Quote:
Originally Posted by arista
(Post 7696276)
Is my Info wrong?
I hate Ranters
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What is your info?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toy Soldier
(Post 7696403)
I'm not saying that the landscape couldn't change to the point where nuclear war becomes reality. I'm saying that if it does, whether or not we're the ones firing them will not matter. Not even slightly.
They have no use as weapons, their only use is as a threat / deterrent. Their only use as a deterrent is against the nuclear superpowers as part of M.A.D. Trident is not needed as part of M.A.D.
The only scenario under which we would need our own nuclear deterrent is if the three major players involved in m.a.d were to be on the same side, and against us. So that's the US, Russia and China teaming up as a nuclear threat against Europe or the UK and US then using four submarines to deter them.
It's a scenario so ludicrous that you might as well say we should keep nukes incase an invading force of insectoid aliens attacks, and we'll need to turn the trident subs into makeshift spacecraft and launch them into space to destroy the insect moon-base.
If either of those things happen (superpower dreamteam or insect invaders) we are automatically and completely screwed to the point that fighting back would actually be laughable.
I'll say again: it's dick swinging.
There's a reason that the English - both people and politicians - are desperate to cling to trident and a place as "big boys" on the world stage in ways that the other countries in the UK are not. That reason is that England - unlike the other countries - have very little national identity that isn't linked to empire and power.
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I don't think that's necessarily true, right now I suppose we're something of a second line of European defence because in the last few hundred years Europe has probably been more ravaged by internal conflict than any other continent. The others have all seen their fair share of conflict but not on the same scale. We all talk about the two "world wars" but in reality they were primarily European wars weren't they, conflict between European powers that ultimately took place on a global scale. And actually its entirely possible that the super powers could go to war without using their nuclear weapons, it doesn't have to mean global apocalypse. There have always been 'rules' to war, things that just aren't acceptable to do - nuclear weapons could easily be one of them. You might say that that will be broken as soon as one side starts losing they'll get their nuke out but that's no more true than breaking any other 'rule' of warfare. And again, the threat of MAD would be another great barrier against that.
And as for the superpowers anyway, who's to say who they will be in the future? If you were to say a hundred years ago that China would be a world superpower no one would believe you. The USA has been a superpower for what, about a century? Countries are developing all the time, the global situation is so fluid that there is absolutely no guarantee that the countries who dominate international relations right now will be those who do in years to come. In a sense nuclear weapons are a big part of what preserves stability in global affairs. The UK, the US, China, Russia and France: their position becomes a lot less secure if suddenly they don't have nuclear weaponry underpinning their status. The UN has played a big part in stabilising international relations and the balance of power in the post-war decades. Nuclear weapons do also do that because like it or not we're stuck with them. A nuclear free world is a pipe dream.
Anyway I get the sense really that the debate here isn't as much about nuclear weapons as about Britain's place in the world. You think that we are essentially irrelevant in international relations these days, or at least irrelevant enough not to bother with nuclear weapons. I disagree, and for the record I don't disagree because hang ups over penis size or the lack of identity I have as an Englishman. I don't mourn the end of the Empire, and I certainly don't think we should be merely 'dick swinging' on an international stage. We do have a role to play though, and when it comes to international security we need nuclear weapons to underpin that role.
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