Alphen, Netherlands. 10
April. The Little Britain general election campaign drones on with blown-up,
strategically-illiterate little politicians daily offering irrelevant political
gimmicks to an uninterested and unimpressed electorate. Little or no mention has been made thus far of
Britain in the world, and no vision whatsoever of a strategic Britain in a
strategic twenty-first century. It
really is dire stuff. Indeed, if one adds up all the extra-money daily promised
to the all-consuming National Health Service and subtract that from the cuts
necessary to reduce the structural deficit then by 2020 Britain will have to
change its name to “NHShire”, because that is all that is going to be
left. At least Britain’s Trident nuclear
deterrent (and its successor) got a mention this week, but only as ever in the
form of politics pretending to be strategy.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon accused Labour leader Ed Miliband of
planning to scrap the deterrent so as to do a power-confirming deal with Planet
Scotland’s very own Scottish National Party.
My friend and colleague
Paul Schulte of the University of Birmingham recently wrote a fascinating piece
entitled “The Strategic Risks of Devaluing Nuclear Weapons”. His essential thesis is that the current
debate, particularly in Western countries, is more informed by political
conceit than strategic rationale. In a
sense, Schulte confronts the essential paradox of deterrence – how does one
prove a negative? How does one prove
that the existence of nuclear weapons prevents their use?
Implicit in the piece
is another set of questions concerning the political utility of such weapons.
Unstable, revisionist states, such as Iran and North Korea, seek such weapons
for purposes of regime prestige or to create the space for an aggressive foreign
policy which could at some point involve the use of large-scale conventional
force and/or proxies to foster their respective regional-strategic ambitions. Big revisionist states with third and fourth
generation nuclear weapons, such as China and Russia, see them as leitmotifs of
power and of national influence. Even
the US and France maintain some belief that nuclear weapons have a political
utility beyond a purely deterrent role.
Of the established
Nuclear Weapons States only Britain has a significant part of the political
class that believes Britain’s deterrent should be scrapped because of cost
and/or for the sake of ideological purity.
However, at no point in the British debate has there been or is there
any real sense of the strategic value of the British nuclear deterrent. Worse, Schulte warns that the political
devaluation of nuclear weapons is only likely to increase and much of that
devaluation driven by the most parochial of political conceits.
To be fair, those that
espouse unilateral disarmament also espouse a a legalistic rather than a power
concept of international politics.
Much of the political Left in Britain believes (not unreasonably) that
scrapping Trident would strengthen arms control regimes such as the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). They can
certainly point with some conviction to the paradoxical hypocrisy of the
Nuclear Weapons States who as recently as the 2010 NPT Review Conference
re-affirmed their determination to “achieve and maintain a world without
nuclear weapons”. However, a further British
retreat into a legalistic foreign and security policy would take place just at
the moment power is making a big comeback.
Another ‘reality’ implicit in Schulte’s argument is that given the contemporary state of world politics general and comprehensive nuclear disarmament is as unlikely as nuclear weapons being disinvented. Therefore, those that advocate scrapping the British nuclear deterrent fail to understand that their arguments about morality are irrelevant and their arguments about cost valueless. By unilaterally disarming Britain would a) signal a final and irrevocable British retreat from strategic influence and realism; b) demonstrate a profound strategic malaise at the heart of the Western unity of effort and purpose; c) tip the balance of power in favour of states which are led by people it is reasonable to assume are less rational about the appalling, horribleness of nuclear weapons. In other words, if Britain unilaterally scraps its deterrent it would help make nuclear war more not less likely.
Another ‘reality’ implicit in Schulte’s argument is that given the contemporary state of world politics general and comprehensive nuclear disarmament is as unlikely as nuclear weapons being disinvented. Therefore, those that advocate scrapping the British nuclear deterrent fail to understand that their arguments about morality are irrelevant and their arguments about cost valueless. By unilaterally disarming Britain would a) signal a final and irrevocable British retreat from strategic influence and realism; b) demonstrate a profound strategic malaise at the heart of the Western unity of effort and purpose; c) tip the balance of power in favour of states which are led by people it is reasonable to assume are less rational about the appalling, horribleness of nuclear weapons. In other words, if Britain unilaterally scraps its deterrent it would help make nuclear war more not less likely.
Trident is in fact
a metaphor for Britain’s role in the world, much like most British
politicians are a metaphor for leadership.
Those who believe Britain is a serious power in a dangerous world tend to
believe that Britain must retain a minimum deterrent as an ultimate agent of
stability. Those who believe Britain
should abandon such weapons believe the UK has little or no independent, international
role to play anymore beyond the self-satisfying disbursement of copious amounts
of British taxpayer’s money in the form of aid.
Given the world into
which Britain and the West is moving it would be utter folly at this moment to
abandon the British nuclear deterrent on a whim without a proper assessment of
the strategic implications and its impact on friend and foe alike. Such an act would also reveal (yet again) the
extent to which much of Britain’s political class lacks any understanding of
the real world or of the role a state as powerful as Britain could and should aspire
to play.
Julian Lindley-French
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