Alphen, Netherlands. 6 November. Only in Britain it seems can a sex scandal involving a foreign, Hollywood
film mogul lead to the effective paralysis of Parliament, and the undermining
of effective governance. Watching the
latest bout of elite hysteria unfold in Britain reveals the extent of the
malaise in the British political class, and why sound strategy is so often
subordinated to unsound politics. Sadly, an extreme form of ultra-liberal political
correctness is morphing into social media lynch mobs that destroy due process.
Indeed, it looks to all intents and purposes as if a new form of intolerant neo-fascism
is taking over in which guilt is presumed, and innocence must be proven. Hysteria re-fuelled by virtue-signalling
political leaders like Theresa May who react rather than lead, locked into a
race to ‘virtue’ they can, by definition, never win.
If such an abandonment of
political reason was confined to matters domestic then perhaps Britain could
weather such storms. Unfortunately, London
has abandoned strategic reason for the same strategy-consuming short-term
politics. With the appointment of Gavin
Williamson, the new Secretary of State for Defence, as a direct consequence of
the political hysteria in London, and as part of an occasional series of guest
blogs, my close friend and colleague, Professor Paul Cornish explores the
consequences of London’s abandonment of strategic reason. He does so within the
context of the forthcoming National
Security Capabilities Review which he warns will fail if it simply seeks to
protect the Government from bad news, rather than the country from dangerous
change, or the still distant but growing possibility of a major war. Paul and I worked closely together on his new
book, co-authored with Kingsley Donaldson 2020:
World of War (London: Hodder and Stoughton). Indeed, I contributed much to the
scenario in the chapter entitled, The
Caliphate Resurrected: Cairo in Chaos.
National
Security Capabilities Review
Paul Cornish
The UK’s newly appointed
Secretary of State for Defence will have a lot on his plate. With the last
strategic defence review not yet two years old, the government has begun a
comprehensive reassessment of the country’s strategic outlook. The National
Security Capabilities Review is expected to be complete by the end of the year.
This is not an open-ended re-evaluation; there will be no new money, and very
likely less. So, stand by for months of zero-sum argument as each defence
interest – often led by a retired senior officer – pleads for a thicker slice
of a diminishing cake.
Sir Basil Liddell Hart,
the military historian, once quipped ‘the only thing harder than getting a new
idea into the military mind is to get an old one out.’ Some might feel that
Liddell Hart’s tart comment applies as much today as it did in the 1940s. With one
former Armed Service Chief after another likely to make the case for more
warships, battalions, aircraft etc., won’t we simply be given sight of a fantasy
world in which they think their ‘old ideas’ (about international security,
defence policy and national strategy) still matter? Possibly. But it’s also
possible that the joke could be on us if we dismiss all these warnings, and all
those who utter them, as merely new versions of an old caricature.
With some exceptions,
Service Chiefs have adhered to the convention that they should not be openly
critical of national strategy and defence policy while still in uniform. But
once back in civvy street they’re free to tell us if they are worried; about
the variety, scale and urgency of the security problems demanding the attention
of the country’s Armed Forces, and whether there are sufficient resources to meet
enough of those challenges. On balance the rest of us should listen to those
warnings – rather than take shelter in some trouble-free comfort zone of our
own imagining. This is where the real problem lies; not so much in the
‘telling’ but in the ‘listening’ – and particularly on the part of government.
Government should listen
to the warnings of our retired Service Chiefs because some of them deserve our
attention. Government should listen to plenty of other people too – because not
even retired Service Chiefs know everything there is to know about
international security and national strategy. But here we return to the
‘comfort zone’ problem just mentioned, a form of confirmation bias that lets us
ignore uncomfortable information because it’s, well, uncomfortable. If generals
can be accused of ‘fighting the last war’ then the rest of us might just as pointedly
be accused of ‘clinging to the preferred peace’. On the face of it, this can’t
be such a bad instinct; who wouldn’t prefer a life of peace and prosperity over
one of conflict and loss? But it must be government’s job to step out of the
comfort zone and contemplate the uncomfortable on our behalf. In other words,
we expect government to think and act strategically. But then we confront an
even bigger problem. It might not be as simple as finding the ‘old’ strategic
idea that animates government and replacing it with a ‘new’ one; it might be
that there isn’t one there at all – and hasn’t been for some time.
There could very well be
a case for the UK to acquire more warships, tanks and fighters or, at least,
not to mothball those we already have. But the first task must be to recover
our strategic sense, such that we can identify and manage the international
security situation as it is, rather than as we used to know it (during the Cold
War, for example), or would prefer it to be (the comfort zone again). But how
can we avoid alarmism and over-reaction on the one hand, and complacency on the
other?
The first step is to explain
what is (and could be) going on around the world, and not simply to describe
the international security context with such floppy platitudes as the ‘the era
of constant competition’. In our recent book 2020: World of War Kingsley Donaldson and I worked with a team of
experts to show how international security encompasses traditional inter-state
conflict, climate change, cyber security, terrorism, mass migration, nuclear
proliferation, urbanisation, resource scarcity and disease. Together, these are
the serious, strategic-level challenges of our day; they need to be understood
for what they are and managed with appropriate methods and means. Although the
contemporary international security challenge is not as grave, singular and ‘existential’
as it was during the Cold War, the world is nevertheless very far from being
stable, secure and pacific.
Complacency should have
no place in national strategy, any more than scare-mongering and alarmism. We
need to know the international security environment more closely if we are to
manage it more effectively. Policy-makers and strategists must neither fight
the last war nor cling to the preferred peace; they must have the capabilities to
deal with this unprecedentedly wide range of evolving security challenges. The
twenty-first century security environment is likely to remain complex,
fast-changing and opaque; all that we can really know of this environment is
that we’ll have to engage with it. But this all looks like hard work when
complacency is so much more comfortable – and so much cheaper in the short run.
In August 1919 Lloyd
George’s government adopted the ‘Ten Year No War Rule’ as a rationale for reductions
in military spending. In 1928 it became a ‘rolling rule’, whereby the decade-long
year strategic holiday would simply begin again each year. The rule was
abandoned in 1932 and rearmament began, belatedly. 1947 saw a variation upon
the theme; the ‘Five Plus Five’ rule whereby major war was not considered
likely for the first five years, with the risk increasingly gradually over the
following five. The rule was dropped by the Attlee government in 1948 because
of deepening insecurity in Europe. In 2017 it would surely be unwise of the May
government to adopt yet another version of the no war rule – but this time with
no apparent time limit. History shows little respect for strategic
holidaymakers.
Professor
Paul Cornish,
Co-author, 2020: World of War (Hodder &
Stoughton, 2017).
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