Bolton: UK Can Have Just One Closest Ally It's the EU or us, writes former UN ambassador By Heather McPherson Posted Aug 1, 2007 4:38 PM CDT Copied President Bush and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown shake hands at the end of a joint press availability at Camp David, Md., Monday, July 30, 2007. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) (Associated Press) Famously combative John Bolton claims that the fate of the US-UK "special relationship" lies entirely with Gordon Brown and the new British government. In an op-ed for the Financial Times, the former UN ambassador writes that the new PM must choose sides: either stand by the US or continue the "long, slow slide into the European porridge." For Bolton, the White House cannot accept the "meaningless dodge" that Britain's EU membership is incompatible with its bilateral relations with the US. Take the possibility of American military action in Iran, where Bolton says that European-led diplomacy has failed. If Bush declares war, he wonders, "where will Mr. Brown come down? Supporting the US or allowing Iran to goose-step towards nuclear weapons?" Read These Next Trump wants a member of the Fed to 'resign, now!' Witnesses to alleged murder-suicide are 1, 2, and 3. He 12 days into livestream when viewers noticed he wasn't moving. Andy Reid was nearly shot in his own office. Report an error