Arab Times

UK’s shrinking army emboldens US adversarie­s – ex-UN envoy

-

LONDON, April 6, (RTRS): Cuts to Britain’s defence spending are emboldenin­g Washington’s adversarie­s on the global stage, John Bolton, former US ambassador to the United Nations, said in a newspaper article on Monday, calling for a sharp rise in London’s military capabiliti­es.

Britain, traditiona­lly a staunch US ally, is in the process of reducing its armed forces by around a sixth to help cut a large budget deficit. The reforms will leave the army with 82,000 soldiers in 2018, its smallest size since the Napoleonic Wars, and down from 102,000 in 2010.

Ahead of an election on May 7, British Prime Minister David Cameron and the opposition Labour Party have refused to guarantee London will continue to spend 2 percent of its gross domestic product on defence.

Bolton, who served as UN ambassador in the Republican administra­tion of then president George W. Bush, said Britain’s stance risked hurting the United States.

“Our mutual adversarie­s immediatel­y assume, all too accurately, that a weakened Britain reflects a weakened America, and they are emboldened,” Bolton wrote in the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Citing the direction of Russia and China and the situation in the Middle East, Bolton said Britain’s defence cuts and proposed cuts “could not come at a worse time, politicall­y and militarily.”

Bolton’s interventi­on is the latest in a series of warnings from US politician­s and military figures. Senior former and serving British military commanders have made similar pleas.

Cameron has rejected US criticism in the past, saying the country is engaged in a “massive” investment programme that will deliver new aircraft carriers, nuclear submarines, destroyers and frigates.

A spokeswoma­n at Britain’s Ministry of Defence said she could not comment because it was a political matter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait