Sunak’s Marble Misstep: A Diplomatic Fiasco with Greek PM Mitsotakis

Denis MacShane
British Chancellor Rishi Sunak leaves 11 Downing Street ahead of unveiling spending review.

United Kingdom (Brussels Morning newspaper) When Tony Blair was prime minister every fellow head of government wanted to meet him. Rishi Sunak is not quite in that league but a British PM is a figure of power and influence in geopolitics and is usually worth a photo call.

I was Europe minister at the time the President of Switzerland was due to meet Blair who rushed off to an urgent meeting in Northern Ireland instead. The Swiss media presented it as a major snub to their nice but unknown President. An emergency cabinet meeting was convened in Berne to discuss this affront to the Helvetic Confederation.

I knew Swiss politicians as skiing friends so I got Blair to send a hand-written mea culpa letter and the offer of a new meeting. Thus face was saved and Anglo—Swiss amity was restored.

It is difficult to know why No 10 has made such a mess of the Greek prime minister’s visit. Kyriakos Mitsotakis is the poster boy of the European centre-right. He refuses all alliance with the Greek far right in contrast to other European conservative parties which are dallying with quasi-racist, anti-immigrant, Muslim-hating political groups in order to win votes.

He has family in London, speaks the best English of any Greek PM in history, and comes to give talks to the London School of Economics and host swish dinners pleading for inward investment in  City.

It was not a state visit – that is reserved for heads of state not PMs but it was official and high-level.The UK’s ambassador in Athens also came with the Greek delegation. These bi-lateral visit are organised and orchestrated by FCO officials and their opposite numbers in foreign capitals.

The No 10 line to explain the snub kept changing and remains incoherent. First it was that Mitsotakis agreed not to raise the restitution of the famous Marbles. The debates about the Tory Lord Elgin using saws and axes to hack off some of the friezes on the Parthenon under the protection of Royal Navy warships who were guarding the Mediterranean against Napoleon hasn’t stopped in two centuries.

The debate on looted art – rather like the Duke of Normandy helping himself to a couple of columns from Stonehenge to take back to France after 1066 – runs on and on like most dialogues of the deaf.

Internationally the mood has changed as the global North accepts it can no longer keep the sculptures and other art taken from much weaker or not yet existent states two centuries ago.

Every Greek PM or Culture Minister has called for the Marbles to return and the Greeks have invested in one of the world’s best museums on the Acropolis with a spectacular empty hall full of sunlight looking out on to the glorious Parthenon the founding building of what became European civilisation.

Of course Mitsotakis would have repeated the long-standing request and of course Sunak would have politely declined. The two PMs would then move along to immigration where Mitsotakis has a good story or Ukraine on concerns front-paged by the FT this week about Turkey funnelling arms to Putin.

Instead a spectacular diplomatic mess unfolded.

Restitution is now part of modern diplomacy. Then No 10 said the problem was Mitsotakis meeting Sir Keir Starmer. This is silly. President Macron has met Starmer as European leaders want to get the measure of the man likely to be Britian’s next PM.

The BBC falsely reported that Starmer was willing to discuss returning the Marbles. But in his talk with Mitsotakis this not-quite offer was hedged with so many caveats it it little different from the British Hellenist establishment line that what we have we keep, possession by England of other nation’s art is nine tenths of the law, and the Greeks could go and jump of the Sounion cliffs from the Temple to Poseidon erected after Aegeus, King of Thrace, plunged to his death when he mistakenly thought his son Theseus had been killed in battle.

Once again No 10 changed the line saying any discussion between Sunak and Mitsotakis was a “slippery slope.” To what or to where was never explained.

Mitsotakis returned to Greece a hero for defending a core Greek national interest and just about every retired British diplomat in the Lords plus most commentators other than Lord Hannan agreed it was a diplomatic disaster for Britain.

Sunak seems to think voters will reward him for telling the Greeks to surrender and gratefully accept the Marbles should forever remain in the sterile cold British Museum Duveen gallery far from their native sunshine. A recent poll had 60 percent supporting doing the right thing by Greece. Even Nigel Farage and Suella Braverman have kept their mouths closed enjoying Sunak’s self-imposed fiasco. Red wall voters don’t know who the syphilis ridden Lord Elgin was or where the Parthenon is located.

In Britain we know our prime minister to be petulant, moody, given to silly exaggeration in what is always a miserable time for an inexperienced politician when he takes over at the fag-end of a government that has lost élan and direction.  Now the rest of Europe knows that going politely for a bi-lateral with the British prime minister may go badly wrong. British diplomacy will have to wait for new leadership before it recovers from this fiasco.

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Denis MacShane (born Josef Denis Matyjaszek; 21 May 1948) is a British former politician, author, commentator who served as UK's Minister of State for Europe from 2002 to 2005. He joined the Labour Party in 1970 and has held most party offices.
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