There was a
time when it was popular and common for Britain to send a gunboat to places
where the locals were up to no good or adopting policies not welcome in London,
the two are not the same.
The message
was "watch it sunshine there's more where that came from". Because if the locals insisted on opposing
Britain there was a large navy on hand and always several battalions of troops
in barracks ready to be sent with them.
Often it was
persuasion that worked, they would come to heel or a deal reached. Sometimes the heavy hint was not taken and
surely enough an expedition would be sent.
Many places in the world have in their histories a British military
visitation to remember.
When our
government proudly claims it is "doing something" we ought to be very
wary. It might be popular with some, it
might get the press excited and on side, it might look decisive, brave and determined but in the early 21st century it is
a loser poker player trying to make good his debts with a busted flush.
We have a
legacy nuclear capability dependent on the USA, a Royal Navy probably now
unable to police our own coastline fully and an Army also dependent on foreign
supply and too small and too little equipped to engage in any large or lasting
campaign.
That ministers
can suggest "putting forces on the ground" to deal with ISIS or ISIL
and the threats from the Middle East without realising that it can be only a
short hit and run raid at best. Others
claim we should be tackling opposition spread over wide areas of land and in
serious numbers which is basically idiocy.
It is what I
like to call a Fort Zanderneuf policy if you recall the story of "Beau
Geste" if not see Wikipedia. It is
all very well to have a disaster as a matter of honour and style and to be able
to blame others but when applied to dealing with a large, complicated and determined
enemy it is inviting losses and reactions in scale.
In that story
the fight was taken to the enemy territory, today the enemy may not be there
but somewhere else. Notably, it is in
Europe and in our own back yard where they have been made welcome. In order to make them concede our politicians
invite them to tea on the House of Commons terrace, a fete worse than death so
to say.
So David
Cameron doing a Sergeant Major Lejaune after a bad night on the cheap plonk
routine and urging his handful of men onward to greater efforts is asking to
lose the next general election to the Labour Party.
Given the
present state of our politics it would be an astonishing achievement and history
would mark him down as the UK's last and biggest loser.
"history would mark him down as the UK's last and biggest loser."
ReplyDeleteI'm not so sure. Government may possess untapped reserves of idiocy we can only guess at.