to hurt us, not things we’ve dreamt about others.
Curt Mills of The American Conservative acutely notes that for President Biden, Ukraine is a political millstone that is energising his Republican opponents electorally. Biden, of course, followedthrough with the liquidation of an even starrier US commitment gone sour in Afghanistan.
We should remember, as Rishi Sunak grandstands, how little Britain’s voice counted as the Americans scuttled out of Kabul. In bearing that in mind, we should reflect on what Britain’s wars of choice have actually done for this country (let alone what they did for the countries in whose plight we involved ourselves — Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya).
Britain has chosen, most recently, to throw a handful of Typhoons thousands of miles from their base in Cyprus at the Houthis in Yemen in order to make the American attack on them look multilateral.
being at stake through this maritime chokepoint, Germany, France, Italy, India, Brazil, Japan and, so tellingly, China did not offer to join the fight. We have gained nothing in doing so; those countries have lost nothing in not doing so.
This, the hype which accompanied it — the Cabinet has been assembled late at night! the Speaker and the Leader of the Opposition have been briefed on Privy Council terms! — was a bagatelle. It was no Iraq, or Afghanistan, where our participation was justified, not least by our Foreign Offi ce, in terms of the immeasurable influence participation would afford us.
And, hard as this is to intellectually reconstruct at the distance of decades, it was influence which would have been denied to others who failed to participate. That would have been what was lost if we had stood back and let those wars proceed, as they would have done, without our dead.
Yet Daniel Johnson, founding editor of Standpoint, makes the inescapable point that we could give the Ukrainians the tools to do the job we won’t do ourselves — but only if we have them to give.
During Russia’s war in Ukraine, “Western” supplies of shells, as vital now to real war as they were a century ago, have seen South Korea send more than the EU combined. Put starkly, even if the Johnsonian argument, centred on combined moral and strategic arms, is conceded, we have insuffi cient to give. Our withered industrial base precludes the wars Sunak, Biden and others say that we, or others on our behalf, should fight.
. As bad as the battlefield has been for the West this century, a far more frightening fact should have been how little use the economy, “the fourth arm” of war, has become for us and our causes. And even more specious than giddy talk about what drones and returning blue-haired graduates would do for Ukraine has been our foolhardy expectations of what Western economic sanctions would mean.
They have meant nothing other than the completion of Russia’s transition into being an economic satellite of China. This is not a good outcome for the West ; that it happened shows exactly where and how we declined most.
The United States replaced Britain’s place in the world — a comparable military footprint, indeed, largely the same values and worthiness — because Britain lost the economic wherewithal to maintain her world system.
Either China is a threat which can and must be faced, or it is not. Every piece of evidence we have thus far — what we said, what we have and have not done — suggests that if we fear China, we have nevertheless preferred to engage in the displacement activity of wrestling with second-rate Russia instead.
The West’s talk of how much of a threat Russia is, even although it has yet to reach Kyiv, represents a fearful evasion of what confronting China will truly mean. China means business and, critically, is good at business. As yet, we don’t want to pay the price of resisting her. ●
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