No 10 says Falklands sovereignty rests with UK after report of US 'review'
Getty ImagesSovereignty of the Falkland Islands "rests with the UK", Downing Street has said, following a report the US could review its position on Britain's claim to the territory.
An internal Pentagon email reported by Reuters suggested the US was considering options to punish Nato allies it believed failed to support its war on Iran.
The options discussed also included seeking Spain's suspension from Nato over its opposition to the war.
BBC News, which has not been able to review the document, has contacted the Pentagon about it.
The Falkland Islands, a British overseas territory in the south-west Atlantic Ocean, remain the subject of a sovereignty dispute between Britain and Argentina.
Asked about the report, a No 10 spokesman on Friday said: "The Falkland Islands have hugely voted overwhelmingly in favour of remaining a UK overseas territory, and we've always stood behind the islanders' right to self-determination and the fact that sovereignty rests with the UK."
The prime minister's official spokesman also said the government "could not be clearer about the UK's position", and that "sovereignty rests with the UK and the islanders' right to self-determination is paramount".
He continued: "We've expressed this position previously clearly and consistently to successive US administrations and nothing is going to change that."
Previous US administrations have formally recognised the UK's de facto administration of the islands, but have not taken a formal position regarding sovereignty.
"The Falkland Islands has complete confidence in the commitment made by the UK government to uphold and defend our right of self-determination," the islands' government said in a statement.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said the reported US stance on the Falkland Islands was "absolute nonsense", adding: "We need to make sure that we back the Falklands. They are British territory."
Reform UK's Nigel Farage said: "This is utterly non-negotiable. There is no way we're even going to have a debate about the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands."
He also said he would raise the issue with Argentina's President Javier Milei when he meets him later this year.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey has once again called for the King's upcoming visit to the US to be cancelled.
"This unreliable, damaging president cannot keep insulting our country," Sir Ed said.
The report emerged three days before King Charles and Queen Camilla are due to travel to the US and meet US President Donald Trump at the White House.
While the White House is yet to comment on the report, it could prove to be another point of friction between the US and UK at a time of diplomatic tension.
Trump has previously said he is "not happy" with the level of support offered by the UK during its war in Iran, while Sir Keir Starmer has repeatedly said Britain will not be drawn into a wider conflict.
Meanwhile, an official from Nato - responding to the suggestion in the report that the US could push for Spain's expulsion from the military alliance - said its founding treaty "does not foresee any provision for suspension of Nato membership, or expulsion".
Earlier, Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said: "We do not work based on emails. We work with official documents and official positions taken, in this case, by the government of the United States."

The Falkland Islands have been under British rule since 1833, but Argentina has historically said it has a right to them on the basis it inherited them from the Spanish crown, as well as the islands' proximity to the South American mainland.
In 1982, a 10-week conflict between the UK and Argentina over the islands was triggered when the latter's military dictator, Leopoldo Galtieri, ordered his country's forces to invade them.
The then UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government sent a naval task force to recapture the islands.
Argentine forces surrendered, but the country still claims sovereignty over the Falklands, which it calls the Malvinas and which lie about 300 miles (483km) east of Argentina.
In the course of the conflict, 649 Argentine military personnel and 255 British military personnel lost their lives, as well as three Falkland Islanders.
More recently, Falkland Islanders have overwhelmingly expressed their desire to remain as a British territory.
A 2013 referendum among the island's 1,672 eligible voters saw all but three voting to continue as an overseas territory, on a turnout of more than 90%.
Successive British governments have long maintained that the island's population has a right to self-determination under international law established by the United Nations Charter.
In April 2024, Milei said he would set out a "roadmap" for the islands to become part of Argentina, adding that it would only be achieved via diplomatic means.
Speaking to the BBC a month later, Milei said he accepted the Falkland Islands are currently "in the hands of the UK", and that there was "no instant solution" to changing their status.
The right-wing leader, who is a close ally of Trump, also said it would take decades for the dispute to be resolved, and criticised Argentine politicians who "beat their chests demanding sovereignty of the islands, but without any result".
