When King Charles III addresses a joint meeting of Congress on Tuesday (April 28), he will become only the second British monarch to do so. His mother delivered the first such address in May 1991, in a Washington flush with Cold War victory and Gulf War triumph, with Anglo-American leadership at something close to its post-1945 zenith.
The Washington Charles that enters this week is a different country, and the difference is the whole story. Donald Trump receives the king at 36% in Gallup, mired in an unpopular war on Iran that Britain declined to join, openly at odds with Prime Minister Keir Starmer over precisely that non-participation and presiding over a tariff regime that has hit British exporters along with most of America’s other partners.
A YouGov survey in late March found 49% of Britons wanted the visit canceled outright. Buckingham Palace and Downing Street are reportedly clearing every line of the choreography in advance, the better to avoid an “unscripted moment” — diplomatic shorthand for a moment of truth.
The polite framing is that Charles’s visit will “reaffirm” the special relationship. The honest framing is that ceremony is the relationship’s last functioning instrument.
A bargain dressed in Magna Carta language
Strip the sentimentality and the special relationship was always more contingent than its mythologists allowed. Churchill coined the phrase at Fulton in 1946 to address an America that had once again recoiled from Europe and needed flattering back into an Atlantic role.
The architecture that followed — NATO, the nuclear-sharing agreements, the Five Eyes intelligence partnership — did real strategic work, but it worked because Washington had a use for a permanent forward position in Europe and London had a use for the appearance of continued global relevance. It was a deal, dressed in Magna Carta language.
That deal made sense in a bipolar world, and again in the unipolar interlude that Britain enthusiastically helped to pageant. It makes considerably less sense in the world Trump’s second term is constructing.
The thing about Trump is that he removes the costume. Where his predecessors in both parties paid sentimental tribute to the Atlantic alliance while running it transactionally, Trump runs it transactionally and says so. He has no patience for the institutional liturgy — NATO, the G7, the WTO — and he has not bothered to disguise his view that allies are debtors.
The consequence for Britain is awkward in a way the British political class has not fully metabolized. Half the value of the special relationship was always the prestige of being addressed by Washington in elevated terms. Trump does not address anyone in elevated terms.
What he does respond to is monarchy. Hence September’s unprecedented second state visit to Windsor, and now the remarkable inversion this week: a reigning British monarch crossing the Atlantic to address the legislature of a republic founded by repudiating his ancestor, on the 250th anniversary of that repudiation, while his government quietly hopes the spectacle will buy it some traction on tariffs and on a war it does not want to be in.
There is something faintly ancien régime about the choreography. Britain offers the one thing Trump genuinely covets — royal validation — and in exchange asks not for substantive concessions but for the favor of being heard.
Analysts close to the planning expect the address itself to stay, in the words of CSIS’s Max Bergmann, “rather high-level” and “somewhat historical.” Translation: nobody on either side wants to test what remains of the relationship by asking it to lift anything heavy.
The Iran test, already failed
The Iran war is the test the relationship has already failed. Starmer declined to commit British forces. Trump pressed on regardless. The asymmetry is the substance of the matter — it confirms that British participation is no longer a precondition for American military action, and that British non-participation imposes no measurable cost on Washington’s freedom of maneuver.
For seven decades, the implicit bargain was that Britain would line up alongside the United States in its wars and the United States would treat London as the indispensable European partner. The first half of that bargain Britain has now declined; the second half, Washington had already quietly abandoned.
What replaces the bargain is harder to name. Starmer’s officials describe a strategy of patient management — keeping channels open, absorbing insults, hoping the post-1945 scaffolding survives until a different administration. The Guardian’s Simon Tisdall has called this approach appeasement and pronounced it a failure.
The truer description is neither: it is a holding action by a country that has not yet decided what it wants to be when the Atlantic frame is gone.
The canary for Asian allies
The implications travel well beyond London, and this is where the question becomes one for Tokyo, Seoul, Manila, Canberra and Delhi to reckon with. The British case is the canary in the alliance shaft.
If the most institutionally embedded, culturally proximate, and reflexively loyal of America’s partners cannot move the second Trump administration on a war fought in the Persian Gulf, the assumption that AUKUS, the US–Japan alliance, the US–ROK extended deterrence framework or the Indo-Pacific posture review will glide along on inertia is dangerously naive.
The transactionalism that has hollowed out the special relationship will not stop at the Atlantic. In some respects it has already arrived in Asia, in the shape of the tariff regime, in the unresolved question of what extended deterrence now means in practice for Seoul and Tokyo, and in the visible distance between American and allied positions on Taiwan contingencies.
Japanese and South Korean planners who watched Britain bend the knee at Windsor in September and again on Capitol Hill this week — and still fail to extract concessions worth the trouble — are absorbing a lesson that no amount of AUKUS messaging will paper over: ceremonial proximity is not strategic insurance.
The realist reading is not that the alliances are doomed. It is that they were always more contingent than their custodians acknowledged, and that pretending otherwise is itself a strategic vulnerability.
Sentiment is not a substitute for shared interest. Where the interests align, the alliance does the work; where they diverge, no quantity of state-banquet pageantry will substitute for the missing alignment.
The morning after
Charles’s address will be gracious and historical and carefully cleared. He will speak, as his mother did in 1991, of language and law and shared sacrifice. He will be applauded. Cameras will catch the president nodding. Vice President JD Vance will occupy the dais.
And then the king will fly to New York and Virginia and home, and the questions of whether Britain will get a tariff exemption, of whether Washington will care what London thinks about Iran or Ukraine, of whether the next administration in either capital will bother to keep up the pretence — those will remain exactly where they were on Monday.
The honest task — for Britain, for America’s Asian allies, for anyone still narrating the post-1945 order — is to stop confusing pageantry with policy. The special relationship is not what will be on stage at the Capitol on Tuesday afternoon. It is, or is not, what is on offer the morning after.
This article was originally published on Leon Hadar’s Global Zeitgeist and is republished with kind permission. Become a subscriber here.
