The Foreign Secretary made the remarks as he updated MPs about the new 100-year partnership deal between the UK and Ukraine.
Vladimir Putin has been humiliated by Foreign Secretary David Lammy in the House of Commons as he said it would take the Russian dictator a century to invade Ukraine
Figures shared by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) earlier that week, attributed to the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, estimate that in November 2024 Russian casualties totalled 45,680. But this figure includes both troops who were killed and those who were wounded – it does not refer solely to deaths.
Russian dictator Vladimir Putin was brutally mocked in the House of Commons as the Foreign Secretary said it would take him a century to invade Ukraine. Putin's bloody war has destroyed Russian's economy and caused huge numbers of casualties, said Foreign Secretary David Lammy.
No place for ‘old-style paternalism’, declares Foreign Secretary who also urges UK to find ‘common ground’ with President Trump
Members of parliament have written a letter to Foreign Secretary David Lammy, warning of the potentially catastrophic dangers from the 'ticking time-bomb' vessels.
David Lammy used to be an arch-critic of Donald Trump. Can he deal with the new Administration and reset the U.K.’s relationship with the E.U. at the same time?
Europe’s defence spending must rise with “Russia on the march” and the “post-Cold War peace” now over, David Lammy has said.
The foreign secretary has used his first major speech of 2025 to go after the Putin’s aggression in tearing up the world order and back Trump’s demands for significant increases in defence spending
David Lammy told the BBC that he believes Mr Trump’s comments ... He also poured cold water on the idea of a deal between Ukraine and Russia being reached in Mr Trump’s first days in office, believing there is “no evidence” that Russian President ...
Foreign secretary also hit back at Trump’s demands that the UK double its defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP
The series of rooms, which act "as a memorial to a supposed diplomatic triumph promising an era of international cooperation", were supposed to be the perfect backdrop for Labour to set out its vision for a more "progressive reality".