US voices Brexit regret as Kerry heads to London

US voices Brexit regret as Kerry heads to London
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US Secretary of State John Kerry expressed regret on Sunday that Britain has chosen to leave the European Union and vowed Washington will maintain close ties with the bloc.

US Secretary of State John Kerry expressed regret on Sunday that Britain has chosen to leave the European Union and vowed Washington will maintain close ties with the bloc.

Kerry, who flies to Brussels and London on Monday for crisis talks with EU and British leaders, said the ideal of unity must remain paramount as Britain negotiates "Brexit". "An EU united and strong is our preference for a partner to be able to work on the important issues that face us today," Kerry told reporters during a visit to Rome.

"One country has made a decision, obviously it's a decision that the United States had hoped would go the other way," he said, alongside Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni. "The vote about Brexit and the changes that are now being thought through have to be thought through in the context of the interests and values that bind us together with the EU." Gentiloni said Brexit demonstrated the need for the EU to change.

"We are working to relaunch the Union in light of the decision by the British electorate. "Our historic friendship with Britain and our alliance through NATO are not up for discussion. "The challenge we have before us is to translate a crisis into an opportunity by turning a difficult moment into the occasion to relaunch the EU."

Washington was dismayed last week when British voters chose to leave Europe, a decision that triggered global economic uncertainty and fears other EU members will follow suit. But Kerry said he had no doubt that Europe would pull together and reassure the markets, noting that even without Britain the EU single market counts 455 million consumers.

President Barack Obama had also made clear his concern about the referendum, and now US officials are scrambling to try to stop the political crisis harming Western unity. Kerry arrived in Rome today on a planned visit to have lunch with Gentiloni and a working dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

But officials on his flight said that tomorrow he would fly on to EU headquarters in Brussels to meet EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini. Mogherini had been expected to meet Kerry in Rome today, but she was busy dealing with the fallout of the dramatic vote, which stunned European and world leaders.

From Brussels, Kerry will continue to London to see Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond and other officials from outgoing British Prime Minister David Cameron's government. Hammond and Kerry are expected to hold a joint news conference before Kerry leaves to return to Washington. Obama and Kerry have been at pains to insist the vaunted "special relationship" between Washington and London will survive what US officials view as the Brexit debacle.

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