G7 agrees hostile states will face rapid and unified international response
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Hostile state activity will be met with a rapid and unified G7
response, including greater intelligence sharing, under an
agreement secured by Prime Minister Theresa May. The move will also
see hostile states publicly ‘called out’ for their egregious
behaviour – with coordinated international attribution of cyber and
other attacks. Speaking at the G7...Request free trial
Hostile state activity will be met with a rapid and unified G7 response, including greater intelligence sharing, under an agreement secured by Prime Minister Theresa May. The move will also see hostile states publicly ‘called out’ for their egregious behaviour – with coordinated international attribution of cyber and other attacks. Speaking at the G7 Summit in Quebec, the Prime Minister has emphasised that recent events, including the reckless use of ‘NotPetya’ ransomware and the attempted murder of the Skripals in Salisbury, have demonstrated the importance of a unified international response to send a clear message that such hostile state activity will not be tolerated. The Prime Minister has stated that calling out malicious activity helps to end hostile states’ false sense of impunity, demonstrates our awareness of their activity, and underlines our willingness to defend ourselves. At the G7 Foreign Ministers meeting last month, the UK proposed a new, more formalised approach to tackling foreign interference across the G7. And today, G7 leaders have agreed to establish a new Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM). The Prime Minister said the agreement sent a strong message that interference by Russia and other foreign states would not be tolerated. This G7 initiative will support preventative and protective cooperation between G7 countries, as well as post-incident responses. It includes:
Speaking at the G7 Summit, the Prime Minister said:
The Prime Minister has also called for additional measures to curb Russia’s ability to undermine the international rules-based system, including:
The UK has also lobbied for a robust, united international position to uphold and strengthen the global prohibition on the use of chemical weapons. Today the G7 has discussed its collective commitment to the Chemical Weapons Convention and called on all countries to support the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) special Conference of States Parties, which is expected to take place later this month. The Prime Minister has urged fellow leaders to capitalise on the important opportunity this meeting presents to empower the OPCW to attribute responsibility for chemical weapons attacks, strengthening the global norm against chemical weapons use. |
