The UK Military, Jeremy Corbyn and the Threat of
Dictatorship
By Chris MarsdenNovember 11, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WSWS"
- The public declaration of opposition to Jeremy Corbyn, the leader
of the Labour Party, by the head of the UK’s armed forces is a
milestone in the disintegration of British democracy.
Chief of the Defence Staff Sir Nicholas Houghton,
asked by the BBC’s Andrew Marr about Corbyn’s statement that he
would never authorise the use of nuclear weapons, replied, “Well, it
would worry me if that thought was translated into power.” Houghton
had earlier told the media that the UK was “letting down” its allies
by not participating in bombing missions in Syria.
Corbyn’s office sent a letter to Defence Secretary
Michael Fallon stating, “It is essential in a democracy that the
military remains politically neutral at all times. By publicly
taking sides in current political arguments, Sir Nicholas Houghton
has clearly breached that constitutional principle.”
Rather than censure Houghton, the government
rushed to support him, with a spokeswoman for Prime Minister David
Cameron stating that “as the principal military adviser to the
Government,” it was “reasonable” for Houghton “to talk about how we
maintain the credibility of one of the most important tools in our
armoury.”
The defence of Houghton was echoed by leading
figures in the Labour Party, with Shadow Defence Secretary Maria
Eagle and Lord West, the former sea lord, saying they would resign
if Corbyn’s opposition to renewing Britain’s Trident nuclear weapons
system became party policy. Lord Hutton of Furness, the former
Labour defence secretary, wrote to Rupert Murdoch’s Times
to insist, “The chief of the defence staff must not be gagged or
bullied into silence.”
Houghton knew that he would be asked about
Corbyn’s position and went on the BBC with the express purpose of
making his public attack. This is not the first time such statements
have been made.
In September, the Sunday Times carried
comments from a “senior serving general” that in the event of Corbyn
becoming prime minister, there would be “the very real prospect” of
“a mutiny.” Elements within the military would be prepared to use
“whatever means possible, fair or foul,” the officer declared.
He went on to say: “You would see a major
break in convention with senior generals directly and publicly
challenging Corbyn over vital important policy decisions such as
Trident, pulling out of NATO and any plans to emasculate and
shrink the size of the armed forces.” [Emphasis added].
Houghton’s statements show that this course of
action is already being followed.
Amid numerous articles supporting or apologising
for Houghton, some within the media have been forced to discuss
openly whether his statements signal a serious danger of mutiny
within the armed forces. Of particular note was Monday’s
Guardian editorial, which stated: “There has not been a
military coup, and barely a military mutiny of any consequence, in
this country’s modern democratic history. That is why the remarks
about Jeremy Corbyn by the chief of the defence staff, General Sir
Nicholas Houghton, must be a cause of concern.”
The Guardian lists various incidents
where the military decided to “pick and choose which orders to
obey,” including the case of “the former NATO commander Sir Walter
Walker,” who, in the 1970s following the 1972 and 1974 miners’
strikes, led a fascistic movement directed against the Labour
government of Harold Wilson and dedicated to preparing to smash a
possible general strike.
The newspaper’s warning, directed to the ruling
elite, is that illusions in democracy that are vital to the
preservation of capitalism are being undermined by overt political
interference by the military.
“Such events,” the editorial concludes, “feed
speculation that the ‘establishment’ would always launch a
Spanish-style pronunciamento to prevent a leftwing government from
carrying out its mandate. Whether they intended it or not, General
Houghton and the unnamed general who recently threatened mutiny if
Labour tried to ‘downgrade the military’ fan those flames again.”
There is in fact no possibility of success for
Corbyn’s stated goal of bringing to power a Labour government that
would oppose austerity and militarism. The response of the bulk of
the Labour leadership to Houghton’s statements further demonstrates
the utterly right-wing, anti-working class character of this
long-time party of British imperialism.
Since he became party leader in September, Corbyn
has come under sustained attack by the Tory Party, the parliamentary
Labour Party, including his own shadow cabinet, the media, and now
the head of the armed forces. Nothing that Corbyn has done to
placate his opponents, including making clear that there will be a
free vote on both the renewal of the Trident nuclear “deterrent” and
Syrian intervention, has led to any let-up in the chorus of demands
that he be removed.
The public declarations of Houghton and the
anonymous threats of a mutiny must be taken as warnings of the
growing dangers faced by working people. What the Guardian
describes as “speculation” is the reality of political and social
relations under capitalism.
The “impartiality” of the armed forces that Corbyn
insists must be preserved has always been a fiction. They are the
“special bodies of armed men” identified by Friedrich Engels as the
essential instrument for preserving the rule of capital—not only
against external threats, but against the internal threat posed by
any serious social and political opposition that emerges in the
working class.
Under today’s conditions, this fiction can no
longer be maintained.
For decades, all the major powers have waged an
unending series of wars of colonial conquest—in Bosnia, Kosovo,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and now Syria. Beginning with the putsch
organised by Washington in Ukraine, NATO has been placed on a
collision course with Russia, while in the East the US is attempting
to forge a military alliance including Japan and Australia against
China.
This explosion of imperialist violence demands a
frontal assault on democratic rights in the form of a raft of
“anti-terror” legislation undermining civil liberties and the
intense surveillance of virtually every man, woman and child in the
world. In every major capitalist country, the power and political
influence of the military grow by leaps and bounds.
These developments are driven by a systemic crisis
of the profit system, which has only deepened since the crash of
2008, and the determination of a global financial oligarchy to
utilise the crisis to further its self-enrichment. To this end,
governments everywhere, whatever their formal designation, are
charged by their paymasters with imposing ever more savage attacks
on the jobs, living standards and social rights of the working
class.
As social opposition grows, so do the preparations
for dictatorial measures by military and intelligence figures,
without any significant opposition from elected officials or the
media.
The turn to austerity, militarism and war is
incompatible with the preservation of democracy. The working class
can answer the threat of dictatorship only through the building of a
new socialist and internationalist leadership dedicated to the
struggle for political power.
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