12.3.07

The forthcoming vote on Trident renewal

The following is the text of a letter sent to our MP, David Tredinnick, with our views on the renewal of the Trident missile programme.

I would just like to remind you (and through you, the party) that the last time you supported the government on a serious matter related to the “defence” of this nation, it was a grave mistake. Albeit under different leadership, the result was an ungodly mess, the price of which is still being paid with the body parts and lives of hundreds of our soldiers and tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians.


It is a disgrace that there has been so little public debate about the issue of renewal (the limited debate there has been has been more about this slippery process than the substantive issue at hand). Parliament – with the supine lobby-fodder on both sides of the house being whipped into doing the bidding of an ill-informed leadership – has shown that it cannot be entrusted with decisions of this magnitude. To have the Conservative party support and prop up this dishonoured Prime Minister when members of his own party are prepared to defy him is really a tragic indictment of the spinelessness of the Conservative party in confronting and dealing with ‘real’ issues: green issues are so much softer and easier, are they not?


I would deplore Conservative support for renewal of Trident in this coming week for the main reason that the decision does not have to be taken this week, this year or this parliament. At the very least, the decision should wait for the current and discredited Prime Minister to leave office, and ideally it would form part of a manifesto commitment in the next general election, thereby giving the British people the opportunity to have say in matters in which, as I say, parliament has a dreadfully meek and compliant record. A referendum would be the ideal solution, since I imagine the average MP to be at least as clueless about the real substantive issues as the average citizen.


Although my main objection to the vote is that it is needless at this time, before you – and other MPs – take a position I hope you have answered the following questions and are prepared to publish your answers after the vote:


  • At whom are we likely to launch these weapons? What state/quasi-state or geographic area? a) I assume that Europe (including Russia), the Americas, Japan, China and the antipodes are not and are never likely to be viable targets, either because they are always likely to remain allies or are simply too powerful for us to drop a nuclear weapon inside their borders. So that leaves territory in the wider Middle East, Africa or parts of Asia as viable targets for our nuclear weapons because they are too weak to hit back. Surely the world is sick and tired of having the American Bully strutting the globe: do we want really want to have a weapon we can only deploy against the weak and defenceless (when the Americans let us)? Shame on us if we do.

  • Under what circumstances and to secure what objective are we likely to use these weapons when their use will cause considerable immediate and long-term civilian deaths, mutilations, illness and disablement?

  • What actual number of innocent civilian casualties (immediate and through the generations) are we prepared to inflict on the targeted region and its neighbours? 10,000? 100,000? 1,000,000? What number of deaths would you, personally, consider acceptable to achieve a far-away objective, Mr Tredinnick?

  • Are there, in fact, any targets at which it would be practical to launch a nuclear weapon – considering the impact of radiation (airborne, or waterborne – along rivers which might provide the sole source of drinking water for friendly innocent communities in neighbouring countries) and the ensuing refugee crisis on neighbouring countries? Could these few targets actually not anyway much better be ‘neutralised’ by conventional weapons?

  • Will the Americans – perhaps 40 years in the future – ever allow us to launch their hardware, using their flight and targeting software against targets they may not wish to be assaulted? If – as it seems to be the case – the USA holds the key to every part of Trident’s capability except the ‘big red button’ itself, then perhaps we could allow the Americans to do their own dirty work rather than contaminating our hands, thousands of square miles and hundreds of thousands of innocent people with “our” bomb.

  • If there are valid answers to the above questions, I would give my support to Trident renewal. I recognise its effectiveness as a deterrent during the Cold War when both sides had so much to lose. Suicide bombers, however, Mr. Tredinnick, do not recognise their death, or the deaths of their fellow citizens as a deterrent.

    £24bn - or indeed any amount - is too great a price to pay to allow our Prime Ministers to strut the globe because of our military strength: much better they walk the world with head held high because of their high moral stand.


    When considering what circumstances could allow the moral use of a nuclear weapon, I am reminded of a disgusting quote from an American Lt. Colonel (from the Guardian) in Iraq who said: “Those two insurgents who just shot at us didn’t understand what they were doing when they took refuge amongst civilians”. The disgusting part is that the Lt Colonel understood exactly what he was doing when he targeted the compound and its buildings with sufficient high explosive to kill and dismember scores of Iraqi civilians including three generations of one family. He never knew whether he had or had not killed his targets: I don’t think he much cared.

    Are you that Lt. Colonel, Mr. Tredinnick? I assume your vote will reflect your answer to that question.


    Yours very sincerely indeed

    Ramage L

    2 comments:

    Anonymous said...

    Brilliant, thank you. You could, maybe of mentioned the impossible 'clean up' of the wounded and psychologically damaged people if one of these weapons were ever very stupidly used. It is likely that the current skirmishes by any comparison to using a nuclear device in the Middle East, and elsewhere, will take us hundreds of years to get over, if ever, or if anyone is left alive in the resulting possible escalation.

    Anonymous said...

    Thank you Charlie. I missed the 'clean up' issue entirely. Unfortunately, if the weapon is ever used, I doubt many of the spineless Tory MPs who follow the party whip tomorrow will be around to volunteer to form a cleansing party .....

    I don’t forsee a nuclear holocaust in retaliation if the Americans ever let us use “our” bomb, but given the ethnicity and religion of the likely targets (realistically they can only be Africans, Asians or Arabs – brown or black people, not white ones) then I don’t see us white folks being able to sleep easily in our beds ...... and we won’t deserve to, either.