THE GENERAL’S SPEECH – DSEI 2021

UK Chief of the Defence Staff Sir Mark Carleton-Smith, speaking at the Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI) – [The Arms Fair] – Excel Centre, London

Born in a British Army base in Bielefeld, Germany, son of a Major General, Eton, Guards Regiment, lower second class BA from Durham University and an officer with experience in virtually every war involving the UK including service as an SAS commander and former Director Special Forces; who could be more qualified to give the opening speech at DSEI last week than the UK Chief of the Defence Staff Sir Mark Carleton-Smith KCB CBE, with the established right of direct access to advise the Secretary of State for Defence and the Prime Minister?

Reporting by media at the Defence and Security Equipment International arms fair (DSEI) is by strict selection, as are passes to attend; potential critics are filtered out, but Shephard Media, whose mission is stated as “to provide the best marketing solutions and business information services to the defence sector”, helpfully published extracts of the General’s speech.

An accompanying photo showed the General, in full uniform and medals, apparently ill at ease with himself in his role as chief salesman for the UK Arms industry, his speech laced with big chief talk such as “establishing advantage over potential adversaries”, “prioritising investment in deep battle”, “creating a sharper and harder and more dangerous army with a more dynamic global posture”, “the adoption of disruptive technologies including Artificial Intelligence, and finally the use of “Autonomous weapons and Quantum Mechanics”. Native English speakers, let alone foreign visitors, must have struggled to understand this ominous gobbledegook.

The UK has a dedicated department for UK Defence and Security Exports, part of the Department for International Trade, which uses taxpayers money to promote DSEI and UK arms exporting companies around the word, the largest of which is BAE Systems, which provides the technology, technicians and armaments which are essential to maintain the murderous war by Saudi against Yemen. BAE chair, Sir Roger Carr, is shown on Twitter at DSEI hosting the Saudi ambassador to the UK, Khalid bin Bandar el Saud, a member of the Saudi royal family, educated at Eton, Oxford and Sandhurst, and whose wife is Lucy Cuthbert of Beaufront Castle, niece of the Duke of Northumberland.

Given that it was exactly one month after President Ashraf Ghani fled Afghanistan, following 21 years of George Bush’s “War on Terror”, the professional Head of the Army, with responsibility for developing and generating military capability would appear to be a man well worth listening to at this pivotal moment. However the armourers and arms dealers of the world were not to hear any regrets nor lessons to be learned from the multiple human catastrophes in Afghanistan, or the wars in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Libya. Not even a word on the link between war and global warming, the vital role of peacekeeping at the United Nations, serious diplomacy or the devastating effects of war on civilians – the “collateral damage” as these war crimes are described. No call even to mourn “the children of war who have experienced more trauma — physical and emotional — than the medical professionals who care for them have ever seen: the shredded remains of their mum or dad, blown apart by bombs……” 1

How prescient were the words of US President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s farewell speech on 17th January 1961; “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. 2

Eisenhower would probably have appreciated reading the 4th of Keir Starmer’s, now abandoned, original ten election pledges, entitled “To promote peace and human rights”: “No more illegal wars. Introduce a Prevention of Military Intervention Act and put human rights at the heart of foreign policy. Review all UK arms sales and make us a force for international peace and justice.” 3

Back at DSEI, Mark Carleton-Smith could only complain that “today’s threats feel much more hybrid; the cycle of competition is heating up and the real challenge is to simply keep up.”, revealing that he appears incapable of understanding the threat to world peace and the environment from the diversion of technology and vast resources to make war, the insanity of the new arms race developing before his very eyes, or even the technology itself.

David Collins

20th September 2021

 

1) https://vfpuk.org/articles/wars-conflict-and-the-impact-on-health-and-well-being-by-michael-lyons/

2) https://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=true&doc=90

3) https://keirstarmer.com/plans/10-pledges/

 

 

VFP LONDON

Date: Second Wednesday of each month

Time: 1830 hours

Location: Housmans Books, 5 Caledonian Road, N1 9DY

Are you a veteran of the armed forces?

Are you ready to serve the cause of world peace?

VFP London hosts a face to face meeting once a month in Housmans Bookshop .

We seek to discern for ourselves and as a group how we might serve the cause of world peace.

We plan and organise our own events and activity.

The atmosphere at our meetings is friendly and welcoming.

If it is your first meeting please bring proof of military service.

Details of all VFP London meetings and activity are posted on our mini website www.veteransforpeace.london

ACTION FOR THE DSEI ARMS FAIR

Here are Neil Harvey’s photos from our Action at the Arms Fair on Tuesday 14th September.

This year the DSEI (Defence and Security Equipment International) Arms Fair is taking place at the Excel Exhibition Centre, in East London.

The exhibition is attended by arms dealers and representatives from regimes all round the world, looking for weapons to fight wars and to subdue internal opposition, often at the expense of causing civilian deaths and injuries and displacing people as refugees.

We are proposing to join up with the some of “Stop The Arms Fair” protests on September 14th, 2021.

There will be an Arms Fair Protest Walk, starting at 11am at Stratford Station, not Stratford International.

The walk will assemble outside Stratford Station (not Stratford International!) at 11am, and go via Plaistow to the ExCeL Exhibition Centre in Docklands to join other protesters at Tank the Arms Fair on the opening day of the DSEI arms fair 14th to 17th September.  The walk is expected to take around 2 hours.

The organisers were delighted when contacted and have offered for VFP members in VFP tops to carry their wreaths at the head of the walk. They have three wreaths for the dead of Afghanistan, Iraq and Yemen respectively, in memory of the many, many victims of the arms trade in these countries.

They plan later in the day to walk round the back of the Royal Victoria Dock opposite the Excel Centre to cast the wreaths into the dock.  Our group are invited to join this action also.

If you do not fancy walking 4 miles, you can go direct to the Tank the Arms Fair Day of Action.

Tank the Arms Fair is a BIG day of action to resist the opening of the DSEI arms fair.

This day of action will take place at the west entrance to the arms fair (near the Royal Victoria DLR station) on its opening day, as arms buyers and dealers and state and military delegations from 100+ countries arrive to browse the weaponry on sale – from guns and bombs to fighter jets and warships – to listen to keynote speakers and watch live action demos in the Royal Victoria Dock, but most of all to network and make deals.
Head straight to the site, or join Mad Hatters and Trident Ploughshares at Stratford Station (not Stratford International!) to walk to the site via Plaistow talking to East Londoners on the way about the huge arms fair taking place on their doorstep.
Here is a link to the Arms Fair Protest Walk
Here is a link to the Day of Action 
If you are planning on coming or want any more information, please contact accounts@vfpuk.org to give us some idea of the numbers to expect.