It looks like the Donald Trump-Boris Johnson honeymoon is finally over -- thanks to China
They could co-star in âDumb and DumberâThe OK Boomer Special Edition,â but Donald Trump and Boris Johnson reached a critical point in their sometimes rocky bromance this week.
Yes, itâs true, the British Prime Minister sent his alleged ally across the Atlantic what every couple in a long-distance relationship dreads: Mixed messages.
At first blush, it might have seemed that Johnson was kissing Trumpâs ring when he said Tuesday in a rare sit-down interview with BBC Breakfast that if the 2015 Iran nuclear deal breaks down, a âTrump dealâ should replace it.
âThe problem with the agreement is that from the American perspective itâs a flawed agreement, it expires, plus it was negotiated by [former] President Obama and from their point of view it has many, many faults,â Johnson said. âWell, if weâre going to get rid of it, letâs replace it and letâs replace it with the Trump deal, thatâs what we need to see.â
Johnson refused to kowtow to Trump even after senior administration officials flew to London and implored Britain to implement a full 5G ban.
Johnson appeared to fawn even further over Trump in the broadcast.
âI think that would be a great way forward. President Trump is a great dealmaker, by his own account and many others, letâs work together to replace the JCPOA and to get the Trump deal instead,â Johnson added.
The JCPOA, or the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, was originally signed between Iran and the U.S., U.K., Germany, France, Russia and China to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. The U.S. abandoned the deal in 2018.
The U.S. has said Trump wonât back a new deal unless it includes new controls over Iran to stop the regime funding terrorist groups, fighting proxy wars and testing ballistic missiles.
U.S. vs. China
But what got shorter shrift in Johnsonâs unexpected BBC interview was his defiance of Trumpâs strident demands that he and the rest of Europe ban Chinaâs powerhouse Huawei technology thatâs ahead of the rest of the world in rolling out 5G.
5G, a massive cellular upgrade that will enable the storied Internet of Things and smart factories, is arguably a force likely to outlast current geopolitical emergencies and could have a more lasting impact on the planet than the crisis du jour in the Middle East.
On this issue, Johnson refused to kowtow to Trumpâat least for nowâeven after senior Trump administration officials flew to London on Monday to present what they said were new security risks allegedly posed by Huaweiâand implored Britain to implement a full 5G ban.
One delegation member predicted it would be ânothing short of madnessâ if the U.K. allowed Huawei to supply high speed 5G mobile phone networks, the Guardian reported.
But Johnson wasnât having it Tuesday.
No Way or Huawei
âThe British public deserve to have access to the best possible technology. We want to put in gigabit broadband for everybody,â Johnson said. âNow if people oppose one brand or another, then they have to tell us whatâs the alternative.â
Recently, the head of Britainâs MI5, Andrew Parker, said he had âno reason to thinkâ that using Huawei technology should threaten intelligence sharing with the U.S.
Can this political marriage be saved? Not even time may tell, as the pair are so patently unpredictable.
âAs much as their politics echo each other, Britain and the U.S. will struggle to reenergize their long-standing special relationship,â Robin Niblett, director of Chatham House, an independent think tank in London, told The Los Angeles Times in a recent Op-ed titled â Boris Johnson & Donald Trump: Brothers in Chaos.â
âOn the plus side, the two countries share deep and mutually beneficial cultural, business and security linkages, which could allow them to strengthen the transatlantic axis in the face of growing assertiveness from Russia and China. But Britainâs post-Brexit geopolitical isolation and economic uncertainty will impose limits on its role as Americaâs principal ally.â


