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Tuesday 17 April 2012

NATO & SNP

First of all, let us be clear about why this topic is even being discussed at this time. It is most decidedly not because of anything said or done by the SNP. To whatever extent there is a significant debate going on about a possible shift in the SNP's policy in relation to NATO, this is entirely due to some substance-free speculation by the BBC. Speculation which was surely indulged in with the intent of provoking precisely the kind of outraged reaction graciously provided by some SNP members. This kind of political mischief-making is hardly new. Even this particular manifestation of it has a history. Fully two months before the BBC picked up on it Kenny Farqharson was flying the same speculative kite in Scotland on Sunday and urging us all to remember where we read it first. How disappointing for him that it took the BBC to succeed where he failed. And without even crediting him as principal mischief-maker.

Another thing worth noting is the response of the anti-independence alliance to the BBC's empty speculation. Am I the only one to notice the striking similarities in the language used by both Ruth Davidson and Jim Murphy? Or the fact that both came out with the identical sound-bite, "The SNP just don't get defence!"? Reading from the same script? You be the judge. But there is no doubting the drooling glee with which they both pounced on the opportunity to portray the SNP as undecided and internally riven on the matter of NATO membership. A number of SNP members and supporters have subsequently fuelled this perception by comments on Twitter and elsewhere. But is there any rational justification for the fuss?

The response in other quarters was just as interesting as various individuals and groups exhibited an almost desperate eagerness to afford gravitas to the BBC's speculation. One "professional journalist" even insisted that the BBC must have been briefed by "senior sources" in the SNP. His "evidence" for this was the fact that they mention the National Council meeting in June. As if this was not public knowledge!

If I may crave indulgence for a little aside at this point I would compare the BBC's story to the "scoop" carried by The Sun in the launch edition of its new Sunday title in Scotland. If you recall, this took the form of an "exclusive" which revealed that the date of the referendum would be Saturday 18 October 2014. The media and assorted pundits immediate leapt to the convenient conclusion that this story was based on information fed to the paper by the SNP. Because this was what they wanted to believe they totally ignored the fact that there was nothing whatever in the story that could not have been gleaned from information in the public domain. All the paper added was an educated guess stated with great fanfare and an air of certainty.

The BBC's speculation about the SNP and NATO policy is similarly no more than a moderately clever journalistic contrivance. The only facts in the whole thing are that the SNP's stance on NATO is subject to review. (As is its stance on anything. This is a political party. Not a fundamentalist religious sect.) And that such a review, if it happened, would take place at the National Council. Where The Sun added their educated guess, the BBC added what would inevitably become a self-fulfilling observation about the debate which their speculation would generate. Where's the substance? There is none!

One further thing worth noting about the BBC piece is Isobel Fraser's less than subtle attempt to conflate the matter of SNP policy in relation to NATO with the matter of the SNP's anti-nuclear stance. Of which more later.

SNP response*

One thing you will be struggling to find amongst all the speculation, guesswork and rumour tarted up as fact is the SNP's response to all this. While we are expected to take on faith all of the accusations and allegations, we aren't even offered the opportunity to make a judgement on what the target of all this has to say. To weigh things in the balance and gauge their relative plausibility.

On Monday 16 April the SNP issued a statement.

Anything that may happen in the future is mere speculation. If a motion is submitted it will be considered by the party's Standing Orders and Agenda Committee who will decide if it goes forward for debate. This reflects the democratic processes at the heart of the SNP.

 Why, we must wonder, should this refutation carry any less weight than the original speculation.

For clarity

It is, perhaps regrettably, in the nature of such discussions that one is generally well-advised to be as explicit about what is not being said as what is. I am not saying that SNP policy on NATO won't be reviewed. Nor am I saying that there is no possibility of it coming under review at this June's National Council. All I am saying is that the speculation by the BBC on this matter is no more than that. It tells us absolutely nothing about the actuality or even the probability of such a review being undertaken. We are told nothing that we didn't know already. The policy is subject to review. That is all.

The nub

And so to the nub of the matter. And for this we have to exercise our imagination and suppose that there is some substance to the speculation. We have to suppose that there actually is an intention to review the SNP's policy in regard to NATO in the short-term. Perhaps even at this June's National Council. I stress again that we have no actual evidence for this, but let's go along with the idea anyway. What does it signify? What are the implications.

The fundamental position of the SNP on the issue of international alliances, as on most other issues, is that independence opens up a range of options. There is, of necessity, a certain ambivalence about the SNP's position on the realities of a post-independence Scotland for the rather obvious reason that it is no part of the party's role to definitively stipulate what those realities must be. Their role, at least until after the referendum, is to drive home the message that this better, independent Scotland is possible. And, to a certain extent, to set out the options that will be opened up by independence. Or, at the very least, to remind people that there will be options. The dual identity of the SNP as both a campaigning organisation for constitutional reform and a political party in the more traditional sense seems to confuse some people. And the fact that the SNP currently wears yet another hat as the party of government only serve to increase the potential for confusion.

Sometimes Alex Salmond speaks as First Minister - the democratically elected political head of our nation and its primary representative in all matters.

Sometimes Alex Salmond speaks as the leader of a political party competing with other political parties in various electoral contests for the prize of the mandate of the people of Scotland.

And sometimes Alex Salmond speaks as the de facto figurehead of a campaign to restore Scotland's rightful constitutional status.

It is only in the first two of these roles that he should be expected to speak in terms of what is intended by his administration or his party. In the final role he can only rightfully speak to what is envisioned. The distinction may be subtle, but it is significant, nonetheless. An all too common error is to think of the referendum campaign in the same terms as a party political contest. We must differentiate between party positions taken in pursuit of election and party positions taken as part of the effort to advance - or obstruct - the campaign for independence. Obviously, these positions cannot be outright contradictory. But they can quite legitimately differ in terms of emphasis and/or specificity.

The matter of the "second question" may serve to illustrate what I'm getting at. As an independence campaigner, Alex Salmond (and I use his name in a metonymic sense) would not wish there to be a second question on the referendum ballot. As a party leader he gets to use the possibility of a second question as a tactical device by which to put his opponents at a disadvantage. As First Minister he has to be completely open to the idea of a second question if there is sufficient demand. He cannot be seen to be ruling out a legitimate option.

So how does this relate to the SNP's position on NATO?

SNP & NATO

Again using the name of Alex Salmond as a shorthand for party and/or administration as appropriate, as First Minister he has nothing to say on the matter of NATO membership. It is a reserved matter. Likewise, as the leader of a party fighting local, national or UK elections, he has nothing to say. Or very little. and certainly nothing pertaining to NATO membership. Neither Perth & Kinross Council nor the Scottish Parliament has any authority in the matter of international military alliances. And even at Westminster it is not for SNP MPs to seek to have the UK redefine its relationship with NATO. It is only in his role as the leader of the independence campaign that he has anything relevant to say. And in that role he is limited to offering a vision of what form an independent Scotland's alliances might take.

Some have chosen to make the matter of this vision a "red line" issue. Some are already talking in terms of a ritual burning of their party membership card. Boy, are they going to look silly if this all turns out to be no more than meeja-fart! They are, of course, perfectly entitled to do as they will. But we are surely just as entitled to question their reasons and challenge the perception of the issue which leads them to make such threats of an action which we must assume they do not take at all lightly. We are entitled to ask, at the very least, if such action, or even the threat of such action is justified by the facts.

The most obvious question we must ask is why they feel the need to make such threats on the basis of mere unsupported media speculation. If there had been some announcement from the SNP it might be different. But, at the time of writing this, all we have is the BBC's puff. Is that a sound basis for even contemplating draconian action? I really don't think so.

What would review mean?

Going back to supposing that the policy is to be reviewed, is that necessarily and inevitably a bad thing? For all we know the party could reaffirm and possibly even strengthen its opposition to NATO membership. This is highly unlikely, of course. For the reasons already stated it is most likely that the SNP will maintain its current ambivalence with a strong tendency to non-membership. Why should it do otherwise? What is to be gained? It is not as if there is a huge amount of public opinion in favour of NATO membership for an independent Scotland. I suspect that, if asked, most people would be indifferent or, at most, content to regard it a s something best dealt with in the period between the referendum and secession.

Among those who are both interested and informed there is likely to be a similar lack of any sense of urgency. They will realise that NATO has changed in the past thirty years. It is no longer the entity that it once was. It has become larger, broader and more complex in terms of the forms of its alliances and partnerships. No longer is it the case that joining NATO on its terms is the only option. Forms of association are now tailored to both the military and the political realities of individual nations. Any review of SNP policy would have to take account of this. So why assume that the only conceivable outcome of such a review must be some kind of U-turn? A total reversal of current policy isn't the only way. Why would it be the preferred way?

The nuclear question

And so we come to what is surely the crux of the matter for those who are reacting so exaggeratedly to the BBC's political shit-stirring. The conflation of SNP policy on NATO with the party's deeply entrenched opposition to nuclear weapons. For some it appears that even rumours of a possibility of a chance that there might be some unspecified redefining of the SNP policy on NATO membership is equated with total abandonment of the party's stance against WMD. Having a sincere wish to avoid giving offence, I have thought long and hard about how to express my feelings about this. The best I can do is say that I find such concerns unfounded, unjustified and just a little bit hysterical.

It makes little enough sense to suppose that the SNP might shift in any significant way from its perfectly serviceable position with regard to NATO membership. To go further and imagine that the party would commit political and electoral seppuku by compromising its anti-nuclear platform is... well... let's just settle for saying that it is not credible.

So let's put the lighter fluid away, tuck the wee plastic cards back in our wallets, and wait to see how this all pans out in the real world. Let's not be rattled and provoked by those who relish their power to rattle and provoke. Let's all just calm down.

NOTE: This article also published by Newsnet Scotland. For an alternative perspective on this issue please see Moridura - ©Copyright Peter Curran 2012: Changing the policy on NATO – who, us? Whatever gave you that idea?

*This passage was mistakenly omitted from the original article and was added on Friday 20 April. - PAB

5 comments:

  1. It's very odd that everyone's just taking the SNP's internal debate over NATO as a fact, despite it being based solely on completely unsubstantiated rumours.

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    1. A point I have been trying to make ever since the BBC piece triggered the very knee-jerk reaction in some that was hoped for.

      I perfectly understand that NATO membership is an issue that many take very seriously. I just don't see that idle speculation in the media is a basis for leaping to all manner of wild conclusions.

      In the first place, we don't even know that any change in policy is proposed, far less about to be implemented. And we certainly don't know the details of this phantom policy shift. So what is there to comment on or rail against?

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  2. One of my main reasons for doubting the speculation about the SNP's intention to review its NATO policy is that nobody had offered a convincing explanation as to why they would do this. We were asked to believe that the SNP would abandon a perfectly serviceable policy for the sake of an electoral advantage that was, at the very least, highly dubious.

    In The Scotsman today George Kerevan presents an argument which must make all but the most dogmatic opponent of NATO membership pause to reconsider. ([url=http://www.scotsman.com/the-scotsman/opinion/comment/george-kerevan-nato-membership-is-a-question-of-morality-1-2245394]George Kerevan: Nato membership is a question of morality - Comment - Scotsman.com[/url])

    To be sure, Kerevan offers no more factual basis for accepting that the SNP plans to discuss its position on NATO at National Council in June. That much is still speculation. What makes Kerevan's article different is the fact that he is not motivated by a prejudiced need to show the SNP and its leadership in the worst light possible. He is not intent upon portraying this putative policy review as entirely a matter of cheap political expediency. Instead, he offers a thoughtful and thought-provoking argument that changing policy on NATO may be a positive thing.

    We may now move on to discuss the questions raised by Kerevan's article. But this will not alter the fact that the initial speculation offered by the BBC and others was prompted by motives far less worthy than a desire to promote reasoned debate about a very important issue.

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  3. Peter, you mistakenly use the word "May" when you mean "April" at least twice in your article... unless you have the power of second sight?

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    1. Many thanks for bringing that to my attention. I'll get the hang of this calendar thing one of these days. Doh!

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