Ukraine crisis: UK defence minister cancels holiday as tensions escalate despite international diplomatic efforts

Ukraine crisis: UK defence minister cancels holiday as tensions escalate despite international diplomatic efforts
The UK defence minister Ben Wallace has cancelled a 'planned long weekend abroad' with family because of 'the worsening situation in Ukraine'.
2 min read
13 February, 2022
Former UK foreign minister Dominic Raab came under fire in the summer for not cancelling his holiday when the Taliban encircled Kabul [source: Getty]

British defence minister Ben Wallace said Sunday he was returning from a holiday in Europe after one day to deal with what he called the "worsening" crisis in Ukraine as he warned that Russia could invade any time.

Wallace planned to spend a long weekend abroad with his family after visiting Moscow last week for diplomatic talks. ITV News said the minister announced the change of plans after one of its journalists spotted him at a European resort and the broadcaster sought comment from the Ministry of Defence.

"Having returned from Moscow early on Saturday morning and because we are concerned about the worsening situation in Ukraine I have cancelled a planned long weekend abroad with my family and will be returning," Wallace said on Twitter.

A government official, who asked not to be named, said Wallace had been on the trip to the undisclosed location with his wife and children during the half-term school holiday.

MENA
Live Story

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced calls to sack his then foreign minister, Dominic Raab, and other senior officials after they went on holiday last summer when the Taliban captured the Afghanistan capital Kabul and the British government struggled to evacuate its citizens. Raab was demoted to justice minister in a cabinet reshuffle a month later.

Wallace told The Sunday Times that a Russian invasion of Ukraine is "highly likely" and the size of its military presence on the Ukraine border meant Moscow could "launch an offensive at any time".

He also cautioned against pinning too much hope on talks, saying there was "a whiff of Munich in the air from some in the West", referring to a 1938 pact that failed to halt German expansionism under Adolf Hitler.

"The worrying thing is that, despite the massive amount of increased diplomacy, that military build-up has continued," he told the newspaper.