Currently the government are about to spend £80 billion on the Trident delivery system, it's not so much the cost but the fact that it is submarine based that makes it expensive, the advantages are however manifold.
- The warheads are safe from interdiction interception from those out there who would do us harm.
- Land based rockets can be got at far more easier than submarines.
- Aircraft can (and are) shot down far easier than a submarine.
- Our nuclear subs can strike back from anywhere at any time.
- Those who would do us harm will never know where or when our revenge would come from as they don't have the means to detect our subs.
Times.
Britain should be prepared to scrap its nuclear deterrent, a group of generals write in The Times today, pushing the future of Trident to the forefront of the election.Personally I don't trust president Obama's disarmament drive, that will only work for civilised countries, North Korea and Iran are not particularly trustworthy where it comes to rhetoric and belligerence, nor do I trust the Pakistani state to remain stable. All of those will pose future threats to civilisation and non will hand over their nuclear weapons I suspect they think Obama's a fool too.
The generals say that the next government would threaten both frontline Forces and global disarmament talks unless it considers different ways of spending the £80 billion required to replace the fleet of submarines.Their intervention, although nonpolitical, offers timely support for Nick Clegg, who goes into tomorrow night’s foreign affairs debate with Gordon Brown and David Cameron as the only party leader arguing against a like-for-like replacement.Since 2007, when the Government decided to replace Trident, the debate has shifted significantly, they write, and there is now a “growing consensus that rapid cuts in nuclear forces ... is the way to achieve international security”. Pressing ahead regardless with a costly replacement could upset President Obama’s international disarmament drive, they say. And money spent on nuclear weapons would be unavailable for frontline troops, counter-terrorism work, helicopters, armoured vehicles, frigates or manpower.They argue that any genuinely comprehensive review needs to answer the question: “Is the UK’s security best served by going ahead with business as usual, reducing our nuclear arsenal, adjusting our nuclear posture or eliminating our nuclear weapons?”
The government have short changed the frontline troops of equipment from day 1, I rather doubt £80 billion will be given to the generals rather than the Navy to play with, far better spent on keeping the governments client state pets happy with bread and circuses.
Clegg's argument that other states shelter under Americas nuclear umbrella may have been true in the cold war but certainly isn't so today, America might retaliate if an ally is attacked, then again they may not, far better to have our own deterrence anyway, particularly one where they wont see it coming until too late.
Yes I know it's expensive, but it's a far better deterrent than any other option and whilst I'm all in favour of funding our armed forces properly, I don't think it should be done at the expense of Trident.
5 annotations:
The country should have the best. The only question now is, "Which country?" The soon to be broken up UK? The soon to be broken up England? Who would the weapons defend?
Another reason for retaining Trident is as much for what we don't know as to what we do.
We have seen a situation where we have gone from big power confrontation to localised area conflicts and on the face of it would undermine the need for Trident. However when the change from national confrontation to local it came quickly who is to say a change back would not be as sudden.
History tells us that Britain has all too often being ill prepared for conflict when it comes. Let us not repeat our past mistakes.
Trident is the cheap Deterrent.
No cruise missiles available for nukes, and can be shot down by current generation fighters.
SLBM is not confusable with conventional weapons, a cruise missile could have nukes, but might not, how will other states react to such an abigious weapon in flight?
Core H fuel is closer to weapons grade than civilian fuel, enrichment is seperate from civilian pipeline. A one shot powerpack for 25 years.
New build submarine necessary to retain skills and capacity, re-aquiring said would be far more costly.
SSBN stays out of sight, SSN gets seen occaisionaly due to is mission. Mixing roles is recipe for disaster.
I was going to have my say, but it has all been said already.
Maybe we should move the subs to Plymouth before an independent Scotland can hold us to ransom.... Just having a sureal moment.
very good!
Post a Comment