EFTA00164496.pdf
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From: "FT Editor's Choice" <FT®newsletters.ft.com>
To: leslie.backschies®ic.fbi.gov
Subject: [BULK] Sir Kim Darroch, Deutsche lay-offs, Lucy Kellaway at 60
Date: Sat, 13 Jul 2019 07:01:02 +0000
Importance: Normal
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By Roula Khalaf
July 13, 2019
The value of an ambassador's private memos is in the unvarnished assessments they
contain. When the cables are leaked to the media, and the administration they report on
is that of Donald Trump, the result is diplomatic mayhem.
Sir Kim Darroch, the UK ambassador to the US, discovered this the hard way. This week
he was the victim of a damaging leak that aptly described the chaos at the White House.
Mr Trump reacted with fury on Twitter, unleashing a torrent of insults at Sir Kim, and
blocking him from White House meetings. When Boris Johnson, the frontrunner in the
Conservative Party leadership contest and a Trump fan, failed to support the British
envoy, Sir Kim was left with no choice but to offer his resignation.
The story that consumed the UK for much of the week leads to two unfortunate
conclusions: the first is that in the age of leaks and hacks, the basic job of diplomats is at
risk; the second is that, as prime minister, Boris Johnson cannot be counted on to
support the civil service. You can read how the Darroch saga unfolded and what it tells
us about the transatlantic relationship.
What I've been reading
1. A Royal Navy frigate intervened to block three Iranian gunboats headed for a British
tanker in the Strait of Hormuz this week. One-third of seaborne crude passes through the
strait, which has become a focal point for tensions between Iran and the west,
threatening global trade, as FT correspondents report.
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2. Jeffrey Epstein rubbed shoulders with the great and the good, from Bill Clinton to
Donald Trump. Those contacts are now scrambling to distance themselves from the New
York financier after he was charged with sexually abusing under-aged girls. The FT's
Joshua Chaffin and Kadhim Shubber profile Mr Epstein, who was previously charged in
2008, and ask how high society tolerated him for so long?
3. Depression and anxiety cost companies $1tn every year worldwide, and some
employers' indifference to their workers' mental health can have tragic consequences,
as the FT's Lilah Raptopoulos and James Fontanella-Khan reveal in a striking feature for
the FT Weekend Magazine.
4. Bankers: "highly paid and disposable". That's chief business commentator John
Gapper's verdict on the massive lay-offs launched by Deutsche Bank this week. He
argues bankers have been alienated from their jobs.
5. As Boris Johnson edges closer to power the FT Westminster team assess whether
his bluster on Brexit will end in a catastrophic crashing out. Across the aisle, Labour's
tortured stance on leaving the EU has been shaped by Jeremy Corbyn's hard-left
advisers, profiled this week by chief political correspondent Jim Pickard.
6. Africa editor David Pilling makes a pitch for the cheapest Lunch with the FT of all
time, a £2.16 feast in a Ugandan slum with rapper turned politician Bobby Wine, an
unlikely challenger to President Yoweri Museveni's three decade rule.
EFTA00164497
7. Republicans are getting worried about saving the planet, just don't call it a fight
against climate change. Gillian Tett finds conservative activists adding "energy
freedom", "regulatory simplification", and "carbon dividends" to their vocabulary. For
more on business and the environment, subscribe to the FT's new Moral Money
newsletter.
8. Martin Wolf looks back on 75 years since the Bretton Woods conference, and see the
global economic order established in 1944 under threat today like never before. At the
heart of the issue is whether countries gain most by co-operation or if it is every nation
for itself.
9. James Dyson hoovered up Singapore's most expensive penthouse this week, as his
company bins its UK headquarters. Edwin Heathcote writes that the pro-Brexit
billionaire's new pad symbolises the age of the international super-rich.
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10. Happy birthday to Lucy Kellaway who contemplates life (and dating) after 60 in a
sparkling weekend read. She muses on whether her next phase is best described as
"extended middle age", "young-old", or "aged adolescence".
What to watch
Criminals stole at least £350m in the UK last year through authorised push payment
scams, including £4,300 from FT deputy head of video Joe Sinclair, who now examines
the fraud, its victims, and how to avoid being duped.
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Have a nice weekend,
Roula
Subscribe to the FT
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EFTA00164500
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| Filename | EFTA00164496.pdf |
| File Size | 218.2 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 5,329 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T11:03:41.787749 |