Wednesday, November 27, 2024

 GB News invite Trump to ‘invade Britain’


Ever the patriots, GBeebies are calling for Britain to cede its independence to Trump's America.


 


Patriotic news channel GB News has encouraged president-elect Trump to invade Britain and make the country the 51st state of America as they continue to grapple with life under a progressive left government.

Darren Grimes, who campaigned for Britain to exit the European Union in 2016 in order to regain its independence, now believes life would be better if the country was gobbled up by Trump’s America which lies some 4,000 miles away.

Campaign group Stop Funding Hate posted a clip of the right-wing commentator suggesting that life in the UK has become so unpalatable since Labour was elected in July that he is now passionately anti-independence.


Another clip, posted on a nameless nationalist account on X, noted that the suggestion might sound funny, but it can’t be “any worse than being under Starlin Starmer”, in reference to the former Communist leader.



Patriotic to a fault, this lot, eh!


Britain Faces a Dilemma: Cozy Up to Trump or Reconnect With Europe?


Opinion
Mark Landler and Patricia Cohen
The New York Times
Tuesday - 26 November 2024

When Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain joined President Emmanuel Macron of France in Paris last week to celebrate Armistice Day — the first British leader to do so since Winston Churchill in 1944 — it was a striking illustration of his Labour government’s desire to reset relations with Europe.

But despite the rich symbolism and the palpable warmth between two centrist leaders, the visit was overshadowed by Donald J. Trump’s victory in the American presidential election a week earlier. With his history of antagonism toward the European Union, Mr. Trump’s return complicates Mr. Starmer’s intention to “turn a corner on Brexit” and pursue what he called a “once-in-a-generation opportunity” to rebuild ties with the rest of Europe.

What could have been an economically profitable, if politically delicate, bridge-building exercise for Britain’s Labour government now threatens to become more of a binary choice between the E.U. and the United States.

Closer British trade ties with Europe, warn diplomats and people in Mr. Trump’s orbit, could come at the expense of relations with the incoming American president, who is a confirmed Brexiteer and cheered when his last British counterpart, Boris Johnson, picked fights with the EU.

“If the UK re-engages in these political and economic ties with the EU, it makes it less likely that Trump will go for a free-trade agreement with the UK,” said Stephen Moore, a senior economic adviser to the Trump campaign.

“You guys have to decide,” he said in an interview, addressing the British public. “Do you want to be more like Europe or the US?”

For now, British officials reject that as a false choice. Mr. Starmer has balanced his diplomatic outreach to Europe with an assiduous effort to cultivate Mr. Trump. The two met for dinner in Trump Tower in September, during which Mr. Trump told Mr. Starmer, “We are friends,” according to a person who was in the room.

Peter Mandelson, a Labour Party grandee under consideration to be Britain’s next ambassador to Washington, recently said on a Times of London podcast that in the three-way relationship between Britain, Europe and the United States, “We have got to find a way to have our cake and eat it.”

Such an outcome, economists said, could feature advances on two tracks: With Europe, Britain could take more aggressive steps to smooth trade friction, like more closely aligning rules on agriculture, linking carbon tax systems, and allowing greater mobility across borders for young people. With the United States, it could pursue, if not a full-scale free-trade agreement, a partial deal that would cover strategically important areas like the digital economy.

A closer economic relationship with the European Union need not come at the expense of good relations with the United States, said Marley Morris, an associate director at the Institute for Public Policy Research in London.

“They’ll want to do everything they can to try to work collaboratively with Trump,” he said of the Labour government.

Yet even when Britain was more ideologically in sync with the United States during Mr. Johnson’s premiership and Mr. Trump’s first term, the two sides failed to negotiate a trade agreement. This time, Mr. Trump’s trade policy seems more focused on his plan to impose across-the-board tariffs of up to 20 percent on trading partners, including, potentially, the EU and Britain.

In that scenario, diplomats said, Mr. Starmer’s best hope may not be a trade deal but rather targeted exemptions from tariffs.

At one level, far-reaching tariffs by the United States on the European Union “could be an unintentional gift to the UK,” said Abraham L. Newman, a political scientist at Georgetown University. It would put a “lot of pressure on the EU to expand its market,” he said, “and the UK is an obvious opportunity for them.”

Tariffs push “them together in a way that they’ve been pushed apart in the last few years,” Professor Newman added.

But while Britain and the European Union could make common cause in responding to American tariffs, it is equally likely that a new wave of protectionism could divide them, diplomats said, particularly if Britain tried to cut its own deal with Mr. Trump that would exempt it from certain tariffs.

“If the UK did it alone, there would be a price to pay,” said Peter Ricketts, a former British national security adviser. “The US would demand concessions, like access for its genetically modified beef, which could create problems with UK consumers and would cause problems with Europe.”

Britain will not be able to lift regulations when it comes to trade with the United States while still complying with the European Union’s rules, said Mark Blyth, professor of international economics at Brown University.

“If you bandwagon with Trump,” Professor Blyth said, “you’re never going to get EU market access.”

That pressure could intensify further if Mr. Trump stokes new trade tensions with China. At a Group of 20 summit in Brazil this week, Mr. Starmer met with President Xi Jinping of China and declared afterward that he wanted “consistent, durable, respectful” relations between Britain and China.

But Kim Darroch, who served as the British ambassador to Washington during the first Trump term, said: “If the US gets into a trade war with China, they may well come to Europe and the UK and say, ‘You need to join us in tariffs.’ There are some really hard choices coming down the road.”

If Britain is forced to make that choice, some argue that it should throw its lot in with Europe. Trade across the English Channel is more than two and a half times greater than that between Britain and the United States. British exports to the EU totaled 342 billion pounds, or $433 billion last year, 42 percent of its total exports. Imports from the EU reached 466 pounds, or $590 billion, 52 percent of its total.

Rebuilding those ties would help recapture some of the growth lost because of Britain’s departure from the EU. A thicket of red tape, border delays and extra costs now ensnarl cross-channel trade. British exporters complain that they must monitor gas usage to comply with the EU’s carbon border tax. Shellfish exporters note that veterinarians must certify shipments of crabs and lobsters headed to France and Spain.

While the trade negotiations have so far been limited to relatively minor issues like accepting European veterinary safety standards, the British Chamber of Commerce has set out a long list of reforms that could go much further in smoothing trade.

Mr. Trump’s skepticism of NATO, and the growing belief that Europe needs to rely less on the United States for its security, is a further incentive to cooperate. Together, Britain and France account for half of Europe’s military capabilities, at a time when security and economic policies are more closely intertwined.

François Hollande, the former French president, said recently that Mr. Starmer “needs to position himself as a European leader.”

Drawing closer to Europe would not be easy for the prime minister, even without Mr. Trump. Britain’s Tory-leaning press remains openly hostile to the EU and will be quick to condemn his rapprochement. Labour politicians worry that a pro-Europe strategy could hurt the party with voters in the so-called “red wall” districts, many of whom backed Brexit but came back to Labour in the last election.

Britain is also instinctively reluctant to do anything that could jeopardize its “special relationship” with the United States, even if successive American presidents have seemed less nostalgic about it.

“I’m sure that for the next while, Starmer & Co. will do all they can to get a good deal from Europe, as well as the US,” said Peter Kellner, former head of the polling firm, YouGov. “But I think there may come a point where they can’t ride both horses, and they will have to choose.”

The New York Times






Iran Opts for Dialogue with Europe ahead of Trump's Return to Office


President Donald Trump shows a signed Presidential Memorandum after delivering a statement on the Iran nuclear deal from the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 8, 2018, in Washington. (AP)

Paris: Michel Abou Najm
26 November 2024 
AD ـ 25 Jumada Al-Ula 1446 AH

It is difficult to predict what the outcomes will be of the discussions between Iran, France, Britain and Germany about Tehran’s nuclear program in Geneva on Friday.

Last week, the UN atomic watchdog's 35-nation Board of Governors passed a resolution again ordering Iran to urgently improve cooperation with the agency and requesting a "comprehensive" report aimed at pressuring Iran into fresh nuclear talks.

Britain, France, Germany and the United States, which proposed the resolution, dismissed as insufficient and insincere a last-minute Iranian move to cap its stock of uranium that is close to weapons-grade. Diplomats said Iran's move was conditional on scrapping the resolution.


Iran has been weighing its response to the censure, debating whether to increase uranium enrichment or by being open to the proposals expected at the Geneva talks.

The discussions may seek a new nuclear deal instead of the 2015 one with Tehran that is in tatters.

As it stands, Iran is likely to opt for negotiations instead of escalation due to a number of internal, regional and international reasons.

Diplomatic sources in Paris noted US President-elect Donald Trump’s appointments of officials handling Middle East affairs, underscoring their unreserved support to Israel and clear hostility to Iran.

These appointments may lead Iran to think twice before resorting to any escalation.

Even before Trump has taken office, his circles have said that the new president will take “several executive decisions related to Iran and that will be declared on his first day in office.” The decisions will be binding and do not need Congress’ approval.

However, Trump is unpredictable and the sources did not rule out the surprise possibility of him striking a deal with Iran related to its nuclear program and behavior in the Middle East. This means that Tehran will have to make major concessions, including abandoning its policy of “exporting the revolution”.

This remains a far-fatched possibility, however. In all likelihood, Washington under Trump will return to his “maximum pressure” policy against Iran on political, diplomatic and economic levels to make it return to the negotiations table and agree on a deal that completely ends its nuclear ambitions.

So, at the Geneva meeting on Friday, Tehran will seek to achieve two main goals: a nuclear breakthrough during what remains of US President Joe Biden’s time in office, and attempt to lure the European powers away from Trump.

The truth is that Tehran is wading in the unknown. One only has to go back to Trump’s past statements about how Israel should have struck Iran’s nuclear facilities during its October 26 attack on the country.

Trump has already shown Iran his hardline stance when he ordered the assassination of Quds Forces leader Qassem Soleimani near Baghdad airport in January 2020.

Based on this, Tehran is scrambling to avert a joint American-Israeli strike that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been dreaming of.

Iran is vulnerable now due to two main reasons: the Israeli strike in October weakened Iran’s air defenses and Netanyahu has said that Israeli jets can now run rampant over Iran without any worries.

And Tehran can no longer rely on its allied militias to threaten Israel with all-out war. Hamas in Gaza is no longer in a position to threaten Israel and neither is Hezbollah in Lebanon.

So, Iran now finds itself exposed and would rather turn to negotiations with Europe than risk escalation that would cost it dearly with Israel now that it can no longer rely on Hamas and Hezbollah.



TRUMP'S 25% TARIFFS 

ON CANADA AND MEXICO

ARE NOT ABOUT 

FENTANYL OR IMMIGRATION

THEY ARE ABOUT BREAKING 

USMCA/NAFTA 2


BECAUSE CANADA AND MEXICO 

ARE SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENTS



 


Trump calls for China to execute drug dealers as he vows drastic steps against Mexico and Canada 'border invasion'

26 November 2024, 07:00

Donald Trump
Donald Trump. Picture: Alamy

By Kit Heren

Donald Trump has called for China to execute its fentanyl producers as he also pledged to impose tariffs on Mexico and Canada to crack down on drugs and illegal immigration

The tariffs, if implemented, could dramatically raise prices on everything from gas to automobiles.

The US is the largest importer of goods in the world, with Mexico, China and Canada as its top three suppliers, according to the most recent Census data.

Mr Trump made the threats in a pair of posts on his Truth Social site Monday evening in which he railed against an influx of illegal migrants, even though southern border crossings have been hovering at a four-year low.

"On January 20th, as one of my many first Executive Orders, I will sign all necessary documents to charge Mexico and Canada a 25% Tariff on ALL products coming into the United States, and its ridiculous Open Borders," he wrote, complaining that "thousands of people are pouring through Mexico and Canada, bringing Crime and Drugs at levels never seen before," even though violent crime is down from pandemic highs.

He said the new tariffs would remain in place "until such time as Drugs, in particular, Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!"

Read more: US judge asked to drop 2020 election interference charges against Donald Trump

Read more: Donald Trump planning to 'kick transgender troops out of US military' on return to White House

Fentanyl pills seized by U.S. Custom and Border Protection officers
Fentanyl pills seized by U.S. Custom and Border Protection officers. Picture: Alamy

Mr Trump also turned his ire to China, saying he has "had many talks with China about the massive amounts of drugs, in particular Fentanyl, being sent into the United States - But to no avail."

He added: "Representatives of China told me that they would institute their maximum penalty, that of death, for any drug dealers caught doing this but, unfortunately, they never followed through, and drugs are pouring into our Country, mostly through Mexico, at levels never seen before,' the incoming president complained.

"Until such time as they stop, we will be charging China an additional 10% Tariff, above any additional Tariffs, on all of their many products coming into the United States of America.

"Thank you for your attention to this matter."

A US Customs and Border Protection agent searches an automobile for contraband in the line to enter the United States
A US Customs and Border Protection agent searches an automobile for contraband in the line to enter the United States. Picture: Getty

The Chinese Embassy in Washington cautioned on Monday that there will be losers on all sides if there is a trade war.

"China-US economic and trade cooperation is mutually beneficial in nature," embassy spokesman Liu Pengyu posted on X.

"No one will win a trade war or a #tariff war."

He added that China had taken steps in the last year to help stem drug trafficking.

It is unclear whether Mr Trump will actually go through with the threats or if he is using them as a negotiating tactic before he takes office in the new year.

Arrests for illegally crossing the border from Mexico have been falling and remained around four-year lows in October, according to the most recent US numbers.

The Border Patrol made 56,530 arrests in October, less than one-third of the tally from last October.

Much of America's fentanyl is smuggled from Mexico.

Border seizures of the drug rose sharply under president Joe Biden, and US officials tallied about 12,247 kilograms of fentanyl seized in the 2024 government budget year, compared with 1,154 kilograms in 2019 when Mr Trump was president.

Mr Trump's nominee for treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, if confirmed, would be one of several officials responsible for imposing tariffs on other nations. He has on several occasions said tariffs are a means of negotiation with other countries.

He wrote in a Fox News op-ed last week, before his nomination, that tariffs are "a useful tool for achieving the president's foreign policy objectives. Whether it is getting allies to spend more on their own defence, opening foreign markets to US exports, securing cooperation on ending illegal immigration and interdicting fentanyl trafficking, or deterring military aggression, tariffs can play a central role."

If Mr Trump were to move forward with the threatened tariffs, the new taxes would pose an enormous challenge to the economies of Canada and Mexico, in particular.

They would also throw into doubt the reliability of the 2020 trade deal brokered in large part by Mr Trump, which is up for review in 2026.

Spokespeople for Canada's ambassador to Washington and its deputy prime minister, Chrystia Freeland, who chairs a special Cabinet committee on Canada-US relations to address concerns about another Mr Trump presidency, did not immediately provide comment.

Mr Trump's promise to launch a mass deportation effort is a top focus for the Cabinet committee, Freeland has said.

A senior Canadian official had said before Mr Trump's posts that Canadian officials are expecting Mr Trump to issue executive orders on trade and the border as soon as he assumes office.

The official was not authorised to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Mexico's Foreign Relations Department and Economy Department also had no immediate reaction to Mr Trump's statements.



Bad ads banned by medical mag

The British Medical Journal has set a global precedent and banned adverts from banks that back fossil fuels.


Brendan Montague 
| 26th November 2024 |
THE ECOLOGIST
Creative Commons 4.0


International Labour Organisation / Creative Commons 2.0


The British Medical Journal (BMJ) has become the first major publication in the world to announce it will no longer accept advertisements from banks that fund fossil fuels.

As a result of the policy, advertising by several major UK high street banks, including Barclays, HSBC, NatWest, Santander and Lloyds, who all finance the fossil fuel industry, will not be permitted across the BMJ’s publications.

Dr Hilary Neve, GP, Plymouth has long campaigned to stop Barclays ads being placed in the BMJ. They told The Ecologist: "So many organisations declare a climate emergency but then do not act in accordance with this.

Funder

"As doctors we see the devastating impact that our heating world has on people's health and know that banks like Barclays that fund fossil fuels are a big part of this. We are pleased that the BMJ listened to us and has now banned adverts for these banks. We hope many other organisations will follow their lead".

Veronica Wignall, from the campaign group Adfree Cities, said: “We welcome the BMJ’s principled step to prevent major banks like Barclays from health-washing their public image while they continue to funnel billions into the world’s worst polluters.

“Bans on advertising for fossil fuel companies are becoming commonplace, to remove misinformation and protect the environment and our health. By the same logic we need to see an end to advertising for the financial institutions that are bankrolling climate breakdown.”

The announcement builds on the publication’s decision in 2020 to exclude advertisements from fossil fuel companies, on the grounds that advertising such companies is incompatible with global health priorities.

The BMJ stated in its editorial: “We will now strengthen our advertising policy further, following criticisms from readers that we carried advertising in our weekly print edition for Barclays Bank, a major funder of the fossil fuel industry.

Finance



We are pleased that the BMJ listened to us and has now banned adverts for banks investing in fossil fuels.


"We are not banning advertising from all banks, but we will allow it only from banks that do not fund fossil fuel companies…We seek to lead by example and do what we ask of our readers. Climate commitments and pledges are important, but they are meaningless without action.”

This groundbreaking policy shift comes after pressure from The BMJ’s readership, after medics expressed concerns that providing advertising space for fossil fuel financiers is inconsistent with the BMJ's editorial policy and commitment to sustainability.

The Journal received backlash after a series of advertisements for Barclays, Europe’s biggest funder of fossil fuels, appeared in the BMJ print edition in February and March 2024. Barclays poured £181.142 billion into fossil fuels between 2016-2023, including more than £18.5 billion in 2023 alone.

The BMJ’s updated policy marks growing support from health professionals for an end to high-carbon advertising, echoing the crucial role of the health sector in the eventual ban on marketing for tobacco products.

In October 2024, the UK Faculty of Public Health published new guidance calling for restrictions on fossil fuel marketing, to protect health. Medics in the Netherlands, Australia and Canada are also campaigning for policies to end advertising by fossil fuel companies, fossil fuel financiers and other high-carbon sectors that are failing to decarbonise, such as aviation.

Focus now turns to The Lancet, The BMJ’s closest competitor. The 2024 edition of the renowned annual Lancet Countdown report revealed that the health threats of climate change have “reached record-breaking levels”. However, The Lancet has yet to rule out running advertisements from fossil fuel companies and the banks that finance them.

This Author
Brendan Montague is editor of The Ecologist.
'Fury' over Scrooge's gravestone being smashed

Kate Baldock
BBC Radio Shropshire
Andrew Dawkins
BBC News, West Midlands
Helen Ball
The inscribed stone has lain in the graveyard next to St Chad’s Church since the movie was released

People in Shrewsbury have said they are "furious", after the "disgraceful" smashing of a gravestone for Ebenezer Scrooge.

The inscribed stone, used as a prop in a 1984 film adaptation of A Christmas Carol, has lain in the graveyard next to St Chad’s Church in the town for four decades.

Town council clerk Helen Ball has said staff would assess whether it might be possible to repair the broken gravestone.

"I'm just really furious, because why would they do it when people go there to see it?," resident Christine told BBC Radio Shropshire.


Christine (right, pictured with Linda on the left) said "they've ruined it" following the smashing of the gravestone

Nigel Hinton, a town guide, was planning Christmas Carol tours this December to coincide with the 40th birthday of the film based on the Charles Dickens classic.

He said the stone's condition had "attracted even more attention".

"It's very upsetting," said Mr Hinton about the damage.

"It's a very iconic piece of prop left over from a film, which had a major impact on Shrewsbury's tourism I think.

"People have been going along sympathising and really having a look at it."

He pointed out it was formerly a gravestone that was "unreadable".



Martin Wood, who hosts Christmas Carol tours around Shrewsbury and appeared in the film 40 years ago, said "we believe it was actually a gravestone for somebody else".

He added: "The film company had to do a lot of research to sort of try and discover who was underneath it before they got permission... to actually use it and put Ebenezer's name on the top of it.

"So, yeah, I mean it's been there for donkeys years."




In terms of its broken state, Mr Wood said: "When I saw the photographs, I thought 'why?'

"What pleasure do they actually get from doing something like this?"

Christine felt a tradition had been lost.

"It's a tradition, an old tradition and they've ruined it."

"My grandkids love going ..honestly, but they've ruined it."

And resident Linda said: "For people of our age to be able to tell your grandchildren about it, [it's] a special thing, isn't it?

She added residents had "grown up" with the film.

CYMRU/WALES

Unison healthcare support workers announce strike days




MORNING STAR  Tuesday, November 26, 2024


HEALTHCARE support workers in Swansea Bay have voted for strike action, their union said today.

Unison Cymru Wales said staff at hospitals in Swansea, Neath and Port Talbot are to strike for two days over pay.

Staff at eight hospitals in the area, including Neath Port Talbot, Morriston and Singleton, are set to walk out on December 10 and 11.

According to NHS guidance, healthcare support workers on salary band 2 should only provide personal care such as bathing and feeding patients.

But the union said the healthcare assistants undertake clinical tasks such as monitoring blood, performing electrocardiogram tests and inserting cannulas.

Unison Cymru regional organiser Lianne Owen said: “Healthcare support workers are some of the lowest-paid staff in the NHS.

“Yet they are routinely expected to carry out complex duties for which they’re not being paid.”

A Swansea Bay University health board spokesperson said: “We remain committed to our ongoing dialogue with Unison locally, and to resolving and progressing matters by working with our wider NHS colleagues and trade union partners across Wales.”

The Magic Number Is 2.5 in the UK


 November 26, 2024
Facebook

Photograph Source: Brayden A. – CC BY-SA 4.0

In Europe it can be 2.0 or 2.5, while in the US it’s somewhere between 4 and 6

Those numbers in the above headline are the percentages of Gross Domestic Product that each country’s government and politicians figure needs to be spent on the military annually in order to be “safe” from potential Russian aggression.

Just to give readers a “sense” (if such a term can be applied to the concept of defense by percentages of national economic activity), that 4- 6% “safety” figure for the US represents an the share US GDP that military spending in the 2022 fiscal year represents. In FY2022 the actual dollar figure for he total military budget was somewhere between the $768.5 billion which the Office of Management and Budget reports went directly to the Pentagon and all the armed forces branches under its jurisdiction, and the $1.58 trillion figure which also includes all the military spending that goes to other agencies like the NSA, CIA, Energy Department (nuclear arsenal), NATO, Veterans Affairs, etc. and interest on the national debt for America’s wars.

Now think about this for a moment. The world is currently at the edge of a precipice like the sheer face of Half Dome in Yosemite National Park portrayed above as the US has been prodding and provoking Russia over Ukraine now for a decade, threatening to bring that former soviet of the old USSR into NATO. Once Russia invaded Ukraine to prevent such a thing from happening right on it’s eastern border, Washington has been providing advanced weapons as well as satellite intelligence to the Ukrainian military to help it kill Russian soldiers. Most recently, the provocations have reached the scary point of providing Ukraine with longer-range missiles which can strike deep inside Russia itself to hit military targets and key infrastructure like rail centers and oil depots. Britain, America’s faithful poodle, has joined in this dangerous game by providing its own longer-range cruise missile the Storm Shadow.

Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin has responded by accurately declaring as “acts of war” the escalatory actions by the US and UK in supplying these new weapons to Ukrainian troops, training them in how to use them, and providing them with the use the precise geolocation data from US military satellites necessary for successful guidance to targets inside Russia . He followed this up by openly changing Russia’s rules for the use of nuclear weapons to include targeting any nuclear powers that provide non-nuclear powers with the weapons to attack Russia.

Certainly anyone can understand the logic of that change. If Russia were for example to give Cuba or Venezuela missiles that could strike Florida or the US Gulf Coast and one of those countries were to start firing them at US targets, and Russia began flying in or shipping in more rockets, would the US refrain from attacking Russia, or its planes and ships and limit itself to bombing Cuba or Venezuela? Of course not!

To make matters even worse, after d Putin sent a powerful message by ordering the firing of a new Russian hypersonic strategic missile with a range of over 3000 miles to hit a city in central Ukraine with six independently maneuverable warheads. The missile, which Putin said was a “test,” took 15 minutes from its launch site in central Asia to reach the target \city of Dnipro. The explosions there were relatively small and involved conventional explosives, but the point was made that the same warheads are designed to carry nuclear bombs.

Putin pointedly said that the UK itself or any country providing weapons to Ukraine to strike targets in Russia, not just Ukraine itself, could be targets of Russian missiles like this new one called the Oreshnik.

The Pentagon confirmed that it has no anti-missile system that could defend against this new Russian missile. Okay, so what is all this nonsense about assigning percentages of GDP for military spending that are supposed to assure the safety of the US and the nations of NATO Europe all about?

If Russia has nuclear missiles that cannot be stopped, how is increasing the percent of GDP spent on a country’s military got anything to do with keeping the country “safe”?

There has been no word fromBiden’s White House or British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s No, 10 Downing Street about reversing the permission granted to Ukraine to use UK and US-supplied longer range rockets to hit deep inside Russia, as Ukraine has just. done. No word either on whether more such missiles will be supplied to Ukraine, as that country’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called for.

If this fraught situation doesn’t sound insane, I don’t know what does.. Here’s the situation: Russia’s over-confident army was initially bloodied by Ukrainian forces backed with US and NATO supplied weapons, but eventually its much larger military figured out how to deal with those weapons and it has been steadily degrading Ukrainian forces, who have reportedly suffered 500,000 casualties and are losing ground daily. The US and UK missiles, unless supplied in vast quantities, will not turn the tide of battle, yet even if the small number currently n Ukrainian hands are used they could spark a Russian strike on Ukraine’s main government buildings in Kiev or even the huge US embassy compound there (the US Embassy was evacuated a few days ago because of fears that could happen). Then where are we? (It’s an act of war to deliberately attack a country’s embassy.)

Wars Have often begun small but then grow in tit-for-tat escalations. When nuclear weapons are added to that equation the time between steps on the upward-moving stairway can occur very quickly, as generals look at an opponent’s missiles, and their own and wonder if they hold their fire whether they will find their own missiles struck before they can launched, leaving them at the mercy of the enemy’s nukes. Given that risk, in a crisis a leader or even local commander could easily decide that if “use it or lose it” is the operative situation, launching first is the safest bet. And then it’s game over. Full scale nuclear war is on.

And all those percentage-of-GDP spending won’t have accomplished a damned thing.

The absurdity of it all was highlighted today as it was reported that Britain’s PM Starmer, after approving the launch of a British Storm Shadow missile by Ukraine into Russia, said Britain, which is facing a budget crisis at present that has it cutting winter heating subsidies for poor people, has “no defense” against a Russian missile attack, but that he would boost Britain’s military spending, despite the budget crisis, from 2% to 2.5%.

Would such a spending boost offer protection? Not when designing and building a whole new generation anti-missile system takes years and with no guarantee of success.

All he’s doing is offering magical thinking to the anxious masses.

The proper response to this current situation is to call a halt to escalation in Ukraine and negotiate an immediate cease fire between Russia and Ukraine with negotiations for an end to that to commence at the same time.

The idea of defense budgeting by percent of GDP has been idiotic from the outset. After all, GDP actually shrank during the recent Covid-19 pandemic, which automatically made the existing military spending a larger percentage of each country’s total economic activity, but with no gain in national security of course.

This kind of numerical nonsense would never be permitted if the budget were about education or healthcare spending.

It’s only in the area of national security where huge parts of the spending is kept secret, hidden in black boxes like the CIA budget.

And it turns out that all that $1.58 trillion the US is spending on “defense” (sic) isn’t making us or the world any safer. In fact it appears to be putting us in the greatest danger humanity has been in since the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, except that back then we had a brilliant man, John F Kennedy, who knew when to fold ‘em and backed away from a nuclear war by secretly agreeing to remove nuclear tipped Jupiter missiles the US had provocatively placed just inside Turkey’s border with the Soviet Union — the whole reason Soviet Premiere Nikita Khrushchev started setting up nuclear missiles in Cuba in the first place.

Now we have a brain-addled lame-duck President Biden with only weeks left in his White House tenure threatening us all with nuclear war in an attempt to leave office saying he “stood with Ukraine.”

That’s 100% nuts!

This article by Dave Lindorff appeared originally in ThisCantBeHappening! on its new Substack platform at https://thiscantbehappening.substack.com/. Please check out the new site and consider signing up for a cut-rate subscription that will be available until the end of the month.