What Vance framed as a technical point about “recent battlefield experience” landed in Britain as a slap in the face to the 636 soldiers who never came home from Iraq and Afghanistan. Veterans like Johnny Mercer and Andy McNab heard not nuance, but erasure. Former commanders such as Lord West and General Sir Patrick Sanders spoke less as politicians than as men who had written letters to grieving families, and who now felt those sacrifices being casually discounted.Their anger was echoed in Westminster. James Cartlidge condemned the remarks as “deeply disrespectful,” while James Cleverly and other MPs demanded recognition of the blood price Britain has paid alongside the U.S. Keir Starmer, careful but firm, wrapped his response in national pride and the language of alliance. Vance’s attempted clarification did little to calm the storm; instead, it exposed a fragile truth: in an age of permanent crisis, even a careless sentence can shake the foundations of trust between allies who believed some things were beyond question.
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