The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Now Corbyn wants new laws to curb raids by SAS

- By Brendan Carlin

NEW laws to curb Theresa May’s right to send the SAS on secret missions have been demanded by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

In his latest controvers­ial comments on defence, Mr Corbyn said that David Cameron got round the need for a Commons vote to send regular British forces to war – by deploying Special Forces instead.

He said the loophole had been used to approve covert British military involvemen­t or arms supplies in Libya, Iraq, Syria and Saudi Arabia.

Mr Corbyn – now facing a leadership challenge – called for a new War Powers Act to stop new Prime Minister Mrs May doing the same.

He said: ‘I’m very concerned about this because David Cameron – I imagine Theresa May would say the same – would say parliament­ary convention requires a parliament­ary mandate to deploy British troops. Except, and they’ve all used the “except”, when Special Forces are involved.’

Mr Corbyn compared the way Britain had sent Special Forces to Libya without a Commons vote to the way America sent ‘military advisers’ to Vietnam before the disastrous war was approved by the US Congress.

‘The parallel is very serious. Clearly Britain is involved. Either through Special Forces in Libya or arms supplies to Saudi Arabia. We have to have a War Powers Act that is much more watertight on this.’

Asked if the parliament­ary doctrine on approving military action should be changed, he said: ‘Doctrine must include military involvemen­t, not just regular forces because the Special Forces argument drives a coach and horses through the principle.’

Labour sources denied Mr Corbyn’s plan would ban the Prime Minister from sending Special Forces on all secret missions without a Commons vote.

‘This is intended to stop the Government getting dragged into war zones and making things worse – like Libya – by sending Special Forces, which can be done without consulting MPs because of a loophole,’ said a Labour insider. ‘It does not mean a prime minister would be forced to get parliament­ary approval for every SAS mission.’

But last night, Tory MP Colonel Bob Stewart – a former British Army commander – said he ‘disagreed entirely’ with Mr Corbyn’s call. He added: ‘You’ve got to give Prime Ministers the right to deploy our Special Forces when they think it’s crucial. They can justify it later.’

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