Adam Smith Institute

Europe's favourite think tank website
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • Increase font size
Power lunch with Liam Fox MP Print E-mail
Written by Dr Eamonn Butler   
Friday, 24 October 2008 06:02

Shadow Defence Minister Liam Fox MP was our guest at a Power Lunch in Westminster this week. It's not a job that anyone envies him. If the Conservatives win the next election they will inherit not only a wrecked economy, but a defence apparatus that's outdated and starved of funds.

We've not had a strategic defence review since 1998, despite the fact that the world has changed a lot since then, and the threats are both larger and very different. To some extent, we're still fighting the cold war. But now we have to contend with energy supply, a bullying Russia, an Iran that wants to be first in a regional nuclear arms race, a divided nuclear Pakistan... It's clear that we need frequent and regular defence reviews if we are to keep on top of a changing and complex defence problem.

Gordon Brown never financed Tony Blair's military excursions adequately – which is why we had troops being killed because they couldn't find any body armour to borrow, or spare parts for their tanks and their few helicopters. Meanwhile, other NATO countries are happy for us to provide their insurance, without paying an adequate premium. So we're overstretched and under-supplied, and when Russia re- arms and starts parking troops next to the Georgian oil pipelines, or stakes a claim in the Arctic, or surrounds Norwegian oil rigs, or when Iran starts playing with nuclear fission, we have neither the forces nor the stamina to stand up to them. But our own security demands that we should.

Sorting that lot out is not going to be an enviable job at all.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.

busy
 

About the ASI

The Adam Smith Institute is the UK's leading innovator of free-market economic and social policies. Politically independent and non-profit, the Institute promotes its ideas through reports, briefings, events, media appearances, and its website and blog. For further information, click here.

rss180
facebook180
twitter180
youtube180

Join our email list

Email info@adamsmith.org if you would like to subscribe to our fortnightly e-bulletin.

Support the ASI

Enter Amount: