Gerald Kaufman's
attempt to 'clarify' Labour's policy on nuclear arms reductions leaves it as
ambiguous as ever, writes Paul Anderson
The current
dispute over Labour's policy on nuclear weapons, which has been simmering
since Gerald Kaufman, Labour's foreign affairs spokesman, hinted in a Guardian article a fortnight ago
that a Labour government would keep nuclear weapons “as long as anyone else had them”, is unlikely to
degenerate into internecine strife as previous Labour defence rows have done.
With the
possibility of a general election in November, even the sternest Labour
critics of the leadership's apparent political trajectory are likely to fall
silent in the interests of party unity. Unless it does something really
stupid, the worst the leadership can expect is a few murmurs of dissent at
October's party conference.
Unlike in 1983 and
1987, it is the anti-nuclear Left rather than the pro-nuclear Right that is
unhappy about the policy – and, however fractious in between election campaigns,
the Left at election time tends to keep its reservations to itself. The Right,
as James Callaghan demonstrated famously in 1983, is often less
self-disciplined.
Nevertheless,
Kaufman's remarks have undoubtedly touched a raw nerve. He wrote that
"Britain should remain as a participant" in nuclear arms reduction
talks "until they are successfully and finally concluded with an agreement
by all thermo-nuclear powers completely to eliminate these weapons", and
journalists were apparently briefed that this implied that Labour would keep
Britain's "independent deterrent" for as long as the other nuclear
powers retained nuclear weapons.
On this
interpretation, Kaufman was flagging a radical change in Labour policy. The
party had never before advocated retaining nuclear weapons until everyone else
got rid of theirs. Unsurprisingly, the reaction from the Left was
unenthusiastic.
Bruce Kent,
Labour's prospective parliamentary candidate for Oxford West and Abingdon,
writing in Tribune last week,
said that the article was "a final surrender to David Owen, Peter Jenkins,
Robert Maxwell, Alf Garnett and all".
But it is possible
to put a different spin on Kaufman's words. It is perfectly feasible for a
country to remain a participant in arms reduction talks after its own stocks
of a particular sort of weapon have been negotiated away or unilaterally
abandoned.
Indeed, that is
precisely the situation Britain is in today in the talks aimed at the
elimination of chemical weapons: Britain unilaterally abandoned chemical
weapons in 11957 but has remained a participant in talks ever since.
On this reading, Kaufman's statement did not imply that Labour
would keep the bomb as long as anyone else had one. All he was saying was that
a Labour government would stay in nuclear arms reduction talks to the very end
– which would include the possibility that Labour would bargain away the
"independent deterrent" but stay in the talks in order to press the
remaining nuclear powers to reach agreement on reductions.
Stated explicitly,
this would indeed have been a clarification of Labour policy rather than a
change. But Kaufman has refused to elaborate on the precise meaning of his
words. His intervention has merely stirred some already muddy waters. Labour's
position on Britain nuclear arms remains as ambiguous as before.
According to the
policy passed at party conference in 1989, the year that Labour dropped
unilateral nuclear disarmament, the line is that British nuclear arms do not
constitute a deterrent: they are useful only as "bargaining chips"
in nuclear arms reduction negotiations.
Because it would
be too expensive to cancel the Trident nuclear missile submarine project at
this late stage, a Labour government would build three of the four boats currently
planned. But it would attempt to get Trident and its Polaris predecessor
included in the second round of the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START-2),
and it would drop Tory plans to replace the ageing WE-177 free-fall nuclear
bombs with new air-to-surface missiles, either bought from the United States
or developed jointly with France.
The crucial
vagueness in the policy is that it says nothing about how Labour would get
Britain into START-2 and little about what its negotiating position would be
once it was in.
In part, this is
for the very good reason that no one could possibly know in 1989 what the
situation in the START process would be when Labour came to power. But the
vagueness was also a means of papering over differences.
Those on the Left
accepted putting British strategic nuclear forces into START-2 only on
condition that the talks would quickly result in a deal to bargain them away;
those on the right saw the policy as meaning that Labour would keep the
deterrent if Britain's entry into START-2 was blocked or if the talks got
bogged down.
Kaufman's
intervention is perhaps best understood as a piece of "kite-flying"
to see what would happen if he made an explicit commitment to keeping British
nuclear arms as long as anyone else had them. He expected to he denounced by
the hard left and by the peace movement but to be given the benefit of the
doubt by the centre-left of the party.
Instead, the
centre-left, including senior Shadow Cabinet and National Executive Committee
politicians and the normally mild-mannered Labour Co-ordinating Committee,
stuck its neck out. It is clear that Kaufman would provoke a really serious row
if he tried explicitly to change the position on START before the manifesto is
drawn up and it seems likely lhat he will now let the matter rest.
Which is not to
say that Labour's position on other nuclear weapons isues will remain the same.
The party is coming under increasing union pressure both on Trident and on
Polaris, and the signs are that, at least on Trident, the leadership is set tn
change course.
The unions at the
VSEL shipyard in Barrow-in-Furncss, situated in a Labour target marginal
constituency, are pressing hard for Labour to commit itself to building lour
rather than three Tridents because the yard will shed thousands of jobs, and
almost certainly close, if the fourth submarine is not built.
Martin O'Neill,
Labour's defence spokesman, has already indicated that a Labour government
might build the fourth submarine if cancellation charges in the
(yet-to-be-signed) contract made it more expensive to cancel than to build.
Further movement is expected in the run-up to the election.
Polaris is a
potentially far more difficult problem. Unions representing fitters working on
maintaining the ancient and decrepit Polaris fleet are becoming increasingly
concerned at the radiation exposure dangers their members now face.
Only one of the
four submarines is now fully operational: the other three are suffering from
cracks in the coolant systems of their nuclear reactors. Fitters are being
exposed to levels of radiation close to or above the maximum permitted in a
desperate attempt to patch up the damage so that Britain has a nuclear missile
submarine force until Trident becomes operational in the late nineties.
If the unions' radiation exposure fears prove justified
in the run-up to the election, Labour will have little option but to say that
it will scrap Polaris on safety grounds. Because the missiles for the Trident
submarines have been seriously delayed by the inability of the Atomic Weapons
Research Establishment in Aldermaston to build the warheads, this would
effectively amount to ial least temporary) unilateral nuclear disarmament. The
more cynical Labour leaders must be praying that no one comes up too soon with
authoritative evidence that Polaris is too dangerous to keep afloat.