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The Foreign and Commonwealth Office, commonly called the Foreign Office or the FCO, is the British government department responsible for promoting the interests of the United Kingdom overseas, created in 1968 by merging the Foreign Office and the Commonwealth Office.
The head of the FCO is the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, commonly abbreviated to Foreign Secretary (currently David Miliband). This position is regarded as one of the three most prestigious appointments in the cabinet, alongside those of Chancellor of the Exchequer and Home Secretary. Together with the Prime Minister, these comprise the Great Offices of State.
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Ministers
Ministers at the FCO, as of 5 October 2008, are as follows:
- Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs – The Rt Hon. David Miliband, MP
- Minister for Europe – Caroline Flint MP
- Minister of State for Africa, Asia and the UN – The Rt Hon. The Lord Malloch-Brown (also attends cabinet)
- Minister of State for the Middle East - Bill Rammell MP
The Permanent Under-Secretary and Head of the Diplomatic Service is Sir Peter Ricketts, KCMG, a senior civil servant.
History of the department
The department's origins
The FCO was formed in 1968, from the merger of the short-lived Commonwealth Office and the Foreign Office. The Commonwealth Office had been created only in 1966, by the merger of the Commonwealth Relations Office and the Colonial Office, and the Commonwealth Relations Office had been formed by the merger of the Dominions Office and the India Office in 1947—with the Dominions Office having been split from the Colonial Office in 1925.
The Foreign Office was formed in March 1782 by combining the Southern and Northern Departments, each of which covered both foreign and domestic affairs in their parts of the Kingdom. The two departments' foreign affairs responsibilities became the Foreign Office, whilst their domestic affairs responsibilities were assigned to the Home Office.
Developments
In 2006, the FCO identified ten strategic international priorities for the UK over the next five to ten years. The priorities underline how closely domestic and international policies are now linked:
- Making the world safer from global terrorism and weapons of mass destruction
- Reducing the harm to the UK from international crime, including drug trafficking, people smuggling and money laundering
- Preventing and resolving conflict through a strong international system
- Building an effective and globally competitive EU in a secure neighbourhood
- Supporting the UK economy and business through an open and expanding global economy, science and innovation and secure energy supplies
- Achieving climate security by promoting a faster transition to a sustainable, low carbon global economy
- Promoting sustainable development and poverty reduction underpinned by human rights, democracy, good governance and protection of the environment
- Managing migration and combating illegal immigration
- Delivering high-quality support for British nationals abroad, in normal times and in crises
- Ensuring the security and good governance of the UK's Overseas Territories
Since a large part of the modern FCO's brief is to police the application of UK law enforecement in order to protect British borders (point 2 above) the FCO has acted in foreign jurisdictions as a landlord to British police services like NCIS, the National Criminal Intelligence Service, who became shared tenants with the FCO in their foreign territory/offices around Europe while NCIS agents investigated serious organised crime with potential to directly harm British interests. Such British policing activities on foreign soil, such as the joint Mi5 NCIS Operation Trinity, are/were run from FCO premises in a covert and politically inert manner, with the host country and their national police force often unaware of the full scope or number of British agents operating on foreign soil, so as to avoid the danger of serious breaches in operational and police security plus the potential for serious international and political incidents.
In August 2005, a report by management consultant group Collinson Grant was made public by Andrew Mackinlay. The report severley criticised the FCO's management structure, noting that:
- The Foreign Office could be "slow to act".
- Delegation is lacking within the management structure.
- Accountability was poor.
- 1200 jobs could feasibly be cut.
- At least £48 million could be saved annually.
The Foreign Office commissioned the report to highlight areas which would help it achieve its pledge to reduce spending by £87 million pounds over three years. In response to the report being made public, the Foreign Office stated it had already implemented the report's recommendations. [1]
In April 2006 a new executive agency was established, FCO Services, to provide corporate service functions. In April 2008 it moved to Trading Fund status so it had the ability to provide similar services which it already offers to the FCO, to other government departments and even outside businesses.
History of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Main building
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office occupies a building which originally provided premises for four separate government departments: the Foreign Office, the India Office, the Colonial Office, and the Home Office. Construction on the building began in 1861 and finished in 1868, and it was designed by the architect George Gilbert Scott. Its architecture is in the Italianate style; Scott had initially envisaged a Gothic design, but the then Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston insisted on a classical style. (Palmerston was Prime Minister at the time the building was begun, in 1861, not Foreign Secretary, a post that he had not held since 1851.) English sculptor John Birnie Philip produced a number of allegorical figures ('Art', 'Law', 'Commerce', etc) for the exterior.
In 1925, the Foreign Office played host to the signing of the Locarno Treaties, aimed at reducing tension in Europe. The ceremony took place in a suite of rooms that had been designed for banqueting, which subsequently became known as the Locarno Suite. During the Second World War, the Locarno Suite's fine furnishings were removed or covered up, and it became home to a foreign office code-breaking department.
Due to increasing numbers of staff, the offices became increasingly cramped and much of the fine Victorian interior was covered over—especially after World War II. In the 1960s, demolition was proposed, as part of major redevelopment plan for the area drawn up by architect Sir Leslie Martin. A subsequent public outcry prevented these proposals from ever being implemented. Instead, the Foreign Office became a Grade 1 listed building in 1970. In 1978, the Home office moved to a new building, easing overcrowding.
With a new sense of the building's historical value, it underwent a 17-year, £100 million restoration process, completed in 1997. The Locarno Suite, used as offices and storage since the Second World War, was fully restored for use in international conferences. The building is now open to the public each year on Open House Weekend. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office is now also the main tenant of the Admiralty Extension building, at the opposite end of Horse Guards Parade.
List of Foreign and Commonwealth Office home properties
- FCO Main Building, Whitehall, King Charles St, London (abbreviated to KCS by FCO staff)
- Kirkland House, 22-24 Whitehall, London.
- Old Admiralty Building, Whitehall, London (abbreviated to OAB by FCO staff)
- Hanslope Park, Hanslope, Milton Keynes (abbreviated to HSP by FCO staff). Location of FCO Services, HMGCC and Technical Security Department of the UK Secret Intelligence Service)
See also
- Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
- Secretary of State for Commonwealth Affairs
- Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations
- Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs
- Her Majesty's Diplomatic Service
- Heads of the United Kingdom Mission in Japan
- British Ambassadors to the Holy See
- Department for International Development
- British diplomatic missions
- Diplomacy
- Ambassador
- Court of St James's (to which foreign ambassadors to Britain are accredited)
External links
- Official website
- FCO Blogs
- Britain in the EU (FCO)
- Official website of FCO Services (Executive Agency)
- Official FCO/Immigration Service website
- British Satellite News - FCO-funded news channel
- FCO Flickr site
- FCO YouTube site
- FCO Twitter site
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 20 November 2008, at 22:19.
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