The new submarines
announced by Sir Starmer yesterday are obviously a new form of stealth weapon,
since no-one will be able to see them for a decade or two. Although the
announcement covered 12, it turns out that seven of those are replacements for
existing obsolete boats, so only five are additional. They will start rolling
off the production line in the late 2030s (let’s say 2038 for the sake of
argument), and will be launched at the rate of one every eighteen months. So,
by about 2056, the Royal Navy will have a whole five additional submarines, built to
a 30 year old specification, in its fleet.
Sir Starmer says
this will ‘send a message’ to Putin. Leaving aside the huge cost of that ‘message’,
the thing about messages is that the ones received may not precisely match the
ones sent. In this case, telling Putin we’ll be just about ready to come for
him in 30 years’ time, assuming that the schedule doesn’t get delayed and that
the boats actually work when delivered (two caveats which past military
procurement exercises suggest might be ‘challenging’) is more likely to lead to
laughing-into-cornflakes than quaking-in-boots.
The submarines were only part of the announcement, of course. There were also the announcements
about wanting to fit nuclear weapons to aircraft and resurrecting some sort of
citizen’s army. But the theme running through seemed to have two main elements:
how much the UK is going to strengthen its armed forces, and how slowly it’s
all actually going to happen. And that matters in terms of Putin’s potential
motivation (for it is surely only Putin and Russia who are the targets of all
this). If one imagines Putin as some sort of Bond villain, sitting in the
Kremlin stroking his cat, then all bets are off. No-one can plan to deal with
insanity on that scale, although fiction might suggest that all it takes is one man with a licence to kill. If, however, we treat Putin as being a rational actor – and even if the premises of his rationality don’t always match our own, they can
still be identified and planned for – then there is one, and only one,
plausible reason for his wanting to start an all-out war with NATO. At its
simplest, that reason is a belief (whether right or wrong doesn’t matter:
he only needs to believe it) that NATO is gearing up to attack Russia, and that
his best chance is to attack first, before NATO has reached full readiness.
All the talk among
UK politicians and military types about being in a ‘pre-war’ stage, and needing
to be ready to fight an all-out European war within the next few years might be
intended to send a message of deterrence, but it’s easy to see how, from a different
perspective, it might look like preparing the population and economies of ‘the
west’ for an invasion of Russia. And the closer any army is to a state of
readiness to fight a war, the more likely it is that that war can start by
accident, or by a simple misjudgement. Reducing the time available to make a rational
assessment by positioning troops and weapons close to a border increases the
probability of a ‘use it or lose it’ mentality taking hold. We might indeed be
in dangerous times, but Sir Starmer seems intent on increasing, rather than
decreasing, the level of danger.
Perhaps I misjudge
Sir Starmer. Maybe his announcement really has nothing to do with war at all,
but is really about trying to sound strong, play the patriotic card for reasons
of internal UK politics, and impose his own militaristic definition of
Britishness on the population. After all, everything else he does is calculated
and calibrated in terms of its expected impact on voting behaviour. But
expecting Putin to read between the lines and understand that Sir Starmer doesn’t
really mean what he’s saying at all is a big ask of someone who is more than a
little paranoid to start with. Sir Starmer is playing a very dangerous game,
either way.
5 comments:
Putin will be in his mid 80s in 2038 and will no doubt have little influence on Russian policy if he is even still alive. When we hear about Russian war losses even if they are half the figures reported by the MoD this will have a massive impact on Russian life now and for a significant time to come. I would think there are very few senior Russian government officials who privately do not think that the decision to go to war was one of the worst decisions that the Kremlin has ever made in modern history. It is likely that Russia that will need quite some time to recover as it did after the Cold War which resulted in the end of the USSR.
This is one of your best for a long time, ukraine has been forced to innovate and so huge stockpiles of cheap and cheerful methods of death and destruction would be better and dramatically cheaper insurance now. I suppose a warehouse full of things that can be used is less of a vote winner than suggesting that AI, whatever that is, will win on a battlefield
Good post. Your last paragraph sums it up, but I do not agree with the first sentence.
Overall, this is ‘very thin cruel indeed,’ but we do not know what has cut from the first draft to make it palatable to Labour MPs in the Union parliament.
History gives us the formula for a country to be ‘conflict ready,’ It is the Bismark model, where education of children must come first and the code of God, Keiser, Country implanted in their brain. By doing this you develop a mindset that makes sacrifice and duty a high value and something to be attained by everyone. The model changes in other cultures ,but the outcome is the same.
When this has been established after four years you can introduce a national service, but none of this has been mentioned and if they were serious, it would start the next school year. But as you point out equipment purchase is the headline with the hope, they will still be relevant when being deployed.
Spare a thought for HMG Cabinet , full of people whose politics was motivated by Student Union politics , CND, and Stop the War. They must be in trauma having to agree to spent £15 Billion on upgrading nuclear war heads and billions more supporting a foreign. Their parents who marched in the anti- Vietnam war demonstrations will be considering disowning them.
"... the formula for a country to be ‘conflict ready’ ... is the Bismark model, where education of children must come first and the code of God, Keiser, Country implanted in their brain" That's certainly the way Russia is going; the US Department of War (as Hegseth wants to rename it) is also talking about building a 'warrior culture' (something which axiomatically, apparently, excludes women and anyone else who isn't a white heterosexual male); and it's clear that there are plenty of warmongers in the UK who'd like to follow suit. I'm not sure how effective it will be, though. It has certainly worked in the past, but with the access people have today to news and alternative views (and there's a reason why some are trying to clamp down on that), I seriously wonder whether the military mind is anywhere near correct in believing that a population can be collectively turned against an 'enemy' to the extent of being willing to send its youth to fight and die - to say nothing of the willingness of that youth itself. On the other hand, I too was one of those whose politics, as you put it, "...was motivated by Student Union politics [and] CND...", and I too "... marched in the anti- Vietnam war demonstrations". Perhaps I'm unduly optimistic about the extent to which people will resist a call to arms.
Interesting that you view the current media platforms to be a hindrance to conditioning the public square. Over the decades the Military / Intelligence community have had the same concerns.
For my part I believe the opposite ,as the Covid lockdowns was a grand experiment on the back of the winter influenzas season to evaluate this very problem.
The BTI ( Behaviour Insight Team) embedded in Downing Street , played a blinder and it was a joy to watch, when new trigger points were implemented that stimulated voluntary reactions by the press ,e.g. The Great Barrington Declaration was squeezed out from discussion and its members sent into media exile, for what editors judged at the time, to be unhelpful content in fighting the crisis. We know from the Senate hearings in the US ,that Twitter was captured by the government and complied to support the common ( and manufactured) view – brilliant!
So, we live in far more dangerous times .
Finally, I think Anonymous 8 June 08.48 insights are brilliant and I concur with them – well most of them.
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