PoliticsNerd
I don't think they should Willow, but that is my bias, just as others are biased towards support for Trump.
I just remember that the last payment for lease-lend was made on 29 December 2006 for the sum of about $83m USD (£45.5m) to the United States. We never once tried to negotiate it down - it was a debt of honour.
Interestingly the US never paid France its Revolution debt. It seems that the US puts a high price on the democracy of others but expect to pay nothing to allies for there own. At the beginning of WWII America were neutral but their leader now seems to want to side with the aggressor.
Allies change. I hope the US remains ours but I would put that at 50/50 over time.
We’ve only recently paid this back
“Most people will remember 2015 as the year in which the coalition Government of David Cameron and Nick Clegg broke up, Andy Murray led Britain's tennis team to victory in the Davis Cup and a 51,000-tonne tanker, the Hoegh Osaka, ran aground in the Solent.
But few will know it was also the year in which the UK Government finally paid off a debt that had allowed it to fund a huge compensation bill for Britons who lost out financially when slavery was abolished 179 years earlier, when William IV was on the throne.
In the early 1830s, the Government borrowed £20 million (more than £2.4 billion in today's money) to fund the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 and compensate Britons for the loss of their "property" – their possession of women, men and children in the Caribbean.
This was a colossal sum, approximately equivalent to 40 per cent of the Government's total annual expenditure. It was so big, in fact, that the Government borrowed the money from the financial markets and asked for well over a century in which to pay it back.”