The
Ministry of Defence, whether by accident or design, has let slip a think piece
on what to do about Faslane, the key base for our Trident missile nuclear
strike force. It is in Scotland, up the
Firth of Clyde and turn left not long before Glasgow. If Scotland becomes independent it could be
left with the Scots as a peace offering but they may not want it. The picture above is of The Isle of Arran in
The Firth, home to many of my forebears.
One
reason is cost, the more significant one is that a lot of Scots feel that not
only is nuclear war wrong but engaging with it could be more of a liability
than an asset for them. Canny chaps,
they realise that any nuclear facility is not just a strike force to hit others
but in fact a prime target for the others if it all becomes two or more sided.
If
the others are not over fastidious in their selection of targets and have spare
capacity in their own nuclear capability as well as computers capable of multi
targeting then it may not be just Faslane that gets hit. Glasgow might as well. This may suit some in Edinburgh and other
places but the possibility exists that their coordinates also may be in the
targeting systems.
There
is a real risk therefore that all that kit might have to be moved south. The question is where? If Wales is ruled out because they might not
like it at all then that leaves England.
The trouble here is that there are not many places around the English
coast where the waters are both deep enough and with choices of passage to
allow relatively secure movement as and when necessary.
The
Ministry of Defence, perhaps after a hard day on the hospitality at a
procurement session are said to have suggested that the little bit of Scotland
on the low road to Loch Lomond could remain as UK territory, a mini Gibraltar,
only without the sun and fun. This could
almost be guaranteed to be a cause of dissent and endless trouble. One way of avoiding this is thought to be
offering the Scots a chunk of England as a swap.
There
are dafter ideas but I am struggling to think of one. They could have Hull, or Westminster or what
is left of Dunwich, once home to a prominent family of Scott's but it is not
likely that this will be popular, at least in Scotland.
Perhaps
it could be included as an extra question, with a few others in the Referendum
to come in 1314. The logic for this date
is apparently because 700 years ago, the King of Scots, with sundry lords of largely
Norman, Norse and other descent won a battle against the King of England with
other Norman lords, both using companies of foreign jobbing mercenaries along
with a few servile locals required as field fodder.
This
anniversary it is hoped will procure a number of marginal votes to help the SNP
win, regardless of anything that has happened in the centuries since. The Referendum might and indeed with
advantage have been held a sooner. But
there was a slight snag with the autumn of 2013. The 9th September is the 500th anniversary of
the Battle of Flodden when King James IV of Scots got it badly wrong and died
in a major defeat with heavy casualties for the Scots, see Wikipedia.
As
it happens there seem to be more of families of my ancestors there on the Scots
side who also died for their King and Country.
For some reason there is very little in the media about this coming date
and its significance. There will be a
few interested who will take part in events to mark the date, but I suspect
they will not be widely reported.
There
are all the signs that the various Referendum campaigns will be a series of
cheap stunts, wild claims, fake figures and on the SNP side "Brigadoon"
like fantasies and a reversion to the early 14th Century notion of the Scots as
a wandering tribe who finally made it to a promised land.
What
is becoming clear is that all the complicated and difficult issues are being
almost entirely ignored. Like it or not
the Faslane question is just one element in the highly complex area of defence,
border controls and security.
More
worrying for the Scots there are indications that while the Westminster
government is clearly corrupt, incompetent, bungling and misguided and in hock
to bent bankers, the madder end of the green factions and oil oligarchs the
only lot worse than them in Europe could turn out to be those who take power in
Edinburgh.
Which
takes us back to why the Union happened in 1707 despite the probable wishes of
the majorities north and south of the Border and the result of the Battle of
Flodden. Earlier in 1314 at Bannockburn among
the defeated southern Norman and mercenary force were a number of early Albanian
Stradioti light horse. Where did they
get to afterwards?
Did
they scatter into The Borders to become later Borderers?
No comments:
Post a Comment