GovWire

Speech: The Strength of UK-Italy Relations

Cabinet Office

September 15
08:36 2023

Ladies and gentlemen, at the risk of derailing what The Economist has rightly called the blossoming relationship between the United Kingdom and Italy, perhaps youll permit me to say:

Vorrei ringraziare tutti voi di essere qui stasera, in questa bellissima citta, in questa antica e famosa universita.

Grazie di cuore.

Thank you to the Rector, for welcoming us to this fine seat of learning.

Thank you Mayor, for your very warm welcome to your wonderful city, which is so beloved of my fellow Brits.

Thank you to Lord Willetts and Carlo Calenda, for your leadership of Pontignano and for all you do to nurture the close friendship between our nations.

And thank you above all to all of you for being here.

You all believe in the importance of this relationship between the United Kingdom and Italy.

Important, not just because of our friendship, culture and our long shared history.

But because you are strong believers in how much more we can achieve together as modern European nations facing the same challenges:

from supporting Ukraine in its fight for freedom

to confronting economic and energy security challenges

to tackling illegal migration.

And you know that to succeed, we must address them together.

The number of my colleagues attending this conference demonstrates that this is certainly the view of the British Government.

(Although it would perhaps be an exaggeration to say that they took a lot of persuading to come to Siena!).

Their presence is a testament to the United Kingdoms determination to drive forward a new strategic partnership between London and Rome.

Now our topic for this years Pontignano is Adapting to technological change.

But before I say a few words on that, let me take a step back and look at our relationship with Italy to take stock, as diplomats like to say.

A turning point.

My counterpart, Antonio Tajani, said at the start of the year that relations between the UK and Italy were at a turning point.

And he was right.

Look at the situation that confronts us:

war in Europe

threats to our energy and our food supplies

climate change

irregular migration, across the Mediterranean and the Channel.

And all of it underpinned by the onward march of technology.

Set against that backdrop, it is surely no wonder that our two countries - sharing so many interests whose strengths complement each other in so many ways - should seize this moment to work more closely together.

And that is exactly what we are doing.

A longstanding friendship.

We are, of course, building on a very strong foundation.

The ties between our peoples go back centuries indeed all the way back to ancient Rome and through the Renaissance.

More recently - 80 years ago, British Forces landed at Salerno, as part of their central role in the liberation of this country.

And next year we will mark the 80th anniversary of Anzio and Monte Cassino.

Today, the bonds between us are thriving and vibrant.

And there is also a mutual respect and affection between our peoples epitomised in Italians moving reaction to the death of our late Queen a year ago.

And your enthusiasm at the Coronation of King Charles III earlier this year.

Indeed our new Monarch loves Italy, as he himself told an Italian television crew in the Mall the night before he was crowned.

So there is a rich tapestry of ties between us. And that vibrant partnership is an invaluable source of strength, as we face together the most challenging set of circumstances in many decades.

Until recently, perhaps the defining political moment of my generation was the 9th November 1989 the date that the Berlin Wall came down and liberty rolled across our continent.

Now a new date is inscribed in our memories.

The 24th February 2022 the date Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine and its missiles rained down on Ukrainian cities.

The events of that day, and every day since, have reminded us of some old truths.

The need for strong defence to deter war.

The need to stand up to aggression today, or risk greater aggression tomorrow.

The need for friends and allies to stick together and stand up for what we believe in.

Every day since the invasion, that is exactly what the United Kingdom and Italy have done as G7 partners and leading members of NATO.

Let me pay tribute to Italys response.

You have been at Kyivs side every step of the way.

And I am proud of the role that Britain has played and will continue to play, for as long as it takes.

If anyone doubted Britains enduring commitment to European security, you have your answer, not just in our words, but in our actions.

And as we sit here tonight, in this cradle of European civilisation, let us spare a thought for the people of Ukraine, a fellow European country, who face another night in bomb shelters or on the front line.

Forging a new relationship between the UK and Italy real momentum

It is not just on Ukraine, however, that cooperation has been galvanised between our two countries.

There is a real determination to make this relationship between Britain and Italy count for more, to be more than the sum of its parts.

Take a look at the last nine months:

In December our Prime Ministers signed with their Japanese counterpart the Global Combat Air Programme to build a new generation of combat aircraft together.

In February, our Defence and Trade Secretaries signed agreements forging ever closer relations.

And then in April, our Prime Minister was delighted to welcome PM Meloni to Downing Street where they signed an ambitious Memorandum of Understanding - covering issues from national security to cultural ties.

The agreement also covered another subject on which our countries share the same challenge: illegal migration.

This is a challenge that is political, societal, criminal.

Our electorates demand that we deal with it, and we must.

We both share the same sense of urgency and albeit at different ends of Europe, we are facing the same phenomenon:

Large numbers of arrivals by sea.

Unscrupulous traffickers in human lives.

The death traps into which they place innocent women and children.

The tragedies in the dark waters off the Channel, off Lampedusa or the Calabrian coast.

So we are significantly expanding our cooperation together.

Working together in bodies such as the G7 and the Council of Europe.

Adapting to technological change.

In so doing, we will, of course, be taking advantage at every opportunity of new technologies the theme of this Pontignano.

I am delighted that British scientists will once again be able to collaborate with those in Italy and across Europe as part of the Horizon programme.

And, as a Minister from the country that invented the steam engine, speaking in the land of Marconi, I know how well both our countries know the revolutionary power of technology.

And the list of technologies that have fundamentally altered the course of human history is relatively short: fire, metals, the printing press, the combustion engine, electricity, fission, the internet.

All of these tools have been bent to achieve a step-change in the pace of human progress.

And now I believe that we are on the cusp of another such inflection point, one that has the potential to make the pace of progress supersonic:

Artificial Intelligence, or more specifically, the advent of artificial general intelligence, represents, at once the most exciting and the most daunting challenge of our age.

Exciting, because there is an opportunity, as our PM has put it, for human progress that could surpass the industrial revolution in both speed and depth.

For game-changing innovations in all aspects of our lives:

unthinkable advances in medicine

cures for cancer and dementia

growing crops to feed the world

or solving climate change.

But also daunting.

Not only will AI expedite and intensify the existing threat landscape,

in Artificial General Intelligence, humans face the potential of a technology that surpasses both the capability of our collective endeavour, and the limits of our understanding.

We have to accept that the answer to many of our questions about the AI frontier will be we dont yet know.

We do not yet know what these machines might be capable of.

What we do know is that, to date, the limits of human progress have been capped by the sum of our collective intelligence.

By adding to that sum with AI - at potentially dizzying scales - we will redraw the bounds of what we previously thought possible.

But, as scary - and exciting - as that is,

it should not be a barrier to our exploration.

But it does mean that we need a new approach to regulation.

One that iterates to build faith in the systems that will come to underpin so many aspects of our lives.

This approach will involve active and ongoing collaboration between Governments, Al labs and academics, amongst others.

Many organisations outside of national Governments, in particular private companies - including those in Italy - have been pivotal to the most recent advances in AI.

I know that many such companies are taking part in Pontignano this year.

And these collaborations will be crucial to ensure the safe and reliable development and deployment of frontier AI throughou

Related Articles

Comments

  1. We don't have any comments for this article yet. Why not join in and start a discussion.

Write a Comment

Your name:
Your email:
Comments:

Post my comment

Recent Comments

Follow Us on Twitter

Share This


Enjoyed this? Why not share it with others if you've found it useful by using one of the tools below: