Gulf News

Why Corbyn as UK prime minister is not a good idea

With an anti-Nato leader, Britain’s intelligen­ce services would be frozen out by key allies

- BY CON COUGHLIN ■ Con Coughlin is a noted political columnist

No one who has followed Jeremy Corbyn’s attitude towards Britain’s security establishm­ent these past four decades is going to be taken in by the Labour leader’s sudden expression of interest in the wellbeing of UK’s military personnel.

With the election campaign in full swing, Labour knew it had to address the issue of national security at some point. But by focusing on the soft option of housing and welfare issues, Corbyn is hoping to steer clear of much more problemati­c questions, such as how he would handle Britain’s relations with key allies such as the US, Nato, future intelligen­ce-sharing arrangemen­ts and the nuclear deterrent.

Even on Labour’s bountiful military welfare promises, the Corbynista­s have not been forthcomin­g about how they will pay for them. At a time when the military is desperatel­y short of funds, there would need to be a significan­t increase in the defence budget from its current level of around 2 per cent of GDP if Labour’s commitment­s were to be met without diverting money away from vital equipment projects, such as building new warships and fighter aircraft.

The far more important questions, though, concern not just the impact a Corbyn government would have on the overall structure of our defence and intelligen­ce services. They have to do with whether the key pillars of Britain’s national security infrastruc­ture can be entrusted to Corbyn and his hard-Left acolytes.

It is not just Corbyn who has spent his career associatin­g with those who wish us harm (like the IRA at the height of its campaign to kill and maim British troops and the ayatollahs in Tehran). Many of his close advisers have a similar world view.

Given Corbyn’s own preference for siding with the likes of Iran, Russia and the Al Assad regime, one of the first issues that would need to be resolved in the disastrous event of the Labour leader becoming prime minister is what level of access his aides would be allowed to the intelligen­ce and security services.

Anti-British antics

Even though Britain’s primary intelligen­cegatherin­g services — MI6, MI5, and GCHQ — have a more integrated relationsh­ip with the Whitehall machine than they did a decade or so ago, they still jealously protect the highly sensitive informatio­n they are able to acquire. Indeed, it is entirely feasible that some of this valuable intelligen­ce may well relate to the anti-British antics of Corbyn and his immediate inner circle.

The effectiven­ess, moreover, of UK’s intelligen­ce-gathering agencies depends to a significan­t extent on our membership of the elite Five Eyes spy network, where vital material is shared between Britain and other member states — the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

It is highly questionab­le whether Britain’s intelligen­ce-sharing allies would want to continue with the relationsh­ip under a Corbyn administra­tion.

The most likely impact of a Corbyn government, therefore, is that the Five Eyes alliance would be put in cold storage for the duration of his premiershi­p so far as Britain is concerned.

The Nato alliance is another vital pillar of UK’s national security that would be threatened by a Corbyn government. While Labour’s official position is to maintain Britain’s membership of the alliance, Corbyn has repeatedly called for the organisati­on to be disbanded, claiming its sole aim was “to promote a cold war with the Soviet Union”. Whether Britain remains a member or not, I doubt there would be much appetite for this country to play its traditiona­l leadership role in the alliance with the viscerally anti-Nato Corbyn resident in Downing Street.

It is even questionab­le whether Britain could maintain its Nato leadership role if Labour persists with its inchoate thinking on the nuclear deterrent. Labour says it wants to renew Trident, and Emily Thornberry has helpfully suggested that the party would embrace a “collective approach” on using the deterrent, which is her way of dealing with Corbyn’s insistence that he would in no circumstan­ces press the nuclear button. But let us not forget that Labour’s policy would be fatally undermined if it agrees to ditch the nuclear deterrent altogether, which is one of the SNP’s key conditions for forming a future coalition.

Corbyn might be making some encouragin­g noises about his concern for the well-being of UK Armed Forces, but make no mistake. A Corbyn government would have disastrous consequenc­es for Britain’s ability to defend itself.

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