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Entries in West Asia (2)

Monday
Mar152010

Afghanistan & British Electoral Politics

We have not looked at Afghanistan as an issue since the High Summer of last year or commented in depth on British foreign policy since the Autumn. Why is this?

Partly because there has been nothing new to say and partly because comment on British policy in West Asia has degenerated into a political sideshow, a subject for knockabout between two political parties seeking to win an election later this Spring.

Miliband's Compton Lecture

David Miliband's Compton Lecture on March 10th might be regarded as the last serious pre-election attempt by the Government to establish precisely what it is doing in this faraway country before a disenchanted public adds it to the melange of issues that will decide its fate.

Within the first few words, he managed to encapsulate what New Labour stands for and to reaffirm the ideology of engagement - enlightenment values in a transatlantic context.

We have recently thrown some doubt on the viability of the latest iteration of the Enlightenment project as an idealism that can be destructive in its attempts to impose systems on the crooked timber of humanity but Miliband has no such concerns.

He gives three reasons for engagement in Afghanistan. Two of these lodge New Labour firmly in a grand strategic camp in which the national interest is seen as identical to that of its chief ally expressed within an idealist and abstract notion of the 'West'.

Naturally, he cannot walk away from the prime motive for engagement that is presented to the British people - that we have to be there because the West Asian badlands pose a terror threat at home.

What is never said is that our active post-imperial engagement with the margins of the West fuels the very insurgency that might be imported back into the country and that some post-imperial ethnic minorities within the UK are disengaged from the Crown, in part, by such actions.

To the costs of the war must be added the costs of a complex 'soft' power operation to monitor and manage lower income ethnic communities, of an almost comically belt and braces security operation around the country and of trying to outmanouevre the extremists' equally evil twin, the BNP.

If we add to this the divisiveness of the war, popular anger and irritation at security measures, the palpable growth in tension between ethnic communities ... all at a time of economic difficulty ... it seems an expensive way of dealing with a threat which is not entirely proven as to its extent or importance.

Party & Crown

The truth is that a balanced budget and internal social cohesion are regarded as wholly worth sacrificing on the altars of the transatlantic alliance and the 'future of Western power'.

In other words, the tragedy of New Labour is that, after over hundred years of struggle to become the dominant ruling party in the country, it has become the Party of Pitt, Walpole, Wellington and Castlereagh rather than the Party of Paine, Jefferson, Shelley and Blake. It has become the Crown.

It is the Crown (not the House of Windsor but the State) that has determined, for complex historical reasons related to its power and institutional ambition, that the transatlantic alliance, NATO and the West represent a community in which it must have a place or have no meaning.

There is an historic rationale for this (albeit an imperialist one) and, even today, there are sound economic and strategic arguments for good relations with the United States, collective security and the defence of core liberal values in a global setting.

But this is not what is happening here. This is not good relations with the US, it is Alliance. It is not just collective security, it is NATO. It is not just defence of values but promotion and extension of values. The qualitative difference is important and it is proving immensely costly.

The Necessity For Settlement

We will leave you to read Miliband's lecture. You may decide whether to be persuaded or not. What is clear is that Miliband knows that our country can no longer afford the forward policy begun under Tony Blair in the late 1990s and he is looking for an 'exit' without the political costs of being seen to withdraw.

Strip away the tub-thumping, the 'our boys' talk and the attacks on the evils of the other side and what it comes down to is a simple fact.

If the West had more resources (and more support at home) it probably could win eventually but the scepticism of the British public, lack of support from wiser heads in Europe and growing budgetary problems no longer give the Government the option of being in on the kill or leading from the front.

With an election on the way, what New Labour has to do is demonstrate that past investment was worthwhile in support of what will be an American victory - or ensure that it withdraws with dignity and honour long before it turns into a wider West Asian American quagmire.

A close reading of the Lecture tells us just how much Western objectives have changed from the heady days when liberal progressives thought that they could bring their much vaunted Enlightenment values, to Afghan women in particular, through the barrel of a gun.

The British and Soviet imperial histories are used by Miliband to demonstrate that the Afghans cannot be beaten into submission but have to be seduced into "a self-governing, self-policing but heavily subsidised Afghanistan, where the tribes balanced each other ..."

Ay, there's a rub. The British (who succeeded) and the Soviets (who failed) had an interest in heavy subsidy because the troubled country was a chaotic threat to contiguous interests whether the British hold over Indian wealth or Soviet determination to maintain order amongst its ethnic minorities.

The essence of such Imperial strategies was complicity in a protection racket - sufficient funds would be applied to keep the Afghans concerned with topping each other rather than interfering in neighbouring countries. So much for Enlightenment idealism!

But Why Us?

But what on earth is the interest of the United Kingdom, an island on the edge of another continent within a global trading system that scarcely touches these backwoods, in taking part in the levels of heavy subsidy that are undoubtedly at the heart of of Miliband's Grand Master Plan.

Of course, Miliband is not expecting the British to pay, he expects the electorates of the 'West' to pay, that is hard-pressed Americans and Europeans who have far more worries about bailing out Greece than about the baksheesh expectations of Afghan tribesman.

All this effort seems increasingly absurd when compared with the exposure of another island nation with a similar profile, Japan, operating a similar distance from the country concerned and with equal dependence on Gulf oil.

Unless British foreign policy makers are genuinely and insanely concerned with the preservation of neighbouring empires (Russia, China, India) from dissolution regardless of the effects on the national budget, there are only two motives for the expenditure of blood and gold by the Crown.

Neither can be spoken of in blunt terms because, if the British population understood what was being said, there might be a political reaction that could lose this Government its mandate.

Social Cohesion At Home

The first truth is not that terrorism might be imported into British cities from Afghanistan but if Afghanistan is not settled then the destabilisation of Pakistan and so of Kashmir really does threaten to bring sectarian war into British cities - and not necessarily just as Islamism.

What discomforts the British is that post-imperial mass immigration, promoted for economic and ideological reasons, and not discouraged by a New Labour Government that gains significant votes from these communities, would very soon be linked to violent social disorder.

The size and spread of the warring communities and their concentration in the poorest areas of our major post-industrial cities creates a nightmare scenario for the Crown - one where Enlightenment values crumble in a local competition for resources fuelled for profit by radical ideologues.

The link between terrorism and mass migration is one that has not been proved. Discussion has sometimes been silenced as 'racist' - but anyone who watches the push and pull between the poorest communities and their homelands and growing 'ressentiment' amongst indigenous rivals is concerned.

So, for this reason alone, both Crown and New Labour (indistinguishable in their concern for social order) have increased the number of authoritarian tools for social control and have pressed, under security advice, to get the rest of the West engaged in settling Afghanistan before the infection spreads.

When Miliband speaks of earlier British imperial settlements designed to protect British investment in India, it suggests that his settlement is required to avoid the real cost of that massive overseas empire - chaos in an aging urban-industrial structure with low wage populations whose allegiances are obscure.

The Burden Of History

A second 'real' reason for engagement with Afghanistan derives from another burden from history - in this case, recognition of strategic and economic dependence on the US. This is an old story that does not need to be told again here - it is about the necessary displacement of one empire by another.

The point is not that this has happened but that New Labour and the Crown have become the depressed victims of that history. Questions are being raised that directly affect British post-imperial strategy.

First, is the dominance of London as global centre (which is the central economic core of the transatlantic alliance) really in the interests of the British people as a whole?

Equally to the point, have the interests of Crown, City and Alliance become wholly detached from the interests of the nation in the light of the recent economic crisis? This is more salient when we consider the social order questions raised by our decaying urban-industrial infrastructure (see above!).

Our engagement in West Asia would appear to require taxing the population to sustain the interests of Crown, City and Alliance. The economic benefits from that bloc may be regarded as questionable looked at from a council estate in outer Manchester or amongst the small retailers of Guildford.

Second, much as the British like to preen and swagger about their world status, no different of course in this from the French, the question arises as to why we bother when most people are not nationalist in orientation in the traditional way and would much rather the quiet life without ideology or 'service'?

The Crown and conservative authoritarians of all parties may like 'Great Power Status' [GPS] but it is becoming increasingly costly. The tension between the costs of sustaining it and maintaining social cohesion become much more manifest as economic conditions worsen (as we noted some years ago).

GPS is sustained through the same sort of legerdemain that has put New Labour in control of the State through means that undermine the nation. In this case, Britain's 'destiny' as an independent power is being undermined by a determination to seek GPS under the wing of another power.

The Politics Of Confusion

Miliband's Lecture is intelligent and informative but he cannot raise these questions himself because in so doing he would undermine the very basis for New Labour's role which relies both on denial about post-imperial causes of social disorder and on promoting the illusion of GPS.

Afghanistan, far more than Iraq which was just a costly mistake with no long-lasting effects on national cohesion, pulls together all the internal contradictions within the New Labour project.

The desire to build votes on economic growth and full employment has created the conditions for social disorder that owe too much to accidents of history on the North West Frontier while its determination to strut for its right-wing vote on the world stage continues to turn the country into a poodle. 

In the long run, Afghanistan can be 'won'. The US might well be able to afford to settle a dowry for peace of sufficient size through its massive security budget but that settlement might be, for the British, a horribly expensive way to invest in maintaining social order in Britain's inner cities.

Many may ask why we lacked the courage to by-pass this war and just take our gold, put it into our troubled communities and save blood not only overseas but perhaps, one day, at home.

Tuesday
May052009

Economics and the UK's Great Power Status

Economic pressures are biting hard into British ability to project power. The British have finally left Iraq, handing over security control to the US on April 30th, but are committed to Afghanistan. 179 British military personnel have died in Iraq over six years and the death toll is mounting in West Asia.

Competing Pressures on Budget

There a number of fiscal issues arising here.

The expense of operations East of Suez was presumed to be worthwhile because economic growth, derived from never-ending globalisation, would pay for the interventions necessary to stabilise the lands where the wild things are. That growth has come to a grinding halt.

Projection of power also involved high expenditure along three competing lines - boots on the ground to follow through on intervention, a bigger naval presence to protect trade and energy routes and participation as leading player in the projection of European power.

On top of this were Cold War hang-overs like the independent nuclear deterrent (Trident) and demands for more budget against insurgent and terrorist threats from the security services, not excluding GCHQ budgets for monitoring the Government's own electorate.

This is a massive and mounting sum - nuclear upgrades, better equipment for the army, aircraft carriers, the Eurofighter, hugely increased 'spook' budgets ...

Tough Decisions

... and yet there has been no recent Strategic Defence Review. Few take seriously the threat of a direct assault by any other sovereign state on the island of Britain and the threat of terrorism appears to be mostly talk with any likely annual death rate less than one severe bombing raid on civilians in 1940.

Expenditure entirely depended on increased tax revenue and a politically compliant population that would not mind the steady diversion of taxes into the toys of great power status because it was living it large on easy credit. Neither the revenue nor the compliance may now be taken for granted.

The constituency for worrying about child poverty or the state of care homes had been swept aside with union connivance but, as the mafia say, 'things change'. The state of the British economy has taken all the fun out of defence procurement and it will soon direct attention back to social problems

The Government's refusal to undertake a full Strategic Defence Review until after the next Election creates an illusion of business as usual until the crunch in government spending really takes hold from 2011. This is purely tactical - a hope against hope that New Labour can bluff its way back in 2010.

Government strategy has been reduced to stalling on big decisions wherever it can, kite-flying on the possibility of killing off big projects like Trident (in the context of some US-led wider nuclear disarmament treaty) and spending high now to achieve some short term objective and then get out.

West Asia - A Race Against Time

Take West Asia. UK policy has three components - don't upset the Americans, don't spend any more money than necessary and hope that the Americans can pull off their Iraq trick and allow the British to get out in 2010, preferably just before an election, with honour intact if not enhanced.

The UK has just published its new medium term strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan to bring it into line with US policy in the area. It will send a temporary extra 700 troops to Helmand to help provide security for the presidential election in August.

But the Army is not happy. Gordon Brown vetoed any further UK involvement in the US troop surge in Afghanistan much to the consternation of commanders on the ground. Their immediate demand for 2,000 more troops was curtly rejected.

The issue of military anger ('incensed', according to the Financial Times) at the Government’s decision is an interesting one because there seems to have been a sustained campaign by the Army to embarrass the Prime Minister in the media.

To some extent, this military anger is a righteous irritation with a failure to resource it properly on mission. To some extent, it represents anger that lack of available force means that Helmand Province will soon become a wholly US command and that Brits will be ordered around as their juniors.

But behind this is the fear that the military may be cut back in favour of aircraft carriers and aircraft in the post-election Strategic Defence Review (probably undertaken by the Tories). If funds are committed to the big toys now, the incoming Government may be faced with a fait accompli.

The Old 'Guns versus Butter' Debate

Boots on the ground ensuring a victory might have been an argument for spending more on soldiers in the future, regardless of the fact that, if the UK can no longer afford a Blairite policy of global humanitarian intervention, there is really not much point in having much of a standing army at all.

The Financial Times sided with the military this week, criticising the Government for trying to conduct war ‘on the cheap’. This is a little naïve about a domestic situation where there is no stomach for massive transfers of funds and loss of lives at a time of economic crisis.

Extra funding was promised to help Pakistan’s counter-terrorism operations as well as education and economic assistance, with pledges of £665m over the next four years. Yet, privately, respected intelligence analysts are telling MPs that the UK should just scuttle from West Asia as fast as possible.

British citizens might legitimately wonder why £665m of their taxes are going to improve education overseas when everyone knows that there will be serious cut-backs in education and in other services at home within that same period to assist in a war that might be supposed to be none of our business.

Case Study in Crisis - The Eurofighter Programme

The end of the days of fiscal wine and roses is not restricted to its effect on overseas operations. The UK has declined to pay £1bn towards the Eurofighter Typhoon jet programme on demand amidst European anger. It will now come to a decision by May 15th and it is not an easy one to make.

Brown was personally called by Merkel, asking him to keep to a commitment for a programme conceived in the Cold War (mid-1980s) and probably of no real use to the UK compared to the more immediate requirement to balance the economic books.

There will be more European protests. Anxiety in Berlin relates to its own domestic politics and should not detain us. The bottom line for us is that the British were quite prepared to bung a £1bn wad towards the European attempt to be a strategic power in its own right as an entry price to the game.

Now the Eurofighter looks like a great white elephant, economically and potentially politically, a grand European project which is really a luxury item and, in fact, the pursuance of continental industrial policy by other means.

Its supporters are increasingly reduced to warning of the effects of a failure to proceed on an industry which provides 40,000 jobs. This is important politically when the main union involved is central to the New Labour project but the argument does not have a great deal to do with national defence needs.

A £1bn subsidy to the defence sector is going to upset a lot of people. Those seeing public spending cuts and future tax rises and those sectors who have not received Government help, notably the rival automotive sector which has had minimal assistance, are not going to be well pleased.

Political Tensions

The military, who would rather have the money spent on improved equipment for missions like Afghanistan, are opposed and have friends in the Tory Party. Drifting liberal and left supporters of the Government, many on the cusp of walking out of the Labour coalition altogether, will not see the point.

The decision affects the Treasury (public finances), the Business Department (industrial policy) and the Ministry of Defence (allocation of limited resources), while pressure from European partners involves the Foreign Office. Eurosceptics could have a field day in the run-up to the June 4th vote.

The UK defence industry is getting equally irritated with the Tory Party’s alleged plans (as yet very unclear) to cut expenditure on defence. Tories are giving private assurances that certain programmes are safe (presumed to be the aircraft carriers) but, in public, the opposite impression is being given.

The Tory Party has the same problem as New Labour. It likes to talk tough and has its own services constituency but it also needs to win and hold power amongst a population who will not take kindly to high taxes and poor services if taxes only mean funding the military.

Prospects

We now have the prospect of two years’ of struggle by the defence and security services and industrial interests to sustain the ‘guns’ budget against some increasingly desperate social demands from the 'butter' interest, with each defence interest squabbling, in turn, over access to what remains.

Unlike the Edwardian era when German dreadnoughts threatened an empire, the 1930s when fascism looked to conquer Europe or the Cold War when Cossacks with snow on their boots threatened to reach the Channel, there are no serious national enemies on the horizon other than a few terrorists.

All in all, unless the 'guns' lobby comes up with a really good scare, they are going to find it harder and harder to compete with any democratic mandate for sustaining the welfare state and resisting tax increases. And perhaps quite right too ... unless, of course, some extraterrestrials arrive on cue.

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