Alphen, Netherlands. 9
March. Britain is in danger. It is in
danger from a revanchist Russia, determined to turn back the clock of history. It is in danger from Islamic State and Al Qaeda
determined to turn back the clock of civilisation. It is in danger from Jean-Claude
Juncker and his fellow EU-federalists who want to replace the European
nation-state with an EU super-state.
Yesterday, Juncker opportunistically sought to capitalise on Russia’s
aggression by calling for an EU Army. It
is in danger from the seemingly interminable Eurozone crisis. It is in danger from irresponsible
immigration and those on the political Left and Right who for their own reasons
refuse to recognise the very clear link that exists between some aspects of mass-immigration
(by no means all) and insecurity. However,
the greatest danger Britain faces is from its own political class who seem to
become daily more detached from any sense of the national interest or the vital
role Britain still has to play in Europe’s security, and that of the world
beyond.
In my now many years on
this planet I have endured many British general election campaigns. The current ‘campaign’ is quite simply the
worst, most unworldly, most cynical, I have ever endured – on both sides of the
political divide. Indeed, whilst most
elections are fought out as a rush to occupy the political centre-ground, the
May 2015 General Election seems to be a rush by both Labour and Conservative
leaderships to evacuate the middle ground…and sod reality in the process. Indeed, Britain’s increasingly radicalised, professional
political class bring to mind former Irish Taoiseach Garret Fitzgerald who when
confronted with a particularly irate Margaret Thatcher at the height of difficult
negotiations for the 1985 Anglo-Irish agreement said, “That is all very well,
Prime Minister. What you say may indeed
work in fact, but does it work in theory?”
Neither Team Cameron nor
Team Miliband seems to have any sense of the national interest, or the real
and very dangerous world which exists beyond the Westminster/Whitehall bubble,
and which is getting daily closer.
Cameron has tried to effectively kill any debate about Britain’s
security and defence and has absolutely no interest in discussing Britain’s
place in the world. Miliband and the
Left simply trot out the unworldly mantra that aid and development IS an
investment in security, implying that ring-fencing the aid budget should be
seen as an alternative to defence investment.
When I wrote my new paperback
Little Britain? Twenty-First Century
Strategy for a Middling European Power (five-star reviewed at www.amazon.co.uk) it was a cri de coeur, a plaidoyer (and other French words) for London’s High Establishment –
both political and bureaucratic – to return to effective statecraft, and to craft
Britain’s still not inconsiderable soft and hard power into coherent national
strategy. Critically, the book pleads
with politicians to for once put strategy before politics and defend Britain’s
vital national interests at a vital time by re-embracing political realism. And yet, later this year, be it Cameron or Miliband,
Britain will abandon the minimum NATO commitment of 2% GDP on defence – the foundation
upon which all British influence and effect is built.
This will happen not
because of sound strategic analysis, although national and defence ‘strategies’
will be prepared to provide some form of political alibi. It will happen because both Cameron and
Miliband are isolationists who for their respective reasons are locked into
their respective ideological positions both of which in some way involve and
require the abandonment of political realism.
Cameron is committed to deficit-busting cuts at any cost whatever is
happening in Britain’s strategic environment.
Miliband is committed to transferring as much national wealth as
possible into the National Health Service, social care and welfare. Given the balance to be struck between
strategy, security and affordability it is Britain’s defences that will
inevitably be raided.
So, in the vain hope
reality may at some point break-out in Britain’s High Establishment let me
point out Britain’s hard realities.
President Putin by 2020 will have injected some £700bn in new armed
forces. Between 2015 and 2020 the US
will cut its defence budget by more than Europe’s entire collective defence
investment. According to a Home Office report leaked this weekend of the 700 or
so Islamists who left Britain to fight with Islamic State, over 300 have
returned to Britain many of whom are actively planning terrorist attacks. This weekend it was announced that Islamic
State had established a strong presence in Libya. There are some 200,000 refugees waiting in
Libya to cross into Europe.
In an ideal world Dave,
George and Ed could indeed raid Britain’s defences to bribe their respective
sets of core supporters. Sadly, the
world is anything but ideal and like it or not Britain is a security anchor-state.
If Britain abandons political realism for political fancy it is not just
Britain that will suffer, but Europe, and much of the world beyond.
How I weep for thee my
country. What did we British do to deserve these politicians?
Julian Lindley-French
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