Edinburgh Evening News

An outward-looking member of the internatio­nal community

- Angus Robertson Angus Robertson MSP is Constituti­on, External Affairs and Culture Secretary

Scotland can be a trusted neighbour and ally as well as a good world citizen

As an outwardloo­king nation, Scotland’s best future is as a sovereign member state of the internatio­nal community – this is the subject of the Scottish Government’s latest paper in the “Building a New Scotland” series, offering a substantiv­e and exciting outline of the enormous potential of an independen­t Scotland.

The new publicatio­n entitled “An independen­t Scotland’s Place in the World” gives a comprehens­ive overview of how Scotland can be a trusted neighbour and ally as well as a good world citizen.

From the off independen­ce will mean that Scotland takes its place in the internatio­nal community alongside 193 other United Nations member states. We will be able to be part of the European Union, as was the democratic­ally expressed wish of Scotland in 2016, and as a NATO member state working with our allies, including northern European neighbours Sweden and Finland.

Independen­ce would also mean that Scotland gets to determine the type of state it wants to be on that world stage – one that acts based on its values and principles, promotes human rights and developmen­t and builds partnershi­ps with other countries and internatio­nal organisati­ons to address global challenges. An independen­t Scotland would be a good global citizen working towards peace and security in the interests of Scotland’s people and everyone else.

The defence and security of its people is the first duty of every independen­t country’s government. Occupying one of the most geopolitic­ally important parts of the world – reaching out into the North Sea and the North Atlantic – Scotland’s contributi­on to global security will be significan­t, too.

An independen­t Scotland would have its own armed forces, supported by a modern contract for personnel and strong support for veterans.

Decisions on future forces capability would be informed by a comprehens­ive, expertled Defence and Security Review. This would ensure that planning and capability were responsive to the threat environmen­tal and geopolitic­al challenges in play at the point of independen­ce. Scotland should play its part in global nuclear disarmamen­t, removing nuclear weapons from Scotland in the safest and most expeditiou­s manner possible following independen­ce.

With the full powers of independen­ce, this Scottish Government would commit to meeting the UN target of 0.7 per cent of Gross National Income on official developmen­t assistance (ODA), and establish a new ministeria­l portfolio dedicated to internatio­nal developmen­t. We would continue to be world leaders in the climate space, building on the globally recognised contributi­on Scotland has made to climate justice, biodiversi­ty and renewables.

Scotland’s overseas offices and organisati­ons have a track record of delivering billions of economic benefits. We can expand this, showing our nation as a key trade and investment partner for more nations the world over. The full paper can be read on the Scottish Government’s website, alongside the previous ten papers. I encourage all those interested to delve into this topic and engage in discussion­s about the future of Scotland at home and in the world.

 ?? ?? Angus Robertson is pictured with Independen­ce Minister Jamie Hepburn
Angus Robertson is pictured with Independen­ce Minister Jamie Hepburn
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom