Johnson’s position on Ukraine? Now, that’s a legacy. Working with Ben Wallace, who had become convinced in November 2021 that Putin would invade, Johnson was the only European leader to offer lethal arms to Zelensky. He appreciated before anyone else that the battle for democracy, which has been fought twice in the last century, was to be fought again. And that if Putin succeeded, and the West looked the other way as it did with the Minsk treaty which followed the annexation of Crimea, then it would send a global message that would embolden every dictator. So British weapons were sent and those put to good use in the crucial, opening days of the war. The Ministry of Defence and Foreign Office establishment were deeply uncomfortable with the UK being such an outlier, but Johnson pushed this through, by force of character. All of this was keenly felt and appreciated in Ukraine. And not forgotten.
There are three streets named after Johnson now. For a while, there were even Boris Johnson croissants (a meringue and a scoop of vanilla ice cream to represent his hair). He’s still regarded as hero in Ukraine, a true friend in a world of fake friends. My Ukrainian colleague Svitlana Morenets, when she arrived at The Spectator, could not believe that the UK was about to chuck out Johnson. Don’t we recognise a hero when we see one? Johnson went out on a limb for Ukraine at a time when no one else in Europe did: they will never forget that. Even if most Brits [including gulliver] didn’t notice at the time.
Spectator today