The last gasps of the British Empire


by Katryntjie, on 05/08/2009 at 19:32
Even in the decades after it lost its empire, Britain strode the world like a pocket superpower. Its economic strength and cultural heft, its nuclear-backed military might, its extraordinary relationship with America—all these things helped this small island nation to punch well above its weight class. Now all that is changing as the bills come due on Britain's role in last year's financial meltdown, the rescue of the banks, and the ensuing recession. Suddenly, the sun that once never set on the British Empire is casting long shadows over what's left of Britain's imperial ambitions, and the country is having to rethink its role in the world—perhaps as Little Britain, certainly as a lesser Britain.

This is a watershed moment for the United Kingdom. The country's public debt is soaring, possibly doubling to a record high of 100 percent of GDP over the next five years, according to the International Monetary Fund. The National Institute for Economic and Social Research forecasts that it will take six years for per capita income to reach early-2008 levels again. The effects will cascade across government. Budgets will be slashed at the Ministry of Defense and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, affecting Britain's ability to project power, hard and soft. And there's little that can be done to reverse the trend, either by Prime Minister Gordon Brown or by the incoming government of David Cameron's Conservatives, assuming they win a general election that must be held within the next 10 months. As William Hague, Cameron's deputy and shadow foreign secretary, said in a recent speech: "It will become more difficult over time for Britain to exert on world affairs the influence which we are used to."

History has been closing in on Britain for some time. The rise of giant emerging economies like China and India always meant that Britain would have a smaller seat at the increasingly crowded top table of nations. It also meant that the United States would recalibrate the so-called special relationship as it sought new partners and alliances, inevitably shrinking the disproportionate role Britain has long played in world affairs. Brown's predecessor, Tony Blair, made a final stab at greatness with what amounted to a 51st-state strategy: by locking Britain into America's wars—on terror, in Afghanistan, and in Iraq—London achieved an importance it hadn't had since Churchill and the war. But whatever advantage Britain gained in the short term was wiped out by the political damage Blair's strategy caused at home. Ordinary Britons and even members of the British establishment grew increasingly critical of what they saw as London's subservient relationship with Washington. Blair's authority was diminished, his political agenda at home suffered as a result, and it became clear that Britain's geopolitical default setting would no longer be to automatically follow America's lead. In fact, Blair may merely have postponed the inevitable: a lesser Britain is a consequence of world events, not unlike the slow relative decline of the United States, which finds itself today where Britain was at its apogee.

The global recession has hit virtually every country, but Britain more than most. The great engine room of British prosperity, the financial sector, now feels like an anchor. Britain has slipped into deflation—a decline in general price levels—for the first time in 50 years. The IMF believes Britain's economic slump will be deeper and longer than that of any other advanced economy. The number of Britons claiming unemployment benefits has jumped from 1.3 million (4.6 percent of the workforce) in 1999 to more than 2 million and is on track to top 3 million. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development says Britain's recovery may begin later this year, but will lag behind those of other rich countries like Japan and the United States. At the moment, Britain is arguably saddled with the worst public finances of any major nation, thanks to voracious spending in recent years and to borrowing that is growing faster than in other developed nations or even fast-growing developing ones. Britain is so heavily indebted that one political commentator dubbed it "Iceland-on-Thames," suggesting Britain could follow that nation into bankruptcy.

What makes the British case stand out even more is that it is the only country of its size in recent history that has sought such a disproportionately large role on the world stage. During the Cold War, Margaret Thatcher saw herself as second only to Ronald Reagan as a leader who helped to bring down the Soviet Union and make the world safe for capitalism. During Blair's decade in office, from 1997 to 2007, Britain fought three wars—in Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq—in which its military participation was right behind that of the United States. Now that's changing. "Although we are a relatively wealthy country and we have a seat on the U.N. Security Council, we are a power in decline," says Ian Kearns of the Institute for Public Policy Research, which recently conducted a British security review. Paddy Ashdown, a former leader of the Liberal Democrats who took part in the IPPR study, recalled the gibe by the late U.S. secretary of state Dean Acheson in 1962: "Great Britain has lost an empire and has not yet found a role." Britain found its footing for a while, but Acheson's words sting again today. "If you were to say we haven't found a role," says Lord Ashdown, "it's true."

The U.K. still maintains one of the largest defense budgets in the world, but probably not for much longer. Recently, as the number of British deaths in Afghanistan has risen dramatically during the summer fighting season, both Labour and the Conservatives have felt obliged to say they would not reduce defense spending, so as not to put troops at greater risk. But in the longer term, experts say big cuts are inevitable. In a recent paper for the Royal United Services Institute, Malcolm Chalmers estimates that the Ministry of Defense budget will be cut by 11 percent in real terms over the next six years. Other estimates are much higher. Ashdown, a former Royal Marine, has said the annual £35 billion Ministry of Defense budget might have to be cut by almost a quarter, which would put Britain more in line with traditionally lower-spending continental powers.

Britain's role in the world will shrink with its budget. A cash-starved British Army would have important implications for NATO, already weakened by the fuzziness of its post–Cold War mission. As it stands, Britain is usually second only to the United States in terms of troop commitments to NATO operations such as Afghanistan, and its loyalty to the cause has encouraged other European NATO partners to do their part. Flagging British commitment will have the opposite, depressing effect and could further alter transatlantic alliances by boosting the relative power of France, which only recently reentered NATO's integrated military-command structure. Long before Britain's withdrawal from Iraq earlier this year, the U.S. military hierarchy was concerned about growing British domestic opposition. Now, as the focus shifts to Afghanistan and British military casualties rise there, public support for that war is waning, too; in a July poll, a majority said the war is "unwinnable" and that British troops should be withdrawn immediately. It hasn't helped that troops and officers have complained of equipment shortages. It was the cause of some embarrassment a few weeks ago that Gen. Richard Dannatt, the head of the British Army, had to hitch a ride on an American Black Hawk helicopter while visiting British troops in Helmand province because a British chopper wasn't available.

The future of Britain's nuclear force, the ultimate symbol of a great power, is also uncertain. Britain's submarine-based Trident missile system is due to be replaced over the next decade at a cost of some £20 billion. But according to a recent Guardian/ICM poll, 54 percent of the British people say Britain should give up its nuclear deterrent altogether. That's unlikely, but it may force the next government to find a cheap way to extend Trident's life span. Traditionally, being a nuclear power was one way of securing permanent membership on the U.N. Security Council, and any downgrading of Britain's deterrent could strengthen the demands of big emerging powers that they should have more seats on the council, possibly at Europe's and the U.K.'s expense.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/209953
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3 Replies
1 Katryntjie, on 01/09/2009 at 17:52
Die son het inderdaad altyd oor die Britse Ryk geskyn
2009-09-01 01:05


Ná die Kongres van Wenen in 1875 het die Europese vorste se geskarrel om kolonies in Afrika te bekom byna koorsagtig geword.

Die Europese vorste het eenvoudig die kaart van Afrika rondom ’n konferensietafel verdeel en die probleem waarmee Afrika ’n eeu later steeds geworstel het, geskep, naamlik om sonder enige ander oorwegings stamme te verdeel en tradisionele, natuurlike verdelings te ignoreer.

Engeland was natuurlik lankal in die proses van kolonialisering oor die wêreld heen, want dit was juis in Engeland waar die sogenaamde nywerheidsrevolusie twee eeue tevore reeds begin het.

Met die vestiging van fabriekswese was daar twee kandinale behoeftes: meer grondstowwe en groter afsetgebiede, oftewel markte. Die meganisering van fabrieke het ook ’n ander uitwerking gehad deurdat masjinerie talle werkers vervang het en werkloses het uiteraard ’n belangrike bron vir die aanvulling van die Britse leër gebied.

Met Engeland en Nederland kort op die hakke van die eerste Portugese ontdekkingsreise was die Engelse vlag spoedig in talle wêrelddele ’n bekende gesig. In Suid-Afrika was die tekens van verengelsing duidelik aan die Kaap. Die Britse militêre stelsel van besoldigde soldate in formele militêre eenhede het die kommandostelsel van die NOIK-tydperk vervang.

Die beginsel van die beskerming van huis en haard deur kommando’s is verwerp. Teen 1842 moes die Republiek Natalia swig voor die Britse aanval by Congella. Die daaropvolgende tydperk het die Xhosas telkens met die Engelse soldate gebots in ses grensoorloë. Die Zoeloe-koninkryk was die volgende teiken.

’n Moderne Britse krygshistorikus bekla die lot van die Britse leër in die 19de eeu met: “In three successive years they had to fight against Xhosas (1878), Zulus (1879) and Boers (1880).”

Die geskiedenis van die 19de eeu kan nie in ’n paar woorde opgesom word nie, maar die feit was dat daar Britse kolonies in Noord-Amerika, insluitend Kanada, Australië, Indië, Suidoos-Asië, in die Sjangai-omgewing van China, talle eilande in die Atlantiese Oseaan en natuurlik ook talle kolonies en protektorate in Afrika was. Die doel van dié kolonialisering was altyd gegrond op ’n handelsmotief, maar daar was ook ander onderliggende dryfvere.

Die London Missionary Society het die nuwe wêrelde gesien as sendingvelde en hulle het probeer om die Christelike godsdiens daar te vestig.

Dit was nie altyd verhewe bo politieke oogmerke nie. In die Suid-Afrikaanse geskiedenis kan verwys word na eerwaardes Reid en Van de Kemp en dr. Philip wat ook ’n twyfelagtige politieke rol gespeel het.

Daar was ook nog ’n bepaalde Britse verwaandheid deurdat deurgaans ’n beskawingsveldtog begin is, maar met ’n rassistiese ondertoon. Die Indiese beskawing, met die klem op beskawing, was baie oud, maar heel verskillend van die Britse siening.

Dit kan tereg gesê word in die tydperk van koningin Victoria was daar Britse imperiale belange rondom die wêreld en dat, omdat die aarde rond is, die son op enige gegewe oomblik geskyn het oor ’n deel van die Britse imperiale ryk.

Die stelling, “the sun never sets on the British Empire”, is dus waar, maar uit ’n moderne demokratiese oogpunt waar waarde geheg word aan menseregte en die reg op selfbeskikking, is dit nie noodwendig ’n vleiende stelling nie. Dit bring ook ’n bepaalde perspektief na die vorige artikel waar die Anglo-Boereoorlog se oorsake uitgespel is as die gevolg van ’n bosing tussen imperialisme en nasionalisme.

http://www.volksblad.com/Content/Suid-Afrika/Nuus/2114/f026f4dd08e94bec893e7f2ef58e8880/01-09-2009-01-05/Die_son_het_inderdaad_altyd_oor_die_Britse_Ryk_geskyn
2 Katryntjie, on 15/10/2009 at 20:00
Royal powers review warns against further reformAbolishing remaining powers could 'dangerously weaken' state's ability to respond to a crisis, concludes justice ministry review


Further reforms abolishing the remaining royal prerogative powers risk unnecessary incursions into civil liberties and could "dangerously weaken" the state's ability to respond to a crisis, according to a justice ministry review.

The report, published today, said the continued existence of the crown's powers had "no significant negative effects" and in many cases were "positively useful", adding that the government had concluded it would be inappropriate to propose further reforms at present.

The Whitehall review was ordered by Gordon Brown as part of his Governance of Britain programme after he announced initiatives to increase parliament's powers to make treaties, declare war and make senior appointments to the civil service.

It was published as the Queen prepares for the ceremonial opening of the UK supreme court tomorrow, which finally delivers the separation from parliament of Britain's highest court that was first proposed by Gladstone in 1873.

The justice secretary, Jack Straw, has said he wants to "explore alternative options" to his crown prerogative power to recommend a free pardon as he did in the case of the Liverpool football fan Michael Shields.

The review carried out the first survey of the use of crown prerogative powers across Whitehall and provided a consolidated list for the first time. It looked in detail at powers over the organisation and control of the armed forces, powers to enter or destroy private property in a national emergency, the power to grant royal charters, including the BBC's charter, and the power to set up independent public inquiries.

"Our constitution has developed organically over many centuries and change should not be proposed for change's sake," the review concludes. "Without ruling out further changes aimed at increasing parliamentary oversight of the prerogative powers exercised by ministers, the government believes that any further reforms in this area should be considered on a case-by-case basis, in the light of changing circumstances."

The arguments against further reform range from claims that it would be extremely difficult to disentangle some of the powers from subsequent legislation – especially those involving the armed forces – to the powers being so archaic that it would be a questionable use of parliamentary time to abolish them. The latter category includes the crown's right to sturgeon, wild and unmarked swans and whales, and the right to impress men to the Royal Navy.

In justifying its recommendation of no change, the report said: "Legislation to replace some of the powers could itself give rise to new risks: of unnecessary incursions into civil liberties on the one hand, or of dangerously weakening the state's ability to respond to unforeseen circumstances on the other."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/oct/15/royal-powers-reform-review
3 Richard B Ruddick, on 16/10/2009 at 10:30
Sodra hulle geldmag val gaan hulle weer probeer om hulle lande terug tevat.
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