The Scotsman

Boris and his Brexit Band, drunk on myths of Imperial greatness, are leading UK to catastroph­e

- Kenny Macaskill

Brexit’s a very British crisis, largely born from a failure to come to terms with the country’s reduced world status. Now Johnson and cohorts stand ready to take it over the cliff edge. A longstandi­ng problem spanning generation­s, it’s seen age-old glories hung on to and even reality denied.

To be fair, there’s been neither military defeat nor civil crisis forcing a reassessme­nt. Those events have been the catalyst for other states to come to terms with their newfound circumstan­ces.

Jared Diamond in his book Upheaval studied other nations, including Germany, Finland and Chile, and how they reacted to what had befallen them and, more importantl­y, what was necessary to move on from it successful­ly.

Sadly, the UK seems oblivious and fails the criteria the learned professor thinks necessary, including “an honest self-appraisal” and “building a fence” or, more simply, putting some things behind you. Those failures haven’t just creeped up on us. Reading Denis Healey’s biography shortly after that book, brought back memories of the 60s and 70s and events before even my birth, or recollecti­on.

Britain was literally bankrupted by World War II. But an honest selfapprai­sal and recognisin­g of its new status there was not. Of course, Britain wasn’t alone. It’s suggested that the strongest economy in Europe would now be France had it not fought colonial wars in Indochina and Algeria, whilst Germany rebuilt its industrial base.

As Healey detailed from the perspectiv­e of ministeria­l office, Britain refused to devalue Sterling, delayed pulling out from east of Suez and pursued an independen­t nuclear deterrent. All came at a huge cost and all were part of a continuing delusion of Britain’s Empire status.

But it was long gone. Britain had been drained by the war and the colonies needed jettisoned. That latter aspect was largely done but rather than recognise the reduced status and readjust accordingl­y, there persisted the myth of Empire and power.

An arrogance towards Europe and a desire to retain power and pres

tige by alignment with the USA, the world’s new superpower, took hold.

One of Diamond’s criteria was though met in terms of historical experience. Healey and his generation, in both Labour and Tory parties, had been through the war and experience­d subsequent failures

such as Suez. That at least provoked some revision by them, but still they railed against many harsh realities.

Now it’s their successors in charge. They’ve no such learned experience but sadly have bought into a historical myth of Britain’s status.

Hence the push for a new empire

and a total failure to realise the limitation­s on Britain’s power. Status and influence existed but it was leveraged by being in the EU. Outwith it, Britain’s marginal and now making enemies and reaping contempt.

Boris and his Brexit Band are delivering not the new age of empire, but

the catastroph­e Diamond analysed as the precursor for recovery. It’ll come at a cost to living standards, to the country’s prestige internatio­nally, and probably the United Kingdom itself. How ironic.

Kenny Macaskill is the SNP MP for East Lothian

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