Libenter homines id quot volunt credunt – Men freely believe whatever
they want.
Gaius Iulius Caesar –
De Bello Gallico
Upper Reading Room, Bodleian
Library, Oxford, England. Another world, another time. This is quite simply my
favourite room in the world. Oxford’s oldest library drips with past learning.
Before me the spires and cupolas of All Soul’s College stand proud. To my right
the Radcliffe Camera soars in its Enlightenment certainty. Sadly, it is that very
‘certainty’ that today seems so alien in a world that teeters between the spires
of creation and Stygian destruction. Last night I was a guest at the Royal
United Services Institute to listen to the Annual Christmas Lecture by General
Sir Nicholas Houghton, the UK Chief of Defence Staff. His subject was Britain’s
newly-minted Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR 2015) and his theme
“Interesting Times”. I think that was British under-statement as I came away
somewhat impressed, but also worried.
The test of good strategy is what
happens when it fails. Sir Nick
delivered a solid speech that tip-toed between Britain’s invisible dividing
lines of strategy, politics, diversity, and hard reality. At the end of his
speech I posed a question. It was not perhaps one of my better conference
questions as to put it bluntly I am knackered (tired). It has been a long year,
I have worked and travelled extensively, and I need a break. However, Sir Nick
clearly missed my point which was this. There is no mention of ‘war’ in SDSR
2015 beyond dismissing it out of hand. This to my mind suggests little appetite
for the kind of worst-case planning upon which all sound defence reviews should
be established. My question couched the challenge of ‘war’ in the context of
Russia and the possibility of a major war in the Middle East. Thankfully, my
friend Professor Paul Cornish added acuity to my rather blunt edge by raising a
potentially aggressive China.
My point was not to suggest that
Russia is about to embark upon a major war, but rather that such a war should no
longer be dismissed as a planning scenario. To my mind there is a critical
weakness in SDSR 2015 and the thinking behind it, in what is otherwise a solid
security and defence review. Moreover, it
is a weakness that is not exclusive to SDSR 2015 and which helps to explain the
failure of Europe’s elites to deal with the crises that are now breaking over and
upon Europe.
Any worst-case strategic analysis
worthy of the name would have suggested that a) Russia under President Putin
was eventually going to prove difficult; b) in the wake of the 2010 Arab Spring
parts of the Middle East and North Africa were going to explode/implode; and c)
given the complex nature and interaction between Middle Eastern, North African,
South Asian, and Western European societies political Islamism would create some
friction.
Unfortunately, the refusal to think
worst-case is compounded by worse-case change. An over-stretched American military,
a rapidly shifting balance of military power between the non-US liberal ‘West’
and an illiberal Rest, and a financial crisis that devastated European security
and defence credibility is pushing the worst-case ever closer to being the
here-and-now case.
Just look at the 2015 (about to
become the 2016) migration crisis. Given the mix of rapidly rising birth-rates,
failing states, proximity, access, organised crime, and the gulf between rich
Europeans and poor Arabs and Africans, it should have been clear to Europe’s that
sooner rather than later huge numbers of the latter would up sticks and move to
the lands of the former.
European leaders even had
advanced warning of mass migration a decade ago when western European labour
markets were opened up successively to eastern Europeans. What leaders had
hoped for was the managed movement of a relative few. What they got was mass movement
to the West took place which in Britain’s case has been so badly managed it
could actually drive the UK out of the EU. The tragic irony is that freedom of movement within
Europe is one of Britain’s great triumphs in helping to win the Cold War.
The essential problem is that to
think worst-case one needs a political culture robust enough to countenance the
worst-case. However, because politicians so assiduously avoid the worst-case
(even in private) the strategy piece of a defence review is rarely permitted to
demonstrate that thinking is being conducted into the unthinkable. Rather, too
many European politicians see the worst-case as devil’s work; as though those
of us prepared to think the unthinkable actually want the unwantable. In fact
we think the unthinkable precisely to ensure it remains at worst thinkable. The
failure to think the unthinkable is now all too plainly visible in the form of
the migration crisis.
The reason Europe lacks the systems
and controls to cope with mass migration is precisely because European leaders
refused to think the unthinkable, just as they did with Russia’s seizure of
Crimea. This is because much of the European Project and the culture it
espouses is built on an incredibly rosy view of how people behave. Consequently,
EU structures, such as they exist, are often a series of Potemkin villages,
flimsy facades which stand proud in the good time but have little or nothing to
prevent them from collapsing in a storm. Schengen is the most obvious example; a
non-structure that ISIS is exploiting to deadly effect.
In a recent blog I gave SDSR 2015
7 out of 10. Sure, SDSR 2015 contains all the right buzzwords, as did Sir Nick’s
speech; ‘utility’, ‘agility’, ‘strategy’, ‘diversity’, ‘innovation’, and that
hoary old favourite ‘partnership’.
However, like much that passes for strategic thinking in Europe SDSR 2015
is still grounded in a culture of best-case planning, or how much threat can we
afford. Indeed, the review too often
smacks of the old Ten Year Rule. Adopted in August 1919 the Ten Year Rule stated
that “…the armed forces should draft their estimates on the assumption that the
British Empire would not be engaged in any great war during the next ten years”. 2015 is not 1919, or even 1989.
SDSR 2015 is certainly better than
SDSR 2010 but it still too easily allows SDSR 2010’s Future Force 2020 to now
morph into Joint Force 2025. Given what
has happened over the last 15 year defence planning cycle can we really afford
to be so complacent about the next 15 year defence planning cycle?
2015 has highlighted the strategy
malaise at the top of European power and the refusal of leaders to countenance
the worse-case. Surely, if 2015 has taught us anything it should be that we
must collectively return to worst-case, not best-case planning. The latter will
inevitably create structures and forces which will fail. Only the former can
generate the necessary strength ad redundancy upon which sound security and defence
are necessarily built.
2015: interesting times indeed. And
surely the best case for the worst case.
Happy New Year and all that!
Julian Lindley-French
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.