UK foreign minister to end tour early amid Iran ceasefire push

UK foreign minister to end tour early amid Iran ceasefire push
Britain's Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper speaks during a meeting with Japan's Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi at the Iikura Guest House in Tokyo on April 20, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 20 April 2026
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UK foreign minister to end tour early amid Iran ceasefire push

UK foreign minister to end tour early amid Iran ceasefire push
  • Cooper's department is at the centre of a new crisis over Peter Mandelson's appointment as Britain's ambassador to the United States

TOKYO/LONDON: British foreign minister ‌Yvette Cooper will cut short an intensive diplomatic tour designed to build consensus around making a ceasefire ​in the Iran war permanent and on the next steps to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
Cooper's department is at the centre of a new crisis over Peter Mandelson's appointment as Britain's ambassador to the United States, after the government last week said foreign office officials had ‌overruled a ‌recommendation that he should not ​be ‌given ⁠the ​role.
That revelation ⁠led to new calls from political opponents for Prime Minister Keir Starmer to resign. Starmer says he was not told of the initial vetting recommendation and is due to speak to parliament on the matter later on Monday.
Against ⁠that backdrop, Cooper will return ‌to London early from ‌the Japan leg of her ​trip after meetings on ‌Monday, cancelling a scheduled speech in Tokyo ‌on Tuesday and skipping a planned return to the Gulf.
The foreign office did not give a reason for the change to her itinerary.
Cooper has been on ‌the road since last week, meeting allies in Paris, Antalya, Dubai and ⁠Tokyo.
The ⁠top official in her department, Olly Robbins, was sacked last week after Starmer and Cooper lost confidence in him over what Downing Street said was his decision to overturn the vetting recommendation that Mandelson should not be cleared.
Robbins is expected to appear before a parliamentary committee on Tuesday. That comes after allies spoke out publicly to say he had ​been treated harshly by ​ministers.