Labour’s warmongers are at
it again. On the basis of absolutely no evidence that they are willing to
share, they have declared that “the threat of a Russian attack on the UK
grows”, and that the UK therefore needs to spend vastly more on new weapons
in order to repulse such an attack. I don’t know whether Putin is really
planning to launch an attack on the UK, but – despite his obvious desire to
reinstate what he regards as being the right of Russia to control certain
territories – he isn’t obviously a stupid man. He is, for instance, perfectly
capable of extrapolating from his difficulties in conquering Ukraine to the
likely consequences of attacking any of the major NATO states, and concluding
that it is probably not a battle Russia would be likely to win. He also
understands at least a little about geography: Ukraine is close to Russia and shares
a long and eminently invadable land border, whilst the UK is further away and
any attack beyond an aerial assault would require the use of air and sea
transport for a large number of forces.
The military clearly want more weapons, but then the
military always do, regardless of the assessed scale of any threat. The real
beneficiaries of the proposed increase in military expenditure are the arms
companies (and their shareholders), companies which are already profitable and seem
to have a knack of ending up invariably charging much more than the price
initially quoted. The losers – in a situation where Labour are hemmed in by
their own blind commitment to neoliberal economics and wholly arbitrary fiscal
rules – will be the population of the UK, and especially those most dependent on
the state finances and services which will be cut to pay for weaponry.
The first question we need to be asking is what
exactly is it we are proposing to defend? And that raises the question of what
sort of society we want to be. If the only way to ‘defend’ citizens is to
impoverish and marginalise ever more of them, and prepare them to give their
lives in order to do so, there is a danger that the ‘cure’ is worse than the
disease. Defending the interests and wealth of the wealthy isn’t serving the
population as a whole. The interests of most of us have more in common with those of the ordinary citizens of the 'enemy' state than with the interests of the elites who run the states on either side.
The second – and even more important – question is about
how we prevent war in the first place, rather than merely setting out to ‘win’
it. War only becomes inevitable when government on both sides becomes captured
by people who think it to be so, and much of what looks to be defence preparation
to one side will look to be threat of an attack to the other. The most likely
cause of any further attack by Russia is a belief that ‘we’ are preparing to
attack them. Building up military forces, with more weapons and more powerful
weapons, especially when more of them are stationed close to their borders, isn’t
exactly the best way of dispelling that belief.
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