 154,900,000 |
Telecommunications(Mobile Phones) | 75,750,000 | 327,577,529 |
History
Origins
After several failed attempts the first permanent English settlement in mainland North America came in 1607 at Jamestown in the Colony and Dominion of Virginia. By 1624, the Colony and Dominion of Virginia would cease as a charter colony administered by the Virginia Company of London as it became a crown colony. The Pilgrims were a small Protestant-sect based in England and Amsterdam; they sent a group of settlers on the Mayflower. After drawing up the Mayflower Compact by which they gave themselves broad powers of self-governance, they established the Plymouth Colony in 1620. In 1630 the Puritans established the much larger Massachusetts Bay Colony; they sought to reform the Church of England by creating a new and more pure church in the New World.
Other colonies followed in Province of Maine (1622), Province of Maryland (1632), Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (1636) and Connecticut Colony (1636). Later came the founding of Province of Carolina (1663) (divided in 1729 into the Province of North Carolina and the Province of South Carolina). The Province of New Hampshire was founded in 1691. Finally came the Province of Georgia in 1732.
The Province of New York was formed from the conquered Dutch colony of New Netherland. In 1674, the Province of New Jersey was split off from New York. In 1681 William Penn was awarded a royal charter in 1681 by King Charles II to found Province of Pennsylvania.
The colonies each reported separately to London. There was a failed effort to group the colonies into the Dominion of New England, 1686-89.
Migration
During the 17th century, an estimated 350,000 English and Welsh migrants arrived as permanent residents in the Thirteen Colonies, which in the century after the Acts of Union 1707, was surpassed in rate and number by Scottish and Irish migrants.[13]
The period of British settler colonization saw the introduction of liberal administrative, juridical, and market institutions positively associated with socioeconomic development.[14] At the same time, colonial policy was also quasi-mercantilist,[14] encouraging trade inside the Empire, and discouraging trade with other powers, and discouraging the rise of manufacturing in the colonies, which had been established to increase the trade and wealth of the mother country. Britain made much greater profits from the sugar trade of its commercial colonies in the Caribbean.
The introduction of coercive labor institutions was another feature of the colonial period.[14] All of the Thirteen Colonies were involved in the slave trade. Slaves in the Middle Colonies and New England Colonies typically worked as house servants, artisans, laborers and craftsmen. Early on, slaves in the Southern Colonies worked primarily in agriculture, on farms and plantations growing indigo, rice, cotton, and tobacco.
The French and Indian War, fought between 1754 and 1763, was the North American theatre of the Seven Years' War. The conflict, the fourth such colonial war between France and the Kingdom of Great Britain in North America, resulted in the British acquisition of New France, with it French Catholic population. As part of the terms dictated in the Treaty of Paris signed in 1763, the French ceded control of French Louisiana east of the Mississippi River to the British, which became known as the Indian Reserve.
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Frequencies of English ancestry, as of the 2000 U.S. Census
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Frequencies of Scottish ancestry, as of the 2000 U.S. Census
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Frequencies of Scotch-Irish ancestry, as of the 2000 U.S. Census
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Frequencies of Welsh ancestry, as of the 2000 U.S. Census
American Revolution
The Thirteen Colonies gradually began to experience more limited self-government.[15] Additionally, British mercantilist policies became more stringent, benefiting the mother country which resulted in trade restrictions, thereby limiting the growth of the colonial economy and artificially constraining colonial merchants' earning potential. Prefaced by debt accrued during the French and Indian War of which the American Colonies were expected to help repay, tensions escalated from 1765 to 1775 over issues of taxation without representation and control by King George III. Stemming from the Boston Massacre when British Redcoats opened fire on civilians in 1770, rebellion consumed the outraged colonists. The British Parliament earlier imposed a series of taxes such as the Stamp Act of 1765 and later on, the Tea Act of 1773, of which an angry mob of colonists protested about in the Boston Tea Party by dumping chests of tea into Boston Harbor. The British Parliament responded to the defiance of the colonists by passing what the colonials called the Intolerable Acts in 1774. This course of events ultimately triggered the first shots fired in the Battles of Lexington and Concord in 1775 and effectively, the beginning of the American War of Independence itself. A British victory at the Battle of Bunker Hill in June 1775 would agitate tensions even further. While the goal of attaining independence was sought by a majority known as Patriots, a minority known as Loyalists wished to remain as British subjects indefinitely. However, when the Second Continental Congress convened in Philadelphia in May 1775, deliberations conducted by notable figures such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Hancock, Samuel Adams, and John Adams would eventually come to the conclusion of seeking full independence from the mother country. Thus, the Declaration of Independence, unanimously ratified on July 4, 1776, was a radical and decisive break. The United States of America became the first colony in the world to successfully achieve independence in the modern era.
In early 1776 the Patriots forced all the British officials and soldiers out of the new nation. However, the British returned in force in August 1776, and captured New York City, which became their base until the war finally ended in 1783. The British, using their powerful navy, could capture major ports, but 90% of the Americans lived in rural areas where they had full control. After the Patriots captured a British invasion force moving down from Canada in the Saratoga campaign of 1777, France entered the war as an ally of the US, and added the Netherlands and Spain as French allies. Britain lost naval superiority and had no major allies and few friends in Europe. The British strategy then was refocused on the South, where they expected large numbers of Loyalists would fight alongside the redcoats. Far fewer Loyalists took up arms than Britain needed; royal efforts to control the countryside in the South failed. When the British army tried to return to New York, its rescue fleet was turned back by the French fleet and its army was captured by combined French-American forces under General George Washington at the Siege of Yorktown in October 1781. That effectively ended the fighting.
The Treaty of Paris ended the war in 1783 on terms quite favorable to the new nation.[16] It gained control of nearly all the land east of the Mississippi and south of the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes. However the British colonies of East and West Florida, were given to Spain as its reward. The Native American tribes allied with Britain were major losers; the British ignored them at the Peace conference, and most came under American control unless they moved to Canada or to Spanish territory. However the British kept forts in the American Midwest (especially in Michigan and Wisconsin), where they supplied weapons to Indian tribes.
1783–1807
Trade resumed between the two nations when the war ended. The British allow all exports to America but forbade some American food exports to its colonies in the West Indies. British exports reached £3.7 million, compared to imports of only £750,000. The imbalance caused a shortage of gold in U.S.
In 1785, John Adams became the first American plenipotentiary minister, now known as an ambassador, to the Court of St James's. King George III received him graciously. In 1791, Great Britain sent its first diplomatic envoy, George Hammond, to the United States.
When Great Britain and France went to war in 1793, relations between the United States and Great Britain also verged on war. Tensions were subdued when the Jay Treaty was signed in 1794, which established a decade of peace and prosperous trade relations.[17] The historian Marshall Smelser argues that the treaty effectively postponed war with Britain, or at least postponed it until the United States was strong enough to handle it.[18]
Bradford Perkins argued that the treaty was the first to establish a special relationship between Britain and the United States, with a second installment under Lord Salisbury. In his view, the treaty worked for ten years to secure peace between Britain and America: "The decade may be characterized as the period of "The First Rapprochement." As Perkins concludes,
"For about ten years there was peace on the frontier, joint recognition of the value of commercial intercourse, and even, by comparison with both preceding and succeeding epochs, a muting of strife over ship seizures and impressment. Two controversies with France… pushed the English-speaking powers even more closely together."[19]
Starting at swords' point in 1794, the Jay treaty reversed the tensions, Perkins concludes: "Through a decade of world war and peace, successive governments on both sides of the Atlantic were able to bring about and preserve a cordiality which often approached genuine friendship."[20]
Historian Joseph Ellis finds the terms of the treaty "one-sided in Britain's favor", but asserts a consensus of historians agrees that it was
"a shrewd bargain for the United States. It bet, in effect, on England rather than France as the hegemonic European power of the future, which proved prophetic. It recognized the massive dependence of the American economy on trade with England. In a sense it was a precocious preview of the Monroe Doctrine (1823), for it linked American security and economic development to the British fleet, which provided a protective shield of incalculable value throughout the nineteenth century. Mostly, it postponed war with England until America was economically and politically more capable of fighting one."[21]
The U.S. proclaimed its neutrality in the wars between Britain and France (1793–1815), and profited greatly by selling food, timber and other supplies to both sides.
Thomas Jefferson had bitterly opposed the Jay Treaty because he feared it would strengthen anti-republican political enemies. When Jefferson became president in 1801, he did not repudiate the treaty. He kept the Federalist minister, Rufus King in London to negotiate a successful resolution to outstanding issues regarding cash payments and boundaries. The amity broke down in 1805, as relations turned increasingly hostile as a prelude to the War of 1812. Jefferson rejected a renewal of the Jay Treaty in the Monroe–Pinkney Treaty of 1806 as negotiated by his diplomats and agreed to by London; he never sent it to the Senate.
The international slave trade was suppressed after Great Britain passed the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act in 1807, and the United States passed a similar law in the same year.
War of 1812
The United States imposed a trade embargo, namely the Embargo Act of 1807, in retaliation for Britain's blockade of France, which involved the visit and search of neutral merchantmen, and resulted in the suppression of Franco-United States trade for the duration of the Napoleonic Wars.[22] The Royal Navy also boarded American ships and impressed sailors suspected of being British deserters.[23] Western expansion into the American Midwest (Ohio to Wisconsin) was hindered by Indian tribes given munitions and support by British agents. Indeed Britain's goal was the creation of an independent Indian state to block American expansion.[24]
After diplomacy and the boycott had failed, the issue of national honour and independence came to the fore.[25] Brands says, "The other war hawks spoke of the struggle with Britain as a second war of independence; [Andrew] Jackson, who still bore scars from the first war of independence held that view with special conviction. The approaching conflict was about violations of American rights, but was it also vindication of American identity."[26]
Finally in June 1812 President James Madison called for war, and overcame the opposition of Northeastern business interests. The American strategy called for a war against British shipping and especially cutting off food shipments to the British sugar plantations in the West Indies. Conquest of Canada was a tactic designed to give the Americans a strong bargaining position.[27] The main British goal was to defeat France, so until that happened in 1814 the war was primarily defensive. To enlist allies among the Indians, led by Tecumseh, the British promised an independent Indian state would be created in American territory. Repeated American invasions of Canada were fiascoes, because of inadequate preparations, very poor generals, and the refusal of militia units to leave their home grounds. However the Americans took control of Lake Erie in 1813 and destroyed the power of the Indian allies of the British in the Northwest and Southeast. A major British raid burned the symbolic national buildings in Washington in 1814, but the British attack on Baltimore was repelled and the British commander was killed. The British invasion of New York in 1814 was a total failure, as was the British attempt to capture the key port of New Orleans in early 1815. Negotiations began in 1814 and produced the Treaty of Ghent, which restoring the status quo ante bellum. No territorial gains were made by either side, and the British plan to create an Indian nation was abandoned. The United Kingdom retained the theoretical right of impressment, but stopped impressing any sailors, while the United States dropped the issue for good.[28] The U.S. celebrated the outcome as a victorious "second war of independence." The British, having finally defeated Napoleon at Waterloo, celebrated that triumph and largely forgot the war with America. Tensions between the U.S. and Canada were resolved through diplomacy. The War of 1812 marked the end of a long period of conflict (1775–1815) and ushered in a new era of peace between the two nations.
Disputes 1815–1860
The Monroe Doctrine, a unilateral response in 1823 to a British suggestion of a joint declaration, expressed American hostility of further European encroachment in the Western hemisphere. Nevertheless, the United States benefited from the common outlook in British policy and its enforcement by the Royal Navy. In the 1840s several states defaulted on bonds owned by British investors. London bankers avoided state bonds afterwards, but invested heavily in American railroad bonds.[29]
In several episodes the American general Winfield Scott proved a sagacious diplomat by tamping down emotions and reaching acceptable compromises.[30] Scott handled the Caroline Affair in 1837. Rebels from British North America (now Ontario) fled to New York and used a small American ship called the Caroline to smuggle supplies into Canada after their rebellion was suppressed. In late 1837, Canadian militia crossed the border into the U.S. and burned the ship, leading to diplomatic protests, a flare-up of Anglophobia, and other incidents.
Tensions on the vague Maine-New Brunswick boundary involved rival teams of lumberjacks in the bloodless Aroostook War of 1839. There was no shooting but both sides tried to uphold national honor and gain a few more miles of timber land. Each side had an old secret map that apparently showed the other side had the better legal case, so compromise was easily reached in the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842, which settled the border.[31] In 1859, the bloodless Pig War determined the question of where the border should be in relationship to the San Juan Islands and Gulf Islands. But, the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty proved to be an important step in improving relations.
In 1844-48 the two nations had overlapping claims to Oregon. The area was largely unsettled making it easy to end the crisis in 1848 a by compromise that split the region evenly, with British Columbia to Great Britain, and Washington, Idaho, and Oregon to America. The U.S. then turned its attention to Mexico, which threatened war over the annexation of Texas. Britain tried without success to moderate the Mexicans, but when the war began it remained neutral. The U.S. gained California, in which the British had shown only passing interest.[32]
American Civil War
In the American Civil War a major Confederate goal was to win recognition from Britain and France, which it expected would lead them to war with the U.S. and enable the Confederacy to win independence. Because of the astute American diplomacy, no nation ever recognized the Confederacy and war with Britain was averted. Nevertheless there was considerable British sentiment in favor of weakening the U.S. by helping the South win.[33] At the beginning of the war Britain issued a proclamation of neutrality. The Confederate States of America had assumed all along that Britain would surely enter the war to protect its vital supply of cotton. This "King Cotton" argument was one reason the Confederates felt confident in the first place about going to war, but the Southerners had never consulted the Europeans and were tardy in sending diplomats. Even before the fighting began in April 1861 Confederate citizens (acting without government authority) cut off cotton shipments in an effort to exert cotton diplomacy. It failed because Britain had warehouses filled with cotton, whose value was soaring; not until 1862 did shortages become acute.[34]
The Trent Affair in late 1861 nearly caused a war. A warship of the U.S. Navy stopped the British civilian vessel RMS Trent and took off two Confederate diplomats, James Murray Mason and John Slidell. Britain prepared for war and demanded their immediate release. President Lincoln released the diplomats and the episode ended quietly.[35]
Britain realized that any recognition of an independent Confederacy would be treated as an act of war against the United States. The British economy was heavily reliant on trade with the United States, most notably cheap grain imports which in the event of war, would be cut off by the Americans. Indeed the Americans would launch all-out naval war against the entire British merchant fleet.
Despite outrage and intense American protests, London allowed the British-built CSS Alabama to leave port and become a commerce raider under the naval flag of the Confederacy. The war ended in 1865; arbitration settled the issue in 1871, with a payment of $15.5 million in gold for the damages caused.[36]
In January 1863 Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which was strongly supported by liberal elements in Britain. However the British government predicted it would create a race war and that intervention might be required on humanitarian grounds. There was no race war, however, and the declining capabilities of the Confederacy—such as loss of major ports and rivers—made its likelihood of success smaller and smaller.[37]
Venezuelan and border disputes
the Venezuela Crisis of 1895 broke out when Britain and Venezuela disputed the boundary between Venezuela country and British Guiana, a British colony. President Grover Cleveland and Secretary of State Richard Olney demanded international arbitration.[38] The tribunal in 1899 awarded the bulk of the disputed territory to British Guiana.[39] By standing with a Latin American nation against the encroachment of the British Empire, the U.S. improved relations with the Latin Americans, and the cordial manner of the procedure improved diplomatic relations with Britain.[40][41]
The Olney-Pauncefote Treaty of 1897 was a proposed treaty between the United States and Britain in 1897 that required arbitration of major disputes. Despite wide public and elite support, the treaty was rejected by the U.S. Senate, which was jealous of its prerogatives, and never went into effect.[42]
Arbitration was used to settle the dispute over the boyunary between Alaska and Canada, but the Canadians felt betrayed by the result. The Alaska Purchase of 1867 drew the boundary between Canada and Alaska in ambiguous fashion. With the gold rush into the Yukon in 1898, miners had to enter through Alaska and Canada wanted the boundary redrawn to obtain its own port. Canada rejected the American offer of a long-term lease on an American port. The issue went to arbitration and the Alaska boundary dispute was finally resolved by an arbitration in 1903. The decision favoured the U.S. as the British judge sided with the three American judges against the two Canadian judges on the arbitration panel. Canadian public opinion was outraged that their interests were sacrificed by London for the benefit of British-American harmony.[43]
The Great Rapprochement
The Great Rapprochement is a term that was used to specifically describe the convergence of social and political objectives between the United Kingdom and the United States from 1895 until World War I began in 1914. Ever since the War of 1812 ended in 1815, there were no serious threats of war and no hostile alliances. Although the border was very long and complex, border disputes were peacefully resolved. The large Irish Catholic element in the U.S. provided a major base for demands for Irish independence, and occasioned anti-British rhetoric, especially at election time.[44]
The most notable sign of improving relations during the Great Rapprochement was Britain's actions during the Spanish–American War. With the onslaught of war beginning in 1898, the British had an initial policy of supporting the Spanish Empire and its colonial rule over Cuba since the perceived threat of American occupation and a territorial acquisition of Cuba by the United States might harm British trade and commerce interests within its own imperial possessions in the West Indies. However, after the United States made genuine assurances that it would grant Cuba's independence, which eventually occurred in 1902 under the terms dictated in the Platt Amendment, the British abandoned this policy and ultimately sided with the United States unlike most other European powers who supported Spain. In return the U.S. government supported Britain during the Boer War, although many Americans favored the Boers.[45]
Victory in the Spanish-American War gave the United States its own rising empire. President Theodore Roosevelt built the Great White Fleet to demonstrate the power projection of a large blue water navy that was second only to the Royal Navy in size and firepower.[46][47]
World War I
The United States had a policy of strict neutrality. The United States was willing to export any product to any country. Germany could not import anything due to the British blockade, so the American trade was with the Allies. It was financed by the sale of American bonds and stocks owned by the British. When that was exhausted the British borrowed heavily from New York banks. When that credit ran dry in late 1916, a financial crisis was at hand for Britain.[48]
American public opinion moved steadily against Germany, especially in the wake of the Belgian atrocities in 1914 and the sinking of the RMS Lusitania in 1915. The large German American and Irish Catholic element called for staying out of the war, but the German Americans were increasingly marginalized. The Germans renewed unrestricted submarine warfare in 1917 knowing it would lead to war with the U.S. Germany's invitation to Mexico to join together in war against the U.S. in the Zimmermann Telegram was the last straw, and the US declared war in April 1917. The Americans planned to send money, food and munitions, but it soon became clear that millions of soldiers would be needed to decide the war on the Western Front.[49]
The U.S. sent two million soldiers to Europe under the command of General John J. Pershing, with more on the way as the war ended.[50] Many of the Allied forces were skeptical of the competence of the American Expeditionary Force, which in 1917 was severely lacking in training and experience. By summer 1918, the American doughboys were arriving at 10,000 a day, as the German forces were shrinking because they had run out of manpower.
Although Woodrow Wilson had wanted to wage war for the sake of humanity, the negotiations over the Treaty of Versailles underlined in his Fourteen Points for Peace made it plainly clear that his diplomatic position had weakened with victory. The borders of Europe were redrawn on the basis of national self-determination, with the exception of Germany under the newly formed Weimar Republic. Financial reparations were imposed on the Germans, despite British reservations and American protests, largely because of France's desire for punitive peace[51] and, in what many at the time deemed revenge, for previous conflicts with Germany in the 19th century.
Inter-war years
By 1921 a cardinal principle of British foreign-policy was to “cultivate the closest relations with the United States.” As a result, the British decided not to renew their military alliance with Japan, which was becoming a major rival to the United States in the Pacific. [52]
The U.S. sponsored a successful Washington Naval Conference in 1922 that largely ended the naval arms race for a decade. World War I marked the end of the Royal Navy's superiority, an eclipse acknowledged in the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922, when the United States and Britain agreed to equal tonnage quotas on warships.[53] By 1932, the 1922 treaty was not renewed and Britain, Japan and the U.S. were again in a naval race.
In the 1920s, bilateral relations were generally friendly. In 1923 the government renegotiated its ₤978 million war debt to the U.S. Treasury by promising regular payments of ₤34 million for ten years then ₤40 million pounds for 52 years. The idea was for the U.S. to loan money to Germany, which in turn paid reparations to Britain, which in turn paid off its loans from the U.S. government. In 1931 all German payments ended, and in 1932 Britain suspended its payments to the U.S. The debt was finally repaid after 1945.[54]
The U.S. refused to join the League of Nations, but its absence made little difference to British policy. While the United States participated in functional bodies of the League —to the satisfaction of Britain— it was a delicate issue linking the US to the League in public. Thus, major conferences, especially the Washington Conference of 1922 occurred outside League auspices. The US refused to send official delegates to League committees, instead sending unofficial "observers."
During the Great Depression, the United States was preoccupied with its own internal affairs and economic recovery, espousing an isolationist policy. When the U.S. raised tariffs in 1930, the British (and Canadians) retaliated by raising their tariffs against outside countries (such as the U.S.) while giving special trade preferences inside the Commonwealth. The US demanded these special trade preferences be ended in 1946 in exchange for a large loan.[55]
The overall world total of all trade plunged by over two-thirds, while trade between the U.S. and Britain shrank from $848 million in 1929 to $288 million in 1932, a decline of almost two-thirds (66%).[56]
When Britain in 1933 called a worldwide London Economic Conference to help resolve the depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt killed it by refusing to cooperate.[57]
Tensions over the Irish question faded with the independence of the Irish Free State in 1922. The American Irish had achieved their goal, and in 1938 its leader Joseph P. Kennedy became ambassador to the Court of St. James's. He moved in high London society and his daughter married into the aristocracy. Kennedy supported the Neville Chamberlain policy of appeasement toward Germany, and when the war began he advised Washington that prospects for Britain's survival were bleak. When Winston Churchill came to power in 1940, Kennedy lost all his influence in London and Washington.[58][59]
World War II
Though much of the American people were sympathetic to Britain during its dangerous confrontation with Nazi Germany, there was widespread opposition to possible American intervention in European affairs. This was put into law in a series of Neutrality Acts which were ratified by the United States Congress in 1935, 1936, and 1937 respectively. However, President Roosevelt's policy of cash-and-carry still allowed Britain and France to order munitions from the United States and carry them home.
Churchill, who had long warned against Germany and demanded rearmament, became prime minister after Chamberlain's policy of appeasement had totally collapsed and Britain was unable to reverse the German invasion of Norway in April 1940. After the fall of France in June 1940, Roosevelt gave Britain and (after June 1941) the Soviet Union all aid short of war. The Destroyers for Bases Agreement which was signed in September 1940, gave the United States a ninety-nine-year rent-free lease of numerous land and air bases throughout the British Empire in exchange for the Royal Navy receiving fifty old destroyers from the United States Navy. Beginning in March 1941, the United States enacted Lend-Lease in the form of tanks, fighter airplanes, munitions, bullets, food, and medical supplies. Britain received $31.4 billion out of a total of $50.1 billion sent to the Allies.[60][61]
In December 1941 at the important Arcadia Conference in Washington, top British and American leaders agreed on strategy. They set up the Combined Chiefs of Staff to plot and coordinate strategy and operations. Military cooperation was close and successful.[62]
Technical collaboration was even closer, as the two nations shared secrets and weapons regarding the proximity fuze and radar, as well as airplane engines, Nazi codes, and the atomic bomb.[63][64][65]
Millions of American servicemen were based in Britain during the war. Americans were paid five times more than comparable British servicemen, which led to a certain amount of friction with British men and intermarriage with British women.[66]
In 1945 Britain sent British fleet to assist the American invasion of Japan in October, which was cancelled when Japan surrendered in August.
India
Serious tension erupted over American demands that India be given independence, a proposition Churchill vehemently rejected. For years Roosevelt had encouraged Britain's disengagement from India. The American position was based on principled opposition to colonialism, practical concern for the outcome of the war, and the expectation of a large American role in a post-colonial era. However in 1942 when the Congress Party launched a Quit India movement, the British authorities immediately arrested tens of thousands of activists (including Gandhi). Meanwhile India became the main American staging base for aid to China. Churchill threatened to resign if Roosevelt pushed too hard, so Roosevelt backed down.[67][68]
Cold War
In the aftermath of the war Britain faced a financial crisis whereas the United States was in the midst of an economic boom. The process of de-colonization accelerated with the independence Britain granted to India, Pakistan and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in 1947. The Labour government, which was alarmed at the threat of Communism in the Balkans, implored the US to take over the British role in Greece, which led to the Truman Doctrine in 1947, with financial and military aid to Greece and Turkey as Britain withdrew from the region.[69]
The U.S. provided financial aid in the Anglo-American loan of 1946, granting a 50-year loan with a low 2% interest rate starting in 1950. A more permanent solution was the Marshall Plan of 1948–51, which poured $13 billion into western Europe, of which $3.3 billion went to Britain to help modernize its infrastructure and business practices. The aid was a gift and carried requirements that Britain balance its budget, control tariffs and maintain adequate currency reserves.[70]
The need to form a united front against the Soviet threat compelled the U.S. and Britain to cooperate in helping to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization with their European allies. NATO is a mutual defense alliance whereby an attack on one member country is deemed an attack on all members.
The United States had an anti-colonial and anti-communist stance in its foreign policy throughout the Cold War. Military forces from the United States and the United Kingdom were heavily involved in the Korean War, fighting under a United Nations mandate. A withdrawal of military forces occurred when a stalemate was implemented in 1953. When the Suez Crisis erupted in October 1956, the United States feared a wider war after the Soviet Union and the other Warsaw Pact nations threatened to intervene on the Egyptian side. Thus the United States, with support from several European countries, applied sustained econo-financial pressure, to encourage and ultimately force the United Kingdom and France end their invasion of Egypt. British post-war debt was at such an extent that economic sanctions could have meant a devaluing of the currency. This was something the UK government intended to avoid at all costs and when it became clear that the international sanctions were serious, the British and their French allies withdrew their forces back to pre-war positions. The following year saw the resignation of Sir Anthony Eden.
Dwight D. Eisenhower's victory in the American presidential election in 1952 might have been expected to guarantee a continuance of good United States-United Kingdom relations, if not a period of even closer collaboration. However, Anglo-American cooperation during Eisenhower's presidency was troubled, approaching in 1956 a complete breakdown that represented the lowest point in the relations between the two countries since 1920s. During the years of 1953–1961 the friendship between Dwight D. Eisenhower and Winston Churchill restored the levels of cordiality that had been a feature of the wartime partnership.
Through the US-UK Mutual Defence Agreement signed in 1958, the United States assisted the United Kingdom in their own development of a nuclear arsenal. In April 1963, John F. Kennedy and Harold Macmillan signed the Polaris Sales Agreement to the effect of the United States agreeing to supply the UGM-27 Polaris ballistic missile to the United Kingdom and for use in the Royal Navy's submarine fleet starting in 1968.[71]
The United States gradually became involved in the Vietnam War in the early 1960s, but received no support this time from the United Kingdom. Anti-Americanism due to the Vietnam War and a lack of American support for France and the United Kingdom over the Suez Crisis weighed heavily on the minds of many in Europe. This sentiment extended in the United Kingdom by Harold Wilson's refusal to send British troops to Indochina.
On July 23, 1977, officials from the United Kingdom and the United States renegotiated the previous Bermuda I Agreement, thus signing the Bermuda II Agreement to the effect of only four combined airlines, two from the United Kingdom and two from the United States, being allowed to operate flights from London Heathrow Airport and specified "gateway cities" in the United States. The Bermuda II Agreement was in effect for nearly 30 years until it was eventually replaced by the EU-US Open Skies Agreement, which was signed on April 30, 2007 and entering into effect on March 30, 2008.
Throughout the 1980s, Margaret Thatcher was strongly supportive of Ronald Reagan's unwavering stance towards the Soviet Union. Often described as 'political soulmates' and a high point in the "Special Relationship", both President Reagan and Prime Minister Thatcher met on numerous occasions throughout their political careers, speaking in concert when confronting Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev.
In 1982, the British Government made a request to the United States, which the Americans agreed upon in principle, to sell the Trident II D5 ballistic missile, associated equipment, and related system support for use on four Vanguard class nuclear submarines in the Royal Navy. The Trident II D5 ballistic missile replaced the United Kingdom's previous use of the UGM-27 Polaris ballistic missile, beginning in the mid-1990s.[71]
In the Falklands War, the United States initially tried to mediate between the United Kingdom and Argentina in 1982, but ultimately ended up supporting the United Kingdom's counter-invasion. The United States Defense Department under Caspar Weinberger, supplied the British military with equipment as well as logistical support.[72]
In October 1983, the United States and a coalition of Caribbean nations undertook Operation Urgent Fury, codename for the invasion of the Commonwealth island nation of Grenada. A bloody Marxist-coup had overrun Grenada and neighboring countries in the region asked the United States to intervene militarily, which it did successfully despite having made assurances to a deeply resentful British Government.
On April 15, 1986, the United States Air Force with elements of naval and marine forces launched Operation El Dorado Canyon from RAF Fairford, RAF Upper Heyford, RAF Lakenheath, and RAF Mildenhall. Despite firm opposition from within the Conservative Party, Margaret Thatcher nevertheless gave Ronald Reagan permission to use Royal Air Force stations in the United Kingdom during the bombings of Tripoli and Benghazi in Libya, a counter-attack by the United States in response to Muammar Gaddafi's exportation of state-sponsored terrorism directed towards civilians and American servicemen stationed in West Berlin.
On December 21, 1988, Pan American Worldways' Flight 103 from London Heathrow Airport to New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport exploded over the town of Lockerbie, Scotland, killing 169 Americans and 40 Britons on board. The motive that is generally attributed to the country of Libya can be traced back to a series of military confrontations with the United States Navy that took place in the 1980s in the Gulf of Sidra, the whole of which Libya claimed as its territorial waters. Despite a guilty verdict announced on January 31, 2001 by the Scottish High Court of Justiciary which ruled against Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the alleged bomber on charges of murder and the conspiracy to commit murder, Libya had never formally admitted carrying out the 1988 bombing over Scotland until 2003.
During the Soviet war in Afghanistan, the United States and the United Kingdom throughout the 1980s provided arms to the Mujahideen rebels in Afghanistan until the last troops from the Soviet Union left Afghanistan on February 15, 1989.
Post Cold War
When the United States became the world's lone superpower after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, new threats emerged which confronted the United States and its NATO allies. With military build-up beginning in August 1990 and the use of force beginning in January 1991, the United States, followed at a distance by Britain, provided the two largest forces respectively for the coalition army which liberated Kuwait from Saddam Hussein's regime during the Persian Gulf War.
In 1997, the British Labour Party was elected to office for the first time in eighteen years. The new prime minister, Tony Blair, and Bill Clinton both used the expression "Third Way" to describe their centre-left ideologies. In August 1997, the American people expressed solidarity with the British people, sharing in their grief and sense of shock on the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, who perished in a car crash in Paris, France.
Throughout 1998 and 1999, the United States and Britain sent troops to impose peace during the Kosovo War.
War on Terror and Iraq War
2,669 Americans and 67 Britons at the World Trade Center, The Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania were victims of a terrorist plot orchestrated by the terrorist group known as al-Qaeda on September 11, 2001. Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, there was an enormous outpouring of sympathy from the United Kingdom for the American people, and Tony Blair was one of George W. Bush's strongest international supporters for bringing al-Qaeda and the Taliban to justice. Indeed Blair became the most articulate spokesman
The United States declared a War on Terror following the attacks. British forces participated in NATO's war in Afghanistan. Blair took the lead (against the opposition of France, Canada, Germany, China, and Russia) in advocating the American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Again Britain was second only to the U.S. in sending forces to Iraq. Both sides wound down after 2009, and withdrew their last troops in 2011. President Bush and Prime Minister Blair provided sustained mutual political and diplomatic support and won votes in Congress and parliament against their critics at home.[73]
The July 7, 2005 London bombings emphasized the difference in the nature of the terrorist threat to both nations. The United States concentrated primarily on global enemies, like the al-Qaeda network and other Islamic extremists from the Middle East. The London bombings were carried out by homegrown extremist Muslims, and it emphasized the United Kingdom's threat from the radicalization of its own people.
By 2007, support amongst the British public for the Iraq war had plummeted.[74] Despite Tony Blair's historically low approval ratings with the British people, mainly due to allegations of faulty government intelligence of Iraq possessing weapons of mass destruction, his unapologetic and unwavering stance for the British alliance with the United States can be summed up in his own words. He said, "We should remain the closest ally of the US... not because they are powerful, but because we share their values."[75] The alliance between George W. Bush and Tony Blair seriously damaged the prime minister's standing in the eyes of many British citizens.[76] Tony Blair argued it is in the United Kingdom's interest to "protect and strengthen the bond" with the United States regardless of who is in the White House.[77] However, a perception of one-sided compromising personal and political closeness led to serious discussion of the term "Poodle-ism" in the British media, to describe the "Special Relationship" of the British Government and Prime Minister with the White House and President.[78]
All British servicemen were withdrawn with the exception of 400 who remained in Iraq until July 31, 2009.[79]
On June 11, 2009, the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda accepted four Chinese Uighurs from the United States' detainment facility known as Guantanamo Bay detention camp located on the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. At the request of the United States Government, Bermudan officials agreed to host Khaleel Mamut, Hozaifa Parhat, Salahidin Abdulahat, and Abdullah Abdulqadirakhun as guest workers in Bermuda who seven years ago, were all captured by Pakistani bounty hunters during the United States-led invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001. This decision agreed upon by American and Bermudan officials drew considerable consternation and contempt by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office as it was viewed by British officials in London that they should have been consulted on whether or not the decision to take in four Chinese Uighurs was a security and foreign issue of which the Bermudian government does not have delegated responsibility over.[80]
Release of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi
On August 20, 2009, The Scottish government headed by Alex Salmond announced that it would release Abdelbaset al-Megrahi on medical grounds. he was the only person convicted of the terrorist plot which killed 169 Americans and 40 Britons on Pan American Worldways' Flight 103 over the town of Lockerbie, Scotland on December 21, 1988. He sentenced to life in prison in 2001, but was released after being diagnosed with terminal cancer, with around three months to live. Americans said the decision was uncompassionate and insensitive to the memory of the victims of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing. President Barack Obama said that the decision was "highly objectionable."[81] However, Louis Susman, the United States Ambassador said that although the decision made by Scotland to release Abdelbaset al-Megrahi was seen by the United States as extremely regrettable, relations with the United Kingdom would remain fully intact and strong.[82] The British government led by Gordon Brown was not involved in the release and Gordon Brown stated at a press conference that they had played 'no role' in the decision.[83] Abdelbaset al-Megrahi died May 20, 2012 at the age of 60.
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
In April 2010, the explosion, sinking and resultant oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig led to diplomatic friction and populist Anti-British sentiment, even though the Rig was owned and operated by the Swiss company Transocean and the cement work carried out by the US company Halliburton . Commentators referred to "British Petroleum" even though the company had been known as "BP" since 1998.[84][85] UK politicians expressed concerns about Anti-British rhetoric in the USA.[86][87] BP's CEO Tony Hayward was called "the most hated man in America".[88] Conversely, the widespread public demonisation of BP and the effects on the company and its image, coupled with Obama's statements with regard to BP caused a degree of Anti-American sentiment in the UK. This was particularly evidenced by the comments of the Business Secretary Vince Cable, who said that "It's clear that some of the rhetoric in the US is extreme and unhelpful",[89] for reasons of British pension funds, loss of revenues for the exchequer and the adverse effect such the rhetoric was having on the share price of one of the UK's largest companies. The meeting between Barack Obama and David Cameron in July somewhat helped strained diplomatic relations, and President Obama stated that there lies a "truly special relations" between the two countries. The degree to which Anti-British or Anti-American hostilities continue to exist, remains to be seen.
Present status
Present British policy is that the relationship with the United States represents the United Kingdom's "most important bilateral relationship" in the world.[3] United States Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton paid tribute to the relationship in February 2009 by saying, "it stands the test of time".[90]
On March 3, 2009, Gordon Brown made his first visit to the Obama White House. During his visit, he presented the president a gift in the form of a pen holder carved from HMS Gannet, which served anti-slavery missions off the coast of Africa. Barack Obama’s gift to the prime minister was a box of 25 DVDs with movies including Star Wars and E.T. The wife of the prime minister, Sarah Brown, gave the Obama daughters, Sasha and Malia, two dresses from British clothing retailer Topshop, and a few unpublished books that have not reached the United States. Michelle Obama gave the prime minister's sons two Marine One helicopter toys.[91] During this visit to the United States, Gordon Brown made an address to a joint session of the United States Congress, a privilege rarely accorded to foreign heads of government.
In March 2009, a Gallup poll of Americans showed 36% identified the United Kingdom as their country's "most valuable ally", followed by Canada, Japan, Israel, and Germany rounding out the top five.[92] The poll also indicated that 89% of Americans view the United Kingdom favorably, second only to Canada with 90%.[92] According to the Pew Research Center, a global survey conducted in July 2009 revealed that 70% of Britons who responded had a favorable view of the United States.[93]
Former British Secretary of State for Defence Liam Fox criticized minor American defense adjustments and announced that British military spending will be cut by a level expected to be 10 to 20 percent.[94][95]
In February 2011, The Daily Telegraph, based on evidence from Wikileaks, reported that the United States had tendered sensitive information about the British Trident nuclear arsenal (whose missile delivery systems are manufactured and maintained in the United States) to the Russian Federation as part of a deal to encourage Russia to ratify the New START Treaty. Professor Malcolm Chalmers of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies speculated that serial numbers could undermine Britain's non-verification policy by providing Russia "with another data point to gauge the size of the British arsenal".[96]
On May 25, 2011, during his official visit to the UK, President Barack Obama reaffirmed the relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States of America in an address to Parliament at Westminster Hall. Amongst other points, Obama stated: "I've come here today to reaffirm one of the oldest; one of the strongest alliances the World has ever known. It's long been said that the United States and The United Kingdom share a special relationship."[97]
Trade and investment
The United States accounts for the United Kingdom's largest single export market, buying $57 billion worth of British goods in 2007.[98] Total trade of imports and exports between the United Kingdom and the United States amounted to the sum of $107.2 billion in 2007.[99]
The United States and the United Kingdom share the world's largest foreign direct investment partnership. In 2005, American direct investment in the United Kingdom totaled $324 billion while British direct investment in the United States totaled $282 billion.[100]
Tourism
More than 4.5 million Britons visit the United States every year, spending approximately $14 billion. Around 3 million Americans visit the United Kingdom every year, spending approximately $10 billion.[101]
Transportation
New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport is the most popular international destination for people flying out of London Heathrow Airport. Approximately 2,802,870 people on multiple daily non-stop flights flew from Heathrow to JFK in 2008.[102] Concorde, British Airway's flagship supersonic airliner, began trans-Atlantic service to Washington Dulles International Airport in the United States on May 24, 1976. The trans-Atlantic route between London's Heathrow and New York's JFK in under 3½ hours, had its first operational flight between the two hubs on October 19, 1977 and the last being on October 23, 2003.[103]
Cunard Line, a British shipping company which is owned jointly by a British-American-Panamanian parent company, Carnival Corporation, provides seasonal trans-Atlantic crossings aboard the RMS Queen Mary 2 and the MS Queen Victoria between Southampton and New York City.[104]
State and official visits
Reciprocal state and official visits have been carried out over the years by three Presidents of the United States as well as two British monarchs. Throughout her lifetime, Queen Elizabeth II has met a total of eleven presidents (Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush Sr., Clinton, Bush Jr, and Obama), with the notable exception of Lyndon B. Johnson and she also met former President Herbert Hoover (1929–33) in 1957.[105]
Dates | Monarch and Consort | Locations | Itinerary |
June 7–11, 1939 | King George VI and Queen Elizabeth | Washington D.C., New York City, and Hyde Park (New York) | Paid a state visit to Washington D.C., stayed at the White House, laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery, visited George Washington's Virginian plantation Mount Vernon, made an appearance at the 1939 World's Fair in New York City, and made a private visit to Franklin Roosevelt's upstate New York retreat, Springwood Estate. |
October 17–20, 1957 | Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh | Jamestown and Williamsburg (Virginia), Washington D.C., and New York City | Paid a state visit to Washington D.C., attended the official ceremonies of the 350th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown, Virginia, and made a brief stop-over in New York City before sailing to the United Kingdom. |
July 6–9, 1976 | Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh | Philadelphia, Washington D.C., New York City, Charlottesville (Virginia), Newport and Providence (Rhode Island), and Boston | Paid a state visit to Washington D.C. and toured the United States East Coast in conjunction with the United States Bicentennial celebrations aboard HMY Britannia. |
February 26 – March 7, 1983 | Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh | San Diego, Palm Springs, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, Yosemite National Park (California), and Seattle (Washington) | Made an official visit to the United States, toured the United States West Coast aboard HMY Britannia, and made a private visit to Ronald Reagan's retreat in the Santa Ynez Mountains, Rancho del Cielo. |
May 14–17, 1991 | Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh | Washington D.C., Baltimore (Maryland), Miami and Tampa (Florida), Austin, San Antonio, and Houston (Texas), and Lexington (Kentucky) | Paid a state visit to Washington D.C., addressed a joint session of the United States Congress, made a private visit to Kentucky, and toured the Southern United States. |
May 3–8, 2007 | Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh | Richmond, Jamestown, and Williamsburg (Virginia), Louisville (Kentucky), Greenbelt (Maryland), and Washington D.C. | Paid a state visit to Washington D.C., addressed the Virginia General Assembly, attended the official ceremonies of the 400th anniversary of the establishment of Jamestown, toured NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, visited the National World War II Memorial on the National Mall, and made a private visit to Kentucky to attend the 133rd Kentucky Derby. |
Dates | Administration | Locations | Itinerary |
December 26–28, 1918 | Woodrow Wilson and Edith Wilson | London, Carlisle, and Manchester | Made an official visit to the United Kingdom, stayed at Buckingham Palace, attended an official dinner, had an audience with King George V and Queen Mary, and made a private visit called the 'pilgrimage of the heart' to the ancestral home of his British-born mother, Janet Woodrow. |
June 7–9, 1982 | Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan | London and Windsor | Made an official visit to the United Kingdom, stayed at Windsor Castle, attended a state banquet, and addressed the Parliament of the United Kingdom. |
November 18–21, 2003 | George W. Bush and Laura Bush | London and Sedgefield | Paid a state visit to the United Kingdom, stayed at Buckingham Palace, attended a state banquet, laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey, and made a private visit to Tony Blair's constituency in County Durham, North East England. |
May 24-, 2011 | Barack Obama and Michelle Obama | London | Paid a state visit to the United Kingdom, stayed at Buckingham Palace, attended a state banquet, addressed Parliament, presented wedding gifts to Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge (donation of MacBook notebook computers to Peace Players International); met with Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip and Prime Minister David Cameron. |
Diplomacy
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Common memberships
Strategic Alliance Cyber Crime Working Group
Template:UKUSA The Strategic Alliance Cyber Crime Working Group is an initiative by Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and headed by the United States as a "formal partnership between these nations dedicated to tackling larger global crime issues, particularly organized crime." The cooperation consists of "five countries from three continents banding together to fight cyber crime in a synergistic way by sharing intelligence, swapping tools and best practices, and strengthening and even synchronizing their respective laws."[111]
Within this initiative, there is increased information sharing between the United Kingdom's Serious Organised Crime Agency and the United States' Federal Bureau of Investigation on matters relating to serious fraud or cyber crime.
UKUSA Community
The UK-USA Security Agreement is an alliance of five English-speaking countries; Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States, for the sole purpose of sharing intelligence. The precursor to this agreement is essentially an extension of the historic BRUSA Agreement which was signed in 1943. In association with the ECHELON system, all five nations are assigned to intelligence collection and analysis from different parts of the world. For example, the United Kingdom hunts for communications in Europe, Africa, and Russia west of the Ural Mountains whereas the United States has responsibility for gathering intelligence in Latin America, Asia, Asiatic Russia, and northern mainland China.[112]
Sister-Twinning cities
England and the United States
Scotland and the United States
Wales and the United States
Northern Ireland and the United States
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Friendship links
- Liverpool, England, UK and Memphis, Tennessee, USA
- Liverpool, England, UK and New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
- Newcastle, England, UK and Little Rock, Arkansas, USA
- Wellingborough, England, UK and Willingboro, New Jersey, USA
Heritage
The United States shares with Britain many threads of cultural heritage.
Since English is the language of British and the Americans, both nations belong to the English-speaking world. However, the common language does come with small differences in spelling, pronunciation, and the meaning of words.[113]
The American legal systems is largely based on English common law. The American system of local government is rooted in English precedents, such as the offices of county courts and sheriffs. Although the U.S., unlike Britain, remains highly religious,[114] the largest Protestant denominations emerged from British churches brought across the Atlantic, such as the Baptists, Methodists, Congregationalists and Episcopalians.
Britain and the United States practice what is commonly referred to as an Anglo-Saxon economy in which levels of regulation and taxes are low, and government provides a low to medium level of social services in return.[115]
Independence Day, July 4, is a national celebration which commemorates the July 4, 1776 adoption of the Declaration of Independence from the British Empire. American defiance of Britain is expressed in the American national anthem, The Star Spangled Banner, written during the War of 1812 to the tune of a British celebratory song as the Americans beat off a British attack on Baltimore
Popular culture
Literature
Literature is transferred across the Atlantic Ocean, as evidenced by, the appeal of British authors such as William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, J. R. R. Tolkien, Jackie Collins, and J.K. Rowling in the United States, and American authors such as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Mark Twain, Ernest Hemingway, Stephen King and Dan Brown in Britain. Henry James moved to Britain and was well known in both countries, as was T.S. Eliot. Eliot moved to England in 1914 and became a British subject in 1927. He was a dominant figure in literary criticism and greatly influenced the Modern period of British literature.[116]
Print journalism
British Sunday broadsheet newspaper The Observer includes a condensed copy of The New York Times.[117]
Film
There is much crossover appeal in the modern entertainment culture of the United Kingdom and the United States. For example, Hollywood blockbuster movies made by Steven Spielberg and George Lucas have had a large effect on British audiences in the United Kingdom, while the James Bond and Harry Potter series of films have attracted high interest in the United States. Also, the animated films of Walt Disney have continued to make an indelible mark and impression on British audiences, young and old, for almost 100 years. Films by Alfred Hitchcock continuously make a lasting impact on a loyal fan base in the United States, as Alfred Hitchcock himself influenced notable American film makers such as John Carpenter, in the horror and slasher film genres.
Production of films are often shared between the two nations, whether it be a concentrated use of British and American actors or the use of film studios located in London or Hollywood.
Theatre
Broadway theatre in New York City has toured London's West End theatre over the years, with notable performances such as The Lion King, Grease, Wicked, and Rent. British productions, such as Mamma Mia! and several of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musicals, including Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Cats and The Phantom of the Opera have found success on Broadway. For over 150 years, Shakespeare's plays have been overwhelmingly popular with upscale American audiences.[118]
Television
Both the United Kingdom and the United States have television shows which are similar, as they are either carried by the other nations' networks, or are re-created for distribution in their own nations. Some popular British television shows that were re-created for the American market in more recent years are The Office, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, Strictly Come Dancing (Dancing With the Stars), Top Gear, Pop Idol (American Idol) and The X Factor. Some American television shows re-created for the British market in more recent years include The Apprentice and Deal or No Deal. Popular American television shows that are currently popular in the United Kingdom include The Simpsons, Modern Family, South Park, Scrubs, Family Guy, Friends, The Big Bang Theory and the CSI: Crime Scene Investigation series.
The BBC airs two networks in the United States, BBC America and BBC World. The American network PBS collaborates with the BBC and rebroadcasts British television shows in the United States such as Monty Python's Flying Circus, Keeping Up Appearances, Doctor Who, Nova, and Masterpiece Theatre. The BBC also frequently collaborates with American network HBO, showing recent American mini-series in the United Kingdom such as Rome, John Adams, Band of Brothers, and The Gathering Storm. Likewise, the American network Discovery Channel has partnered with the BBC by televising recent British mini-series in the United States such as Planet Earth and The Blue Planet, the latter popularly known as The Blue Planet: Seas of Life in the American format. The United States' public affairs channel C-SPAN, broadcasts Prime Minister's Questions every Sunday.
On some British digital television platforms, it is also possible to watch American television channels direct from the United Kingdom, such as Fox News Channel, as well as American television channels tailored for British audiences such as CNBC Europe, CNN International, ESPN Classic, Comedy Central, and Fox. The Super Bowl, the National Football League's championship tournament of American football which occurs every February, has been broadcast in the United Kingdom since 1982.[119]
Music
American artists such as Whitney Houston, Madonna, Tina Turner, Cher, Michael Jackson, Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Diana Ross, Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Frank Sinatra, Lady Gaga and Beyoncé, are popular in the United Kingdom. British artists such as The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Sting, The Who, Shirley Bassey, Tom Jones, David Bowie, The Spice Girls, The Bee Gees, Amy Winehouse, KT Tunstall, Leona Lewis, Elton John (Elton John recorded Candle in the Wind which, to date, is the best ever selling single worldwide), Coldplay and Adele have achieved much success in the large American market. Undoubtedly, the popular music of both nations has had a strong sway on each other.
In the United Kingdom, many Hollywood films as well as Broadway musicals are closely associated and identified with the musical scores and soundtracks created by famous American composers such as George Gershwin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Henry Mancini, John Williams, Alan Silvestri, Jerry Goldsmith, and James Horner.
The Celtic music of the United Kingdom has had a dynamic effect upon American music.[120] In particular, the traditional music of the Southern United States is descended from traditional Celtic music and English folk music of the colonial period, and the musical traditions of the South eventually gave rise to country music and, to a lesser extent, American folk.[121]
The birth of jazz, swing, big band, and especially rock and roll, all developed and originating in the United States, had greatly influenced the later development of rock music in the United Kingdom, particularly British rock bands such as The Beatles and the Rolling Stones, while its American precursor, the blues, greatly influenced British electric rock.[122]
Gallery
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Sir Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt during a secret meeting off the coast of Newfoundland, 1941.
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Anthony Eden greeting Franklin D. Roosevelt at the Quebec Conference as Eleanor Roosevelt and Sir Winston Churchill look on, 1943.
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Eleanor Roosevelt, Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone, and Clementine Churchill at the Second Quebec Conference, 1944.
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General Dwight D. Eisenhower with Sir Winston Churchill and Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery at a NATO meeting, 1951.
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Queen Elizabeth II and Patricia Nixon, 1970.
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Gerald and Betty Ford having lunch with Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh at the White House, 1976.
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Margaret Thatcher and Jimmy Carter seen reading the inscription on the front of the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office at the White House, 1979.
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Ronald Reagan addressing the British Parliament, 1982.
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Ronald and Nancy Reagan with Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh at Rancho del Cielo, 1983.
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John Travolta dancing with Diana, Princess of Wales at the White House, 1985.
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Margaret Thatcher seen walking with Ronald Reagan at Camp David, 1986.
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Ronald and Nancy Reagan with Margaret and Dennis Thatcher at the beginning of an official dinner at the White House, 1988.
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George H.W. Bush and John Major conducting a press conference at Camp David, 1992.
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Bill Clinton and Tony Blair embracing each other at a conference in Florence, Italy, 1999.
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Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and George W. Bush in the forecourt of Buckingham Palace before a review of Foot Guards of the Household Division, 2003.
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George W. Bush, Laura Bush, Charles, Prince of Wales, and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall at the White House during the Waleses' official visit to the United States, 2005.
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Queen Elizabeth II reviewing an honour guard during a State Arrival Ceremony held on the South Lawn of the White House, 2007.
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Gordon Brown and George W. Bush having their first meeting at Camp David, 2007.
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Tony Blair being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by George W. Bush, 2009.
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Gordon Brown and Barack Obama, during a photo opportunity in the Oval Office at the White House in 2009.
See also
- Timeline of British diplomatic history
- Timeline of United States diplomatic history
- Foreign policy of the United States
- Foreign relations of the United States
- Foreign relations of the United Kingdom
- Transatlantic relations
Bibliography
- Allen; H. C. Great Britain and the United States: A History of Anglo-American Relations, 1783–1952 (1954)
- Bartlett, Christopher John. The Special Relationship: A Political History of Anglo-American Relations Since 1945 (1992)
- Burt, Alfred L. The United States, Great Britain, and British North America from the Revolution to the Establishment of Peace after the War of 1812. (1940), detailed history by Canadian scholar; online
- Campbell, Charles S. Anglo-American Understanding 1898–1903 (1957)
- John Charmley. Churchill's Grand Alliance: The Anglo-American Special Relationship 1940–57 (1996)
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- Hollowell; Jonathan. Twentieth-Century Anglo-American Relations (2001)
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- Lane, Ann. Strategy, Diplomacy and UK Foreign Policy (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010)
- Louis, William Roger; Imperialism at Bay: The United States and the Decolonization of the British Empire, 1941–1945 (1978)
- Louis, William Roger, and Hedley Bull. The "Special Relationship": Anglo-American Relations since 1945 (1987)
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Primary sources
- Blair, Tony. A Journey: My Political Life (2010), memoir by UK prime minister
- Loewenheim, Francis L. et al. eds. Roosevelt and Churchill, their secret wartime correspondence (1975)
References
- ^ Kiran Chetry, T.J. Holmes, Christine Romans, Christiane Amanpour, Suzanne Malveaux, Nic Robertson, 'President Obama/Prime Minister Brown G-20 Summit Press Conference' (April 1, 2009), CNN: American Morning, CNLM.
- ^ Panel I of A Hearing of the senate Foreign Relations Committee (Part 4) (January 21, 2010), Federal News Service, FEDNWS.
- ^ a b Giles, Chris (July 27, 2007). "/ Home UK / UK – Ties that bind: Bush, Brown and a different relationship". Financial Times. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
- ^ Alex Spillius, 'Special relationship Britain and America share fundamental values, Clinton tells Miliband', The Daily Telegraph (February 4, 2009), p. 12.
- ^ David Williamson, "U.S. envoy pays tribute to Welsh Guards' courage", The Western Mail (November 26, 2009), p. 16.
- ^ Document with full texts of the maritime treaties and maps
- ^ Agreement between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of the United States of America on the Delimitation in the Caribbean of a Maritime Boundary between Puerto Rico/US Virgin Islands and the British Virgin Islands 5 November 1993
- ^ 2013 World Service Poll BBC
- ^ "United States". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
- ^ "Figures – British Religion in Numbers". Retrieved October 5, 2012.
- ^ Religious Affiliation Pew report
- ^ http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy10/pdf/budget/defense.pdf
- ^ Ember et al 2004, p. 49 .
- ^ a b c Matthew Lange, James Mahoney, and Matthias vom Hau, "Colonialism and Development: A Comparative Analysis of Spanish and British Colonies", The American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 111, No. 5 (March 2006), pp. 1412–1462.
- ^ A useful survey is Francis D. Cogliano, Revolutionary America, 1763–1815: A Political History (2008) excerpt and text search; the author is an American based at a British university.
- ^ Jonathan R. Dull, A Diplomatic History of the American Revolution (1987); H. M. Scott, British Foreign Policy in the Age of the American Revolution (Oxford University Press, 1990).
- ^ Perkins (1955)
- ^ Marshall Smelser, The Democratic Republic, 1801–1815 (1968).
- ^ Perkins p. vii
- ^ Bradford Perkins, The First Rapprochement: England and the United States, 1795–1805 (1955) p. 1.
- ^ Joseph Ellis, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation (2000) pp. 136–7.
- ^ Bradford Perkins, Prologue to war: England and the United States, 1805-1812 (1961) full text online
- ^ Donald R Hickey, The War of 1812: A Forgotten Conflict (1989), pp. 11, 107–110.
- ^ Francis M. Carroll (2001). A Good and Wise Measure: The Search for the Canadian-American Boundary, 1783–1842. U. of Toronto Press. p. 24.
- ^ Norman K. Risjord, "1812: Conservatives, War Hawks, and the Nation's Honor," William and Mary Quarterly (1961) 18#2 pp 196–210 in JSTOR
- ^ H.W. Brands (2006). Andrew Jackson: His Life and Times. Random House Digital. p. 163.
- ^ J.C.A. Stagg, "James Madison and the Coercion of Great Britain: Canada, the West Indies, and the War of 1812," William and Mary Quarterly (1981) 38#1 pp. 3–34 in JSTOR
- ^ Kate Caffrey: The Lion and the Union, (1978), p. 270.
- ^ Ralph W. Hidy and Muriel E. Hidy, "Anglo-American Merchant Bankers and the Railroads of the Old Northwest, 1848–1860," Business History Review (1960) 34#2 pp. 150–169 in JSTOR
- ^ Scott Kaufman, and John A. Soares, "'Sagacious Beyond Praise'? Winfield Scott and Anglo-American-Canadian Border Diplomacy, 1837–1860," Diplomatic History, (2006) 30#1 pp p57-82
- ^ Howard Jones, "Anglophobia and the Aroostook War," New England Quarterly (1975) 48#4 pp. 519–539 in JSTOR
- ^ David M. Pletcher, The Diplomacy of Annexation: Texas, Oregon, and the Mexican War (1973).
- ^ Amanda Foreman, A World on Fire: Britain's Crucial Role in the American Civil War (2012)
- ^ Howard Jones, Union in Peril: The Crisis over British Intervention in the Civil War (1992)
- ^ Charles Francis Adams, "The Trent Affair," American Historical Review (1912) 17#3 pp. 540–562 in JSTOR
- ^ Adams (1925)
- ^ Howard Jones (2002). Abraham Lincoln and a New Birth of Freedom: The Union and Slavery in the Diplomacy of the Civil War. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 83–84.
- ^ Nelson M. Blake, "Background of Cleveland's Venezuelan Policy," American Historical Review (1942) 47#2 pp. 259–277 in JSTOR
- ^ Alan Nevins, Grover Cleveland (1932) p 647
- ^ Nevins, 550, 647–648
- ^ R. A. Humphreys, "Anglo-American Rivalries and the Venezuela Crisis of 1895," Transactions of the Royal Historical Society (1967) 17:131–164 in JSTOR
- ^ Nelson M. Blake, "The Olney-Pauncefote Treaty of 1897," American Historical Review, (1945) 50#2 pp. 228-243 in JSTOR
- ^ David G. Haglund, and Tudor Onea, "Victory without Triumph: Theodore Roosevelt, Honour, and the Alaska Panhandle Boundary Dispute," Diplomacy and Statecraft (March 2008) 19#1 pp 20–41.
- ^ William C. Reuter, "The Anatomy of Political Anglophobia in the United States, 1865–1900," Mid America (1979) 61#2 pp 117-132.
- ^ John Dumbrell (2009). America's Special Relationships: Allies and Clients. Taylor & Francis. p. 31.
- ^ Henry J. Hendrix, Theodore Roosevelt's Naval Diplomacy: The U.S. Navy and the Birth of the American Century (2009)
- ^ Mark Albertson, They'll Have to Follow You!: The Triumph of the Great White Fleet (2008) excerpt and text search
- ^ May, Ernest R. The World War and American Isolation, 1914–1917 (1959)
- ^ Ronald Spector, "'You're Not Going to Send Soldiers Over There Are You!': The American Search for an Alternative to the Western Front 1916–1917," Military Affairs (1972) 36#1 pp. 1–4 in JSTOR
- ^ J Ellis & M Cox, The WW1 Databook (Aurum press 2001) p. 245
- ^ Allen (1954)
- ^ C. J. Low and M. L. Dockrill, eds. The Mirage of Power: volume 3: The documents: British Foreign Policy 1902-22 (1972) p. 647
- ^ Carolyn J. Kitching, Britain and the Problem of International Disarmament, 1919–1934 Rutledge, 1999 online
- ^ A.J. P. Taylor, English History, 1914–1945 (1965) pp 202-3, 335
- ^ Richard Pomfret (1997). The Economics of Regional Trading Arrangements. Oxford University Press. p. 58.
- ^ Frederick W. Jones, ed. The Economic Almanac 1956 (1956) p 486
- ^ Jeannette P. Nichols, "Roosevelt's Monetary Diplomacy in 1933," American Historical Review, (1951) 56#2 pp. 295-317 in JSTOR
- ^ Hollowell; Twentieth-Century Anglo-American Relations (2001)
- ^ David Nasaw, The Patriarch: The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy (2012) pp 281-486
- ^ Leo T. Crowley, "Lend Lease" in Walter Yust, ed. 10 Eventful Years (1947)1:520, 2, pp. 858–860.
- ^ William Hardy McNeill, America, Britain and Russia: Their Cooperation and Conflict 1941–1946 (1953) pp 137-50, 772-90
- ^ McNeill, America, Britain and Russia: Their Cooperation and Conflict 1941–1946 (1953) pp 90-118, 129-37
- ^ Paul Kennedy, Engineers of Victory: The Problem Solvers Who Turned The Tide in the Second World War (2013)
- ^ James W. Brennan, "The Proximity Fuze: Whose Brainchild?," U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings (1968) 94#9 pp 72–78.
- ^ Septimus H. Paul (2000). Nuclear Rivals: Anglo-American Atomic Relations, 1941–1952. Ohio State U.P. pp. 1–5.
- ^ John Reynolds, Rich Relations: The American Occupation of Britain, 1942–45 (Random House, 1995)
- ^ Eric S. Rubin, "America, Britain, and Swaraj: Anglo-American Relations and Indian Independence, 1939–1945," India Review" (Jan–March 2011) 10#1 pp 40–80
- ^ Arthur Herman (2008). Gandhi & Churchill: The Epic Rivalry That Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age. Random House Digital, Inc. pp. 472–539.
- ^ George M. Alexander, The Prelude to the Truman Doctrine: British Policy in Greece, 1944–1947 (1982); Lawrence S. Wittner, American Intervention in Greece, 1943–1949 (1982)
- ^ C. C. S. Newton, "The Sterling Crisis of 1947 and the British Response to the Marshall Plan," Economic History Review (1984) 37#3 pp. 391–408 in JSTOR
- ^ a b "Lockheed Martin Awarded Support Contract for United Kingdom's Fleet Ballistic Missile Program?". Retrieved November 8, 2009.
- ^ Simon Jenkins, "American Involvement in the Falklands" The Economist, March 3, 1984
- ^ Shawcross (2004) ch 2
- ^ "Sometimes, I pretend I am Canadian". Helen Kirwan-Taylor. London. November 13, 2004. Retrieved July 13, 2007.
- ^ "US and UK: A transatlantic love story?". BBC. November 17, 2003. Retrieved 06/09/2009.
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(help) - ^ Julian Glover and Ewen MacAskill (July 25, 2006). "Stand up to US, voters tell Blair". The Guardian. London. Retrieved November 22, 2007.
Britain should take a much more robust and independent approach to the United States, according to a Guardian/ICM poll published today, which finds strong public opposition to Tony Blair's close working relationship with President Bush.
- ^ "PM's speech on US Elections". number10.gov.uk. November 3, 2004. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ Young, Hugo (November 14, 2002). "Blair has not been a poodle, but poodleism still beckons". The Guardian. London. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
- ^ Harding, Thomas (March 31, 2009). "British hand over Basra command to US". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
- ^ Naughton, Philippe (June 11, 2009). "Foreign Office fury over settlement of Guantánamo Uighurs in Bermuda". The Times. London. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
- ^ Keesing's Contemporary Archives Volume 55, (August, 2009) Page 49368
- ^ "Ambassador: US-UK ties intact despite Lockerbie". Associated Press.
- ^ Jones, Sam (August 25, 2009). "Lockerbie bomber's Libya reception 'repulsed' Brown". The Guardian. UK. Retrieved August 25, 2009.
- ^ Stolberg, Sheryl Gay (June 12, 2010). "Across Atlantic, Much Ado About Oil Company's Name". The New York Times. New York. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
- ^ Fifield, Anna (June 12/13, 2010). "frills and spills". Financial Times. London. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
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(help) - ^ Eaglesham, Jean (June 11, 2010). "Frills and spills". Financial Times. London. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- ^ Rachman, Gideon (June 15, 2010). "Love and loathing across the ocean". Financial Times. London. Retrieved June 16, 2010.
- ^ Kennedy, Helen (June 2, 2010). "BP's CEO Tony Hayward: The most hated – and most clueless – man in America". New York: NY Daily News. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
- ^ Evans, Judith (June 10, 2010). "Boris Johnson attacks Americas anti-British rhetoric on BP". The Times. London.
- ^ "U.S. hails 'special ties' with UK". BBC News. February 3, 2009. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
- ^ "Obama's Blockbuster Gift for Brown: 25 DVDs –". Fox News. March 6, 2009.
- ^ a b "Poll ranks Canada second in list of top U.S. allies". CTV Global Media.
- ^ Spence, Matt (July 24, 2009). "President Obama makes U.S. popular in Europe again, Pew poll says". The Times. London. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
- ^ "British Defense chief urges support for F-35 engine". GovExec.com. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
- ^ British Cuts to Military Concern U.S. Officials
- ^ Moore, Matthew (February 4, 2011). "WikiLeaks cables: U.S. agrees to tell Russia Britain's nuclear secrets". The Daily Telegraph. London: The Telegraph. Retrieved February 6, 2011.
- ^ Full video of the speech. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxDhUjM8D4Q
- ^ "Trade and Investment with the United States". UK Trade and Investment.
- ^ "Top Trading Partners – Total Trade, Exports, Imports". U.S. Census Bureau.
- ^ "Trade and Investment with the United States". Foreign TradeX.
- ^ "UK & USA relations". UK in the USA Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
- ^ "UK Airport Statistics". BAA.
- ^ "Concorde". Super 70s.com.
- ^ "Transatlantic Crossings". Cunard.
- ^ "The Queen, Presidents And Protocol". CBS News. CBS Evening News with Katie Couric. March 31, 2009.
- ^ "The Royal Visit: June 7–12th, 1939".
- ^ "State Visit". Embassy of the U.S. London.
- ^ "Visit of President Bush to the United Kingdom November 18–21, 2003". USEmbassy.gov.
- ^ http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5286.htm
- ^ http://wivtc.com/portal/?p=16811
- ^ "International cyber-cop unit girds for uphill battles". NetworkWorld.com.
- ^ "The UKUSA Community".
- ^ "Differences Between American and British English".
- ^ Robert D. Putnam; David E. Campbell; Shaylyn Romney Garrett (2010). American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us. Simon and Schuster. p. 316.
- ^ "The Two Types of Capitalism". innovationzen.com. October 19, 2006.
- ^ John Worthen, T. S. Eliot: A Short Biography (2011)
- ^ "The Observer to Feature New York Times Weekly Supplement". Guardian (Press release). Retrieved March 25, 2012.
- ^ Kim C. Sturgess (2004). Shakespeare and the American Nation. Cambridge University Press, ch 1.
- ^ "American Football: The whole nine yards: The NFL comes to Wembley". The Independent. London. October 25, 2008. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
- ^ "Traditional Celtic Music's Contributions to American Music".
- ^ "Origins of Country Music". Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.
- ^ "Pop and Rock Music in the 60s A Brief History". Spectropop.
External links
- History of United Kingdom – United States relations from U.S. State Dept.
- Atlantic Archive: UK-US Relations in an Age of Global War 1939–1945
- John Bull and Uncle Sam: Four Centuries of British American Relations
- An analysis of the Special Relationship from a British perspective. From the Second World War to the latest global problems facing the United States.
- Lecture: Anti-Americanism and American Exceptionalism
- Goldwin Smith, "The Hatred of England," (1890) essay by Canadian scholar
- British Embassy in the United States of America
- Embassy of the United States of America in the United Kingdom