Here is my response:
Dear Vince Cable,
Thank you for giving we members an opportunity to forward
our views to you on the possible military intervention by the UK in Syria.
This is an extremely difficult problem which seems to place
us in a lose-lose situation. If we do
not intervene we appear to stand by impotently
whilst terrible wickedness takes place, including the internationally
illegal use of chemical weapons. If we do intervene there is a strong possibility
of making a bad situation worse, as has already happened in similar
circumstances in Iraq and Libya.
You set out some sensible conditions which should be fulfilled
before any decision is taken: namely:
- 1. The government should share with Parliament what evidence it has that chemical weapons have been used.
- 2. The objectives of any proposed action should be defined and made clear to Parliament
- 3. Any response should be on a multilateral basis
- 4. There must be a full and frank debate and vote in the Commons before any action is taken.
You also sate that we Liberal Democrats must be “willing to
play our part in upholding international law.”
In a sense that settles it. As a letter in today’s Guardian (12th
April)) states: Article 2(4) of the UN Charter says: ”All members shall refrain
in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial
integrity or political independence of
any sate.”
Russia and Iran are themselves breaking this law, and the Syrian
government is breaking an international treaty by using chemical weapons. However, as the well-known clichĂ© states: “Two
(or even more) wrongs don’t make a right. It may well be that France, as the
former mandated power, has some special responsibility which justifies its intervention in Syria: the UK does
not.
But we should not just cower behind this legalism. Rather we should take into account the
unhappy history of previous interventions in the Middle East, the repeated evidence that
assurances that “surgical” intervention on precise targets always turn out to
be false and produce what we sanitise as “collateral” damage . Do we really believe that raining more
missiles on the poor people of Syria will actually improve their lot?
Most seriously, do we really want to ally ourselves with the
intemperate threats and possible actions
of the most capricious, unpredictable, possibly even unbalanced, US president
in history?
Rather I believe that we should vote against any proposed military
action, and instead put forward constructive practical alternatives such as
those recommended in yesterday’s Guardian leader, namely :
·
Give substantially more humanitarian aid for the Syrians seeking refuge in the region
·
Take more
refugees, especially children, into the UK.
Finally, we must redouble our efforts for a diplomatic
solution.
I am no expert but it seems to
me that a considerable part of the Putin government’s motivation is to re-assert Russia’s status as a world power.
In a sense we have brought this problem on ourselves by triumphalist insensitivity since the
collapse of the USSR, not least inviting former satellite states to join NATO (the
former enemy) and the EU (some would say
prematurely).
We have rubbed Russia’s
nose in its perceived humiliation and the Syrian people are paying the price.
Never forget that Russia paid for the defeat of Nazism with
25 000 000 deaths, compared with the UK’s 450 700. We should pull out all the diplomatic stops
necessary to repair this damage to our former and invaluable ally.
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