Our Prime Minister is being a dickhead.
The UK has been instrumental in pushing hard for major military supplies to Ukraine, not just from our own stocks (which are not immense) but also from our allies. Boris Johnson's bullish pressure is believed to have been instrumental in convincing Biden, Macron and the Germans into taking a harder line against Russia at various moments when they were wavering, and British military intelligence has played a critical role in assessing the conflict and correctly projecting the moments of maximum Russian weakness. Clearly our practical support is dwarfed by the Americans', but it is not trivial and it is more than any other country involved in backing Ukraine hard. We have also trained over 10,000 Ukrainian soldiers here and entered into comprehensive new security arrangements with Finland and Sweden during their NATO accession process. Given what a complete balls-up Britain has made of everything else diplomatically for the last six years, Britain's stance on Ukraine has won it renewed support and respect across Europe. Britain's position of one of three nuclear powers opposing Russia is also believed to be a hefty calculus holding Russia back from a major escalation of the conflict. If NATO enters the war for any reason, British forces will likely play a key and major role, particularly our substantial cruise missile stocks and air and naval power.
The reason Britain has taken this stance, despite hefty Russian financial interference in British affairs for the last decade and a half or so, is pretty damn simple (beyond the fact we regard Ukraine as a friend and ally and Russia not so much): in 2018, three British nationals and two Russian defectors were poisoned in Salisbury, one of them dying, as a result of a botched Russian assassination attempt. Subsequent analysis of the poison used concluded that, had a frankly insane number of coincidences not happened, tens of thousands of people would have died, in which case Britain would have had no choice but to invoke Article 5 of the NATO charter and militarily retaliate against Russia, probably leading to World War III. For that reason, Britain - up until now, anyway - has seen Russia's defeat in Ukraine as a geostrategic necessity.
Sunak sending
any message that could be interpreted as weakness is a very bad idea. In fact, if he goes too far down that road he may find himself Liz Trussed in very short order.
This post has been edited by Werthead: 16 December 2022 - 09:19 PM