Friday, May 11, 2007

All Change?

Tony Blair's resignation has prompted rejoicing among those who want to see him as solely responsible for UK involvement in the mess of Iraq. Yet many of his sharpest critics still see military domination as the ultimate solution to a political crisis, rather than as part of the problem.

Conscience is working hard to remove the blinkers, showing that there are many realistic, hard-nosed alternatives to militarism with its huge social, economic and environmental costs. Conscience is campaigning for the right to have the military part of our taxes go to these alternatives, not to war.

As Gordon Brown moves next door, help to make a deeper change. Click here for a short animation.

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Thursday, March 15, 2007

Tories prop up Blair to push Trident vote through

The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament today strongly condemned parliament’s decision to support the government’s plans to replace Trident, Britain’s nuclear weapons system.

The government’s motion to replace Trident passed despite a significant rebellion by backbench Labour MPs. The government was forced to rely heavily on the Conservatives in order to pass the controversial motion. This was the biggest rebellion during Blair’s tenure other than the Iraq war.

An amendment tabled by Jon Trickett, Sir Menzies Campbell, Dr Gavin Strang, Nick Harvey, Peter Kilfoyle and Joan Ruddock, which stated that the case for Trident replacement is not yet proven and expressed doubt about the need for an early decision, was also defeated by the Blair – Cameron alliance.

Kate Hudson, Chair of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, said:

"This decision represents a serious democratic deficit. A recent poll shows that 72% of the British public do not want the government to replace Trident now. How is it that so many MPs, and the government itself, is able to so wilfully ignore those they are meant to represent?"

"It is a significant moral and political victory that the vast majority of the public oppose Trident replacement. We welcome the principled stand of the MPs who voted against the government’s motion, and we encourage them to continue pressuring the government to reverse its shameful position."

"The government never allowed a genuine consultation and debate to take place. Six hours of debate on the day of the vote is an affront to the vast majority of people in this country and around the world who oppose nuclear weapons proliferation."

CND will continue campaigning against British nuclear weapons, and will continue to push for multilateral initiatives to achieve complete nuclear disarmament. A draft Convention banning all nuclear weapons is already lodged at the United Nations.

The nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty preparatory conference next meets in May 2007. There is still time for Britain to reverse its decision to replace Trident and fulfil its obligations under Article VI of the NPT to disarm.

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Monday, March 12, 2007

The best way to improve Britain's national security would be to reject Trident


Apologies for posting the whole of Johann Hari's excellent comment from today's Independent, but they have an annoying habit of removing their best articles from the public section of their website and reserving them for paid subscribers. This is one of the best articles I've ever read on the issue of Trident replacement.

Published: 12 March 2007

A metaphorical mushroom cloud will hang over Westminster this week. On Wednesday, the House of Commons will debate whether Britain should breach the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and buff up our stockpile of weapons of mass destruction for another generation. Already, one government frontbencher has announced he will resign, and a majority of Labour backbenchers in a BBC survey have declared they will rebel.

The Prime Minister has slapped down a challenge to his opponents: "Those who question this decision need to explain why disarmament by the UK would help our security." He's right. So let's show how insisting Britain maintain nearly 200 nuclear bombs on hair-trigger alert floating around this island, each with eight times the explosive power of the bomb that incinerated Hiroshima, makes us less safe.

There are three ways Britain is threatened by nukes from the outside. Nuclear Threat One: A fundamentalist group could smuggle a nuclear weapon into this country and detonate it. A tiny but determined band of people would like to carry out this plan: Osama bin Laden has declared that the acquisition of an "Islamic nuclear bomb" (presumably followed by Islamic radiation poisoning) is "a religious duty," and he tried to buy one himself in the mid-1990s.

The will is there, and the knowledge is not too hard to get. The only (massive) obstacle to these ambitions is getting hold of highly enriched uranium or plutonium. In theory, these essential nuke-ingredients are kept locked away - but there are recorded instances where they have been guarded by men armed only with garden rakes. The US Council of Foreign Relations explains that in the former Soviet Union, "Even basic security arrangements such as fences, doors and padlocks remain inadequate in many locations."

The head of the Democratic Republic of Congo's collapsing nuclear reactor plant was arrested last week for flogging off his enriched uranium to the highest bidder. (Nobody knows how much is missing).

Trident is, of course, useless against this sort of threat. Non-state actors leave you with nowhere to retaliate: after 9/11, would you nuke Hamburg? Besides, jihadists welcome death. For them, mutually assured destruction isn't a deterrent; it's an incentive.

But does Trident make this situation worse? I think it does, for one reason. Every penny we spend on the illusory "safety" of Trident is a penny we are not spending on securing collapsing nuclear facilities around the globe. John Kerry calculated it would cost £8bn to get all the world's enriched uranium and plutonium sealed away. Replenishing Trident will cost at least £20bn. So let's lock up the nuclear materials instead, and spend the £12bn-change on tracking down the maniacs who want to use them.

Nuclear Threat Two: A regional nuclear war could break out somewhere else in the world and trigger a nuclear winter. This is by far the biggest nuclear danger to us, and the least discussed. There are 30,000 nuclear weapons on earth, and the use of barely a dozen could cause irreparable environmental damage. This is not a wildly implausible scenario: only five years ago, Britain had to advise its citizens to leave India and Pakistan because of the real risk of a nuclear war, and it's not hard to imagine a similar situation soon between Iran and Israel.

There is only one route out of this. It is the NPT, created in the 1960s after the world came within inches of consuming itself in fire during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The NPT is based on a simple deal: the existing nuclear powers slowly scale down their nuclear arsenals, in return for the non-nuclear powers agreeing not to tool up.

The renewal of Trident violates this, our last best hope. As Rabinder Singh QC and Professor Christine Chinkin say in a legal opinion, the renewal of Trident "constitutes material breach" of Article VI of the NPT, which pledges "nuclear disarmament" pursued "at an early date".

A global momentum towards disarmament is the best way to sway Iran and other countries in the Middle East from going nuclear. Of course, only the criminally naive believe the deranged anti-Semite Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will wake up the morning after Britain disarms and realise he doesn't need a nuke after all. Gandhian moral suasion has little effect on religious fundamentalists. But we need to be playing a long game here, appealing to the Iranian people themselves. Most estimates suggest it will take a decade for Iran to have a working nuclear weapon, and Ahmadinejad's domestic popularity is already dissolving. Unless the US and Israel bolster him by attacking, he will be gone before he has access to a weapon.

But the problem will remain: the Iranian people will still want a nuclear bomb, with around 80 per cent demanding one in opinion polls. In their situation, it's not hard to see why. They are ringed by nuclear neighbours, and traumatised by the memory of the CIA overthrowing their democratically elected Prime Minister in 1953 and installing a fascistic dictator.

If we want to change this pre-and-post-Ahmadinejad wish for nukes within Iran, we need to change the external situation. In a world that is ramping up its nuclear arsenals, the Iranian people want a weapon of their own. In a world that is steadily decommissioning its nuclear weapons, they probably would rather spend the money on schools and hospitals, like everyone else. Renewing Trident diminishes the chances of that ever happening - and, therefore, our safety.

Nuclear Threat Three: Some as yet unidentified state will one day emerge and threaten us with nuclear annihilation. This is unlikely, but not impossible: in the 1920s, few people saw Nazism on the horizon. But there is a better way to guarantee against this than Trident. It is known as "the Japanese option".

At the moment, Japan has a virtual nuclear arsenal. They have a civil nuclear programme and advanced rocket technology, so they could put together a nuclear weapon in three months if they needed one. Britain could do the same: retain the capacity to assemble a weapon, but not have one day-to-day. By going Japanese, we would simultaneously strengthen the NPT and retain a guarantee against nuclear blackmail.

So yes, Prime Minister, these are three solid ways in which disarmament would make Britain safer. You talk about Trident as an "insurance policy", but as Bruce Kent of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament has warned, it is as though you are taking out an insurance policy against subsidence of your house that contributes to that very subsidence. Let's cling to the naive hope that the fall-out is, in the end, only political

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Guardian calls for delay on Trident vote

Today's Guardian leader is calling for a delay to allow proper debate on Trident replacement.

The balance of the argument runs in the rebels' favour. The case for renewing Trident at all is weak and the case for renewing it now is even weaker, more to do with the timing of Labour's change of leaders than with military or industrial requirements for an immediate decision.

The defence white paper describes Trident as an insurance "against an uncertain future" but is of course no such thing. Insurance carries with it a guarantee of protection. The renewal of Trident is simply a bet that the best protection for Britain over the next half-century will be a small, very expensive and US-dependent nuclear system. But the evidence for this is questionable. The low-intensity debate that has followed the paper's publication has not tested the relevance of nuclear deterrence to a changed strategic environment. When they debate this week, even MPs who accept nuclear weapons in principle should ask the government to delay and offer better evidence. Those who oppose them altogether can vote against secure in the knowledge that there is no longer any certain conflict between their moral position and the security of the country.

The editorial starts by quoting my local MP, Emily Thornberry, who seems to be less worried about rebelling than might be expected from someone who is clearly hoping for a government job when Gordon Brown becomes Prime Minister. But the first comment online comes from the infamous MarkGreen0 (a notorious NewLabour Troll on the Guardian site) who seems more in line with Labour policy:
Labour created the bomb for this country; Blair and Brown will ensure we keep that great Labour legacy.

And we've just had the first resignation over Trident - Deputy leader of the Commons, Nigel Griffiths. Indications are that he won't be the first to resign a government post over this issue, but it seems that none of Labour's rebels feel so strongly that they will resign the whip on this issue of principle.

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Sunday, February 25, 2007

Dubplates Not Nuclear States

Great video montage of yesterday's Anti-Trident Demo.

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Mark Thomas - London Anti-Trident Protest 24 Feb 2007

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Friday, February 16, 2007

Don't Attack Iran

This is a brilliant slide-show of images of everyday life from Tehran, backed with Yusuf Islam singing Peace Train. Well worth a minute of your time.

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