by Suff » 27 Nov 2015, 20:40
Actually Corbyn thought he could say and do as he wanted. He thought that he could gag his MP's, whip his front bench and shadow cabinet and ignore them when he felt like it.
What is now being borne to the consciousness of Corbyn is that he is a leader of a group of MP's who have affiliated themselves with an idea and will support that idea. Sadly for Corbyn that is not the same idea as his.
Those MP's are representatives of their voters. Every 5 years they get the horrifying task of justifying themselves and their decisions and actions to the public. That leader has already shown that he is unwilling and incapable of leading the UK in a war, defending the UK against aggression and maintaining UK political influence in the world.
Voters know that and there are plenty of Labour voters who could vote Lib Dem if their party starts going down a rathole they don't want it to. The Labour MP's know this and will vote accordingly. It will only take one or two serious revolts (half the MP's), for Corbyn to be gone. Personally I don't want that because the Tories are not strong enough, yet, to defeat a 3 way Lab/Lib Dem/SNP grand coalition. I, personally, want one more term of the Tories to straighten things out. We can't afford Labour until we balance the books and we can't do that when the Tories themselves are voting against the measures to bring down the deficit.
Once we reach a budget surplus, then we'll have to spend the next 50 years paying off the £2TN in debt we will have run up before we got it under control. Oh don't forget the press has stopped telling us about the climbing debt. Be sure they will shout loud and clear when we exceed 100% of GDP, but silence again thereafter.
As for bombing? It's simple. Sorties come down to turn around time. Pretty soon the naval fleet France is using is going to start breaking down, no single carrier group can keep up that tempo of operations without losing aircraft to stress. Bringing in the UK will keep the tempo where it is without overstressing the aircraft. The bases in Cyprus will give a much needed relief for the sorties, landing on a carrier in all weather is no joke and, eventually, it will cost lives.
So where are we when our allies need us?
Well we're arguing about what good it will do US to get in there and help support them....
Nice. There were a lot of choice words in NATO about the lack of NATO support in Bosnia. If we are going to do the same then we have to expect the same level of criticism. Stabilising Syria and getting rid of IS is not just in our interest, it's vital to the whole world to make sure that these reservoirs of fundamentalism and terrorism are crushed, once and for all.
Yes it will take ground troops. But better those ground troops are Syrian, picking over the wasteland of bombed and destroyed fortified positions than our own troops in there. It's a no brainer. The longer we bombard IS, the more damaged their infrastructure, military capability and morale is. Which will make them easier to mop up and kill off. If we use the Syrians we have a good chance of wiping them out. If we use NATO forces, we'll likely have thousands of hostages who we will, eventually, have to let go. Once we let them go they will simply find another hole and start all over again.
It's time for Corbyn to Man Up and for Cameron to Wise UP. Notably neither are doing a particularly good job of it right now.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.