Sunday 17 July 2016

To Trident, or not to Trident?


Tomorrow the House of Commons is to vote on whether or not we should replace Trident with another nuclear, allegedly independent, alleged deterrent. If we do we shall remain a nuclear armed state until the 2060s at a  lifetime cost  now estimated to be over £200bn.

Given the chaos following Brexit and the formation of a new government, not to mention another appalling atrocity in France, there doesn't seem much point in debating this issue at the moment - other than to embarrass the Labour Party..

No hint of wiser and more mature politics from Mrs May so far then.

Such a deterrent would not be independent since it is inconceivable that it could be used without the permission of the United States. Nor would such a weapon be much use against the very real threats that face us today, identified as terrorist attacks, climate change, pandemics and cyber warfare.

The vast expenditure involved would not only absorb funds which could be used to finance  the NHS properly, upgrade our prisons and make them fit for purpose, provided an adequate social security safety net, build lots of houses and improve our inadequate transport infrastructure, to name but a few off the top of my head.

It also means that our conventional forces, including our intelligence services, are over-extended, inadequately equipped (see the Chilcot Report) and many of our service personnel, we now learn, are condemned to live in substandard and even rat-infested housing.

The only argument for replacing Trident is the illusory one of keeping us at the top table and allowing us to strut around the world as a big hitter - something, if you want that sort of thing, which could have been better achieved by remaining and playing full and constructive part in the EU.

Sadly not only will most of the Tory MPs vote for the illusion, but many of  Labour's MPs, recently described to me as "Mardy-bums,"* will do the same rather than  follow Jeremy Corbyn's wise lead.

It is my fervent hope that the parliamentary Liberal Democrat Party, minuscule though  it now is, will assert our right to be regarded as the party of reality and reason, and vote solidly against.**

This is apparently a Sheffield expression,  used by children to refer to those who refuse to play, but sulk, if the game is not played according to their liking. I heard if for the first time yesterday morning, used by  a friend of mine, lifelong Labour Party member, I should have thought highly moderate, in reference to  the Labour MPs, and Hillary Benn in particular, who are trying to knife Corbyn in the back rather than support the leader their party has chosen.

**Post Script (added 20th July).  Well they did, or almost - seven out to the eight of them did.  The eighth, Greg Mulholland, Leeds North West, abstained.  But it's only modified rapture, because all of them, including Mulholland, were in favour of downsizing the nuclear capability rather than getting rid of it.  While this may seems successful "triangulation" between what is sensible and what they think the electorate  can be persuaded to accept, it seems to me to be cowardly.  There is no practical case for our retaining Trident, even if not "like for like".  It will be merely a prestige symbol.  We are a mature democracy and should treat the electorate as adults and have the courage to say so.

2 comments:

  1. Such a deterrent would not be independent since it is inconceivable that it could be used without the permission of the United States

    That hardly seems relevant: in the situations in which it would be used, Britain would either already have been obliterated by a first strike, or would be in imminent danger. In such situations, whether the USA approved or not would be a moot point. What are they going to do, issue strongly-worded diplomatic protests against the smouldering wreckage of London?

    Nor would such a weapon be much use against the very real threats that face us today, identified as terrorist attacks, climate change, pandemics and cyber warfare.

    It may, however, be a lot of use against the very real threats which will face us in the next fifty or sixty years, which could be as different from those we face today as the threats of today are from those of 1956.

    In 1956, could you have foreseen the current geopolitical situation? If not, then how can you be sure that we might not, in 2076, be facing, say, a belligerent power which has conquered Western Europe and is eyeing us greedily from across the channel?

    The vast expenditure involved

    It's not that vast, is it, compared to the NHS? Trident replacement costs estimated at £30 billion over 30 years, so about £1 billion per year, running costs £2 billion per year, that's £3 billion per year. NHS budget last year, £116.4 billion.

    So, you know, Trident is really a drop in the ocean.

    It also means that our conventional forces, including our intelligence services, are over-extended, inadequately equipped (see the Chilcot Report) and many of our service personnel, we now learn, are condemned to live in substandard and even rat-infested housing

    None of that is good, but it's hard to see how not replacing Trident would fix it — especially as you've apparently already spent the £3 billion per year it would save on increasing the budget of the NHS by less than 3%.

    The only argument for replacing Trident is the illusory one of keeping us at the top table and allowing us to strut around the world as a big hitter - something, if you want that sort of thing, which could have been better achieved by remaining and playing full and constructive part in the EU

    Except that within the EU we didn't (and never would have) had a seat at the top table: we'd have had one-twenty-eighth of a seat, which we had to share with a lot of foreigners. Hardly a worthwhile position!

    trying to knife Corbyn in the back rather than support the leader their party has chosen

    You can hardly blame them, though, as they are accountable to the voters in their constituencies, who will not return them at the next election if Corbyn is still in post.

    (Also, I'm not sure 'knife in the back' is a good metaphor, so far they have been trying, and failing, to knife him squarely in the front, as all their plotting has been happening in (painful) plain view).

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    1. Well that's a pretty solid and comprehensive refutation. I think Ill have to settle for "We disagree" - except for Corbyn, where you're quite right, the stabbing is in the front.

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