Why Things Don't Happen: Silent Principles of National Security
Aug 2010, Vol. 155, No. 4By Jeremy Blackham and Gwyn PrinsThe defence review is occurring at a time of extreme financial pressure at home and considerable military risk in Afghanistan. Yet it would be a grave failure if it attended principally – or worse, exclusively – to the clamour of those issues. The deepest principles of national security are silent. They explain why bad things don’t happen and they must be given voice. This article also argues that geopolitics prescribe a primarily maritime framework for any British SDSR, and that the core strategic challenges are naval. The Royal Navy, however, has become dangerously weak. Urgent steps must be taken to reverse this trend before it is too late.
Also read 'The Royal Navy at the Brink' by Jeremy Blackham and Gwyn Prins, RUSI Journal (Vol. 152, No. 2, April 2007).
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Further Analysis: Maritime Forces, Defence Policy