(The Times has always been an 'establishment' paper, but Simon Jenkins, who continued as an op-ed writer after he retired as editor, has now moved to The Guardian, where many of his stances (eg opposing the invasion of Iraq) fit better)
MPs are voting for a white elephant. And they know itThe nuclear deterrent is a cold war relic. Renewing Trident for a hypothetical conflict only deprives the army of basic resources
Simon Jenkins
Wednesday March 14, 2007
The Guardian
I can hardly believe that a majority of British MPs will tonight vote to renew the British nuclear deterrent. Almost all of them, of all parties, know in their heads that it makes no sense. They lack the guts to say so, Labour MPs because they want jobs under Gordon Brown, Conservatives because they love whizzbangs and want to embarrass Tony Blair by keeping him in power, for reasons that pass comprehension.
There is no surer sign that the Trident missile system is strategically obsolete than the archaic arguments ranged in its support. It is said to be the ultimate weapon. We have got it and may as well keep it. It is an insurance policy against "the unknown". You never know what the terrorist might get up to. You can't trust the Americans. Trident keeps us a place at the top table.
...
Half the Labour members of the House of Commons, including the prime minister, were members of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. They must surely acknowledge that the spirit, if not the actual letter, of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty requires Britain to decommission Trident. While that may make no difference to the nuclear ambition of North Korea or Iran, the sheer hypocrisy of Britain preaching a non-nuclear world while preparing to spend a staggering £70bn buying and running new long-range missiles, warheads and submarine platforms is breathtaking.
Trident is like the Olympic games or ID cards, projects whose mindless extravagance stretching beyond parliaments puts them out of reach of sane value-for-money accounting. They demand a quasi-religious "justification by faith", supported by a baying priesthood of weapons contractors, publicists and BAE lobbyists. Trident worshippers are a mystical freemasonry, seemingly obsessed with priapic enhancement and ancestor worship. Their concern is with prestige, not with defence.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2033093,00.html