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Britain's Nuclear Deterrent Isn't Independent
By David Morrison
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July
20, 2016
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A British Trident II launch
from a submerged Royal Navy submarine |
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Next Monday, 18 July 2016, the British Government will seek the approval
of Parliament for its proposal to renew the UK’s Trident nuclear weapons
system. This involves the replacement of the four British-built
submarines from which US-supplied Trident II missiles carrying nuclear
warheads manufactured in Britain can be launched. The first of the
replacement submarines is planned to enter service in the early 2030s.
The last Labour Government initiated the process of replacement by
publishing a White Paper,
The Future of the United Kingdom's Nuclear Deterrent, in December 2006.
This recommended that the new system should provide ‘continuous at-sea
deterrence’ (CASD) as the current one does – in other words, that at least
one submarine be on patrol armed with Trident missiles at any time.
The White Paper asserts that the UK needs nuclear weapons:
“to deter and prevent nuclear blackmail and acts of aggression against our
vital interests that cannot be countered by other means” (Paragraph 3-4)
Obviously, this reasoning applies with even greater force to weaker
states, like Iran, that are threatened by stronger ones, like the US and
Israel. Indeed, on the basis of this reasoning, it is impossible to
avoid the conclusion that every state should get nuclear weapons, if it can
possibly afford them. The key question for those who assert the UK’s
right to possess nuclear weapons is how can they reasonably deny that right
to any other state in the world. The White Paper proposal was
approved by the House of Commons in March 2007 by 409 votes to 161, the
Labour Government enjoying solid support from the Conservative MPs for its
proposal. However, around a quarter of Labour MPs defied their
Government and joined the Liberal Democrats, the SNP and Plaid Cymru in
voting against. The final decision will be taken on Monday.
The outcome is not in doubt: with an overall majority in the House of
Commons, the Conservative Government can win the vote on its own.
Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, is opposed to nuclear weapons but a majority
of his MPs will vote in favour. The Liberal Democrats, the SNP and
Plaid Cymru will again oppose. There is little doubt that the UK will
have a submarine-based nuclear weapons system that could remain operational
into the 2060s. The official estimate of the cost of building the
replacement submarines is now £31 billion, up from £25 billion in 2011 (see
House of Commons Briefing Paper,
Replacing the UK's 'Trident' Nuclear Deterrent, 12 July 2016). A
contingency of £10 billion will also be set aside, giving an upper-end
estimate of the submarine acquisition cost of £41 billion. As for the
in-service costs of the nuclear weapons system as a whole, the Commons
Briefing Paper suggests that might be as much as £140 billion over its
projected 30-year lifetime. Deterrent independent?
Conservative and Labour advocates for the retention of the Trident system
invariably describe it as an “independent” nuclear deterrent. For
instance, on 9 April 2015, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon
said that, if a Labour government scrapped it, this “would shatter the
60 year consensus that has existed among governments of all colours in
favour of an operationally independent nuclear deterrent”. Labour
responded by insisting that “Labour is committed to maintaining a
minimum, credible, independent nuclear deterrent, delivered through a
‘continuous at-sea deterrent’”. But is Britain’s nuclear deterrent
really “independent”? At least eight (and perhaps nine) states in
the world now possess functional nuclear weapons and the means of delivering
them. All of them, bar one, manufacture and maintain their own nuclear
weapons and the means of delivering them. All of them, bar one, have
complete control over the use of their systems. In other words, all of
them, bar one, possess what can reasonably be described as an “independent”
nuclear deterrent that doesn’t rely on another state to provide vital parts
of it. The exception is Britain. China has an “independent”
nuclear deterrent. So has France, India, Israel, Pakistan, Russia and
the US – and perhaps North Korea. Britain hasn’t. Unlike other
states that have nuclear weapons systems, Britain is dependent on another
state to manufacture an essential element of its only nuclear weapons system
– the Trident missiles that are supposed to carry Britain’s weapons to
target. These are manufactured by Lockheed Martin in the US.
And Britain’s dependence on the US doesn’t end with the purchase of the
missiles – Britain depends on the US Navy to service the missiles as well.
A common pool of missiles is maintained at the US Strategic Weapons facility
at Kings Bay, Georgia, USA, from which the US itself and Britain draw
serviced missiles as required. There is some doubt about the degree
of “operational” independence that Britain enjoys in respect of its nuclear
weapons system (of which more later). But there is no doubt that
Britain is dependent on the US for the manufacture and maintenance of a key
element of the system. So, to call it an “independent” nuclear
deterrent is fraudulent. Independent foreign
policy? The plain truth is that, if Britain doesn’t
maintain friendly relations with the US, then it won’t have a functional
nuclear weapons system, despite having spent billions of pounds of British
taxpayers’ money on it – because the US would simply cease providing Britain
with serviceable Trident missiles. So, there is a strong incentive
for Britain to follow the US in foreign policy, since independence from the
US in foreign policy could lead to its nuclear weapons system becoming
non-functional. Sustained opposition to the US in foreign policy
certainly would. As long as Britain is tied to the US by a requirement
for US-supplied and maintained missiles for its nuclear weapons system, it
cannot have a wholly independent foreign policy. In these
circumstances, it is highly unlikely that Britain would use its nuclear
weapons system to strike a target without the approval of the US, whether or
not it is theoretically possible for Britain to do so. So, it is
absurd to describe it as an “independent” nuclear deterrent. The
above applies to the UK’s current nuclear weapons system. But it
applies equally to the proposed replacement. To ask the British
taxpayer to fork out upwards of £200 billion in the pretence that the UK
will continue to possess an “independent” nuclear deterrent is fraudulent.
Surprisingly, December 2006 White Paper conceded that our US-dependent
nuclear deterrent will become non-functional if relations sour with the US.
Paragraph 4-7 puts it this way: “We continue to believe that the
costs of developing a nuclear deterrent relying solely on UK sources
outweigh the benefits. We do not see a good case for making what would be a
substantial additional investment in our nuclear deterrent purely to insure
against a, highly unlikely, deep and enduring breakdown in relations with
the US. We therefore believe that it makes sense to continue to procure
elements of the system from the US.” Operationally
independent? British Governments have always insisted that
Britain’s nuclear weapons system is “operationally” independent of the US.
The December 2006 White Paper (4-6) states that “the UK’s current nuclear
deterrent is fully operationally independent of the US”. Apparently,
if a British Prime Minister decides to press the nuclear button, it is
impossible for the US to stop the launch of missiles or prevent them from
delivering British nuclear warheads to the selected target. Maybe so.
Is a British Prime Minister really free to strike any target he/she
chooses in this world with nuclear weapons, at a time of his choosing, using
US-supplied missiles? I doubt that the US would sell any foreign power
– even a close ally – a weapons system with which the foreign power is free
to do catastrophic damage to US allies, not to mention the US itself.
Surely, the US must have a mechanism, under its explicit control, to prevent
the targeting of states that it doesn’t want targeted?
***
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