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Boris Johnson is, you know, very close to Donald Trump. Trump may well be reelected, and that means that for four years Johnson will have in Trump a strong political ally, and he will seek to capitalize on that.
I think it's pretty unlikely that relations with Russia will improve. Johnson was foreign secretary during the Skripal affair, and he at that time spoke in very strong terms against Russia. Shortly after he became foreign secretary, he went to Moscow in an attempt to improve relations, and as he sees it, Moscow's response was to poison people in Salisbury, so he took it as a personal affront. He even said, after he'd left office as foreign secretary, "I hate that regime," referring to Russia.
For some years now, including under David Cameron, Britain has been operating a pivot towards China. There's a nuclear plant station built in Britain, which will be owned by China, the mobile telephone network is going to be built by Huawei, in spite of US protests. So there's a long-term pivot towards China, and when you think about it, this is possibly the economic logic behind Brexit. If Brexit is to be summed up in one simple slogan it's that Britain is leaving the low-growth zone of the European Union, and is pivoting towards the high-growth economies of America and China.
Comment: Although the coronavirus hasn't yet proven to be more deadly or virulent than the flu, countries worldwide are enforcing more stringent border controls, repatriating citizens and stopping flights: