David Miliband, the former U.K. foreign secretary | Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for IRC David Miliband: Brexit deal is worst of all worlds ‘We’re a victim of our own choices when it comes to Brexit,’ says former UK foreign secretary.

The draft Brexit deal is the "worst of all worlds" and Tory MPs are forcing the U.K. into a Donald Trump-style "narrative of national humiliation" and "victimhood," according to former U.K. Foreign Secretary David Miliband.

"The deal on the table does not meet the aspirations of a large majority of the British people, whether or not they voted for Leave or Remain," Miliband told POLITICO in Brussels, the birthplace of his father Ralph.

Miliband, who in 2010 narrowly lost a Labour leadership election to his brother Ed and who now heads the International Rescue Committee, a humanitarian aid organization, described Brexit as "a long-term chronic condition afflicting Britain" and predicted that any renegotiation effort would fail.

Even after the end of the transition period, "we're going to be having the same argument about whether or not we crash out," Miliband said. Allowing Brits to vote on whether to proceed with Brexit is the "democratic choice as well as the stability choice," he said. "The danger of a backlash of going ahead with it is far greater than the danger of a backlash of offering people a rethink."

Miliband had harsh words for Conservatives such as Dominic Raab, who quit as Brexit secretary last week and has accused the EU of bullying in the negotiations. Miliband called this a "narrative of national humiliation" and a "resort to victimhood" that mirrors Trump "spending his time saying that America is a victim of other people's misbegotten ways."

"It's dangerous because it's not true. It stokes up a sense of victimization, of victimhood, that can only lead to unfulfilled anger," Miliband said. "The truth is we're a victim of our own choices when it comes to Brexit."

He was no kinder about the current leader of the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, who "thought that Article 50 should be triggered immediately. Thank goodness that didn't happen." Labour support for the Article 50 process "has put us in the vise that we're in now."

Miliband said that when he was a Cabinet minister, civil servants told him no government would ever trigger Article 50 without first having a plan for the type of EU exit they sought.

"I took Article 50 through the House of Commons in 2008 under the Lisbon Treaty," Miliband said, and "no one believed that any country would be as irresponsible, nor so stupid, as to trigger Article 50 without being absolutely clear about the circumstances of the pocketbook."

He also laid to rest claims that he's setting up his own, centrist political party and said a general election in coming months is virtually impossible.

"We have a Fixed Term Parliament Act and it takes two-thirds of the House of Commons to vote for a general election and I don't see any circumstances in which we end up with a general election."