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Farage accused of 'parroting Kremlin lines' after remarks on UK troops in Ukraine.
Summary
Nigel Farage said he would vote against any UK plan to deploy troops to Ukraine, and cabinet minister Pat McFadden accused him of “parroting Kremlin lines.” Keir Starmer has said MPs will have a debate and a vote before any UK troops are sent.
Content
Nigel Farage said he would vote against any government plan to deploy British troops to Ukraine, commenting that the UK lacks the manpower and equipment for an open-ended operation. His remarks followed a summit where leaders discussed commitments to a potential peacekeeping deployment. Pat McFadden, a cabinet member, publicly accused Farage of "parroting Kremlin lines" and said the stance raised questions about his commitment to national security. Labour has used Farage's past comments on Russia as a line of attack against his party.
What is reported:
- Nigel Farage said he would vote against proposals to put UK troops on the ground in Ukraine, citing resource and timeline concerns.
- Pat McFadden accused Farage of echoing Russian talking points and said the position should give voters pause for thought.
- Keir Starmer said MPs would hold a debate and a vote before any UK troops would be deployed on peacekeeping duties.
Summary:
The article describes a public political dispute over whether the UK should deploy troops to Ukraine, with Farage opposing such deployments and senior figures criticising his position. The next procedural step reported is that MPs will debate and vote before any deployment decision is taken.
