David Miliband: Europe and US need ‘separate bedrooms’ but not divorce
Former Labour foreign secretary David Miliband stated at the Hay literary festival that Europe should maintain a distinct strategic autonomy from the US, likening it to having "separate bedrooms" rather than a complete "divorce." He cautioned that complete disengagement could lead to a difficult position for Europe, particularly in areas like the economy and military procurement. Miliband highlighted climate change as an example where Europe cannot afford to be held back by US policy shifts.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedFormer Labour foreign secretary David Miliband stated at the Hay literary festival that Europe should maintain a distinct strategic autonomy from the US, likening it to having "separate bedrooms" rather than a complete "divorce." He cautioned that complete disengagement could lead to a difficult position for Europe, particularly in areas like the economy and military procurement. Miliband highlighted climate change as an example where Europe cannot afford to be held back by US policy shifts. He also suggested that generating and fairly distributing wealth is crucial for Europe to address its political and military weaknesses. The discussion also touched upon the UK's relationship with the EU, with writer Philippe Sands emphasizing the UK's greater dependence on the US and the need for reconnection with Europe.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedBrexit has demonstrated to other EU member states that disengaging from 40 years of regulatory alignment is catastrophic to an economy.
Britain’s “primary connection” is with Europe, and that is the way Britain has to go.
The UK-US relationship is “one-way” and the UK is “far more dependent” on the US.
Strategic autonomy for Europe could mean divorce from the United States, which Miliband counsels against.
Europe should have “separate bedrooms” from the US, but not seek a “divorce” from its traditional alliance.