Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Forum House of Commons vote on air strikes in Syria – which way will you vote?
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Forum House of Commons vote on air strikes in Syria – which way will you vote?
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v8ninetyFull Member
I reckon that Corbyn is going to whip his MPs. He’s not going to demand loyalty to his leadership though; he’s emailed out to the membership, asking for their views on the vote. I would imagine that the replies are going to read a lot like this thread… He’s going to demand that the labour MPs are loyal to their party membership, not to him. That way he neatly sidesteps the ‘how can you be loyal to a bloke who has rebelled so often himself?’ argument. Not that that will stop it beng made, mind you.
wreckerFree MemberHe’s going to demand that the labour MPs are loyal to their party membership, not to him.
? Their party membership isn’t whipping them, Corbyn is. Does he think they’re sufficiently stupid to fall for that crap?
701arvnFree MemberCycling is more dangerous that ISIS:
“The annualised average of five deaths caused by terrorism in England and Wales over this period compares with total accidental deaths in 2010 of 17,201, including 123 cyclists killed in traffic accidents, 102 personnel killed in Afghanistan, 29 people drowned in the bathtub and five killed by stings from hornets, wasps and bees”
And we should bob the living hell out of those dastardly bumble bees, Brimstone sounds ideal for their so-called ‘Hives’
v8ninetyFull Member? Their party membership isn’t whipping them, Corbyn is. Does he think they’re sufficiently stupid to fall for that crap?
All right, how about “vote the way the people that select you overwhelmingly want you to vote, or prepare to face the people who select you and explain your conduct, and possibly face deselection”.
binnersFull Member? Their party membership isn’t whipping them, Corbyn is. Does he think they’re sufficiently stupid to fall for that crap?
Hey… here’s a really novel idea. Its pretty revolutionary stuff, so brace yourselves….
How about the MP’s vote on the basis of representing the views of their constituents?
Like I said… pretty radical stuff. Bordering on the subversive.
Theres an awful lot of sabre rattling, and people itching to send the bombers in, from the comfort of their Westminster clubs. I don’t see that even remotely reflected in the general population, who are understandably far more wary. Perhaps Corbyn has noticed that too? Just a thought
dragonFree Member“vote the way the people that select you overwhelmingly want you to vote, or prepare to face the people who select you and explain your conduct, and possibly face deselection”
The Labour party membership and the MP’s constituents are not the same. Awesome power play in Labour at present, big one to watch is Tom Watson and which way he moves, if he plays it right then he is the next leader.
jambalayaFree Member@digga I think the emergence of IS should force us to accept that in this regard Assad is our ally. Had Assad been defeated sooner the FSA would have had the strength together with the Kurds to prevent the emergence of IS as such a strong force.
Whilst UK, French and Belgian terrorists hold thise passports they share the fundamentalist ideology which is primarily run out of Syria and Iraq in the same way Al-Q did out of Afghanistan. IS in the Middle East provides the weapons training, tactics and the resources to develop these attacks. It’s a “safe haven” for them and one we must take away
My point about the debate being pointless is that discussions about whether bombing will help or hurt are irrelevant as the bombing camping exists already and in the wake of the Paris attacks is being ramped up substantially. Whilst not being openly discussed it’s my understanding we have an obligation under EU law to assist. The Germans are putting an extra 1,200 troops into Syria.
wreckerFree MemberAll right, how about “vote the way the people that select you overwhelmingly want you to vote, or prepare to face the people who select you and explain your conduct, and possibly face deselection”.
How’s about; you’re (apparently) intelligent adults and elected MPs. Vote for what you truly believe is in the best interests of the UK. We are your party, not your parents. Now go be grown ups.
jambalayaFree MemberThe Labour party membership and the MP’s constituents are not the same. Awesome power play in Labour at present, big one to watch is Tom Watson and which way he moves, if he plays it right then he is the next leader.
Tom Watson I hold in high regard, he’s certainly not faultless and he’s a politician so prepared to fight very dirty. I was a bit surprised he came out pro airstrikes so quickly and so publically. Corbyn’s election has propelled him into a serious candidate for future leader however I think Corbyns successor is most likely to be one of the candidates from the last leadership election. What is clear is that the positioning for the next leader began as soon as Corbyn was elected as no one expected him to last long.
jambalayaFree MemberSupposedly of the 70,000 who responded to Corbyns “don’t bomb email” 70% where against and 30% for. So does that mean the Labour Party MPs should vote to reflect that, 70% against 30% for, or does first last the post apply ?
nickcFull MemberThe Germans are putting an extra 1,200 troops into Syria
Needs to be approved by German parliament first. (edit) And to be more specific, they’re talking about recon. planes, and deploying ships to aid the French carrier force, and some ground forces on the Turkish/ Jordan borders (see recon planes), so saying “sending troops to Syria” is playing pretty fast and loose with the facts…
nickcFull MemberIt’s a “safe haven” for them and one we must take away
This is the same flawed logic the US used to bomb Laos during the Vietnam war, and it didn’t work there either, 40 years later Vietnam is still a unified one party communist state (at peace). You can’t bomb ideas out of existence. The only way to solve this is politically.
binnersFull MemberAll this concentration on what labour MP’s are going to do is masking over one other significant factor….
Namely that Dave has enough of his own MP’s who’s votes are by no means guaranteed on this one either. The shadow of Iraq doesn’t just fall on one party. It hangs over the whole of Westminster who’s cross party support took us there in the first place. So it isn’t labour or Tory, its not a party issue. Its the more thoughtful, or those with their eyes on slim majorities who’ll be asking the most questions. And you don’t have to ask too many questions before this whole thing starts looking just as shaky as the case for going into Iraq
JunkyardFree Memberso saying “sending troops to Syria” is playing pretty fast and loose with the facts…
So better than usual then and you are encouraging him 😉
MPs should do what the public want/ their constituents not what parties want
Their job is to represent after all.
Also as jamby sort of notes it doesn’t really matter what we do as folk are already bombing them even if we do nothing
Given that I dont know why Dave cares so muchbinnersFull MemberGiven that I dont know why Dave cares so much
He’s still pretty huffy about losing the vote to bomb the other lot in Syria …
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberGiven that it’s the public’s money and sorties cost in the region of £33,000 an hour per plane, not to mention the pilots, engineers and support crew are sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, husbands, wifes, mums and dads of british citizens, wouldn’t a direct referendum be a better solution for such serious decisions?
What if half of the MPs voting on the issue were in the pockets of the arms industry?
brFree MemberHow about the MP’s vote on the basis of representing the views of their constituents?
Because that isn’t how it works.
You vote for an MP based on what they say they’ll do plus whichever parties manifesto they’re (currently) attached to and their ‘views’ also have a impact.
They then vote how they want to – or told to, if a member of a party and the whips’ are out.
jimdubleyouFull MemberThe only way to solve this is politically.
Whom does one engage with to identify a political solution? If the stated aims of IS are to bring about the fall of Western democracy, we’re pretty far away from agreeing on a middle road…
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberSaudi Arabia for a start…
If they are encouraged to cease promoting wahhabism, in time, support for IS will dwindle.
Who funds ISIS and trades with them, keeping their weapons and ammo supply stocked up?
These are avenues that the intelligence services have had plenty of time to investigate…
dragonFree MemberGiven that it’s the public’s money and sorties cost in the region of £33,000 an hour per plane, not to mention the pilots, engineers and support crew
But they fly and maintain the planes regardless so most of that cost would happen in peace time anyway. Plus we are already flying recon missions, so the only extra cost is the price of a missile if fired.
Whom does one engage with to identify a political solution?
This is the big one for me, in plenty of cases this is an option, but against ISIS then it isn’t on the table, hence, unfortunately force really is the only option IMO.
molgripsFree Memberunfortunately force really is the only option IMO.
Or attrition.
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberBut they fly and maintain the planes regardless so most of that cost would happen in peace time anyway.
Where do the pilots and support crew live in peace time? How are food, water, entertainment, fuel, missiles and the planes themselves transported to the area in which sorties are flown from?
These are examples of additional costs above and beyond the costs incurred by peacetime training exercises…
unfortunately force really is the only option IMO
How about cutting off the supply of weapons that allows ISIS to continue expanding their territory through sanctions on those who trade with them?
nickcFull MemberI’m preprepared to bet money that Western intelligence agencies are talking to ISIS secretly.
Encourage Turkey to stop funding ISIS by buying the oil they’re selling, encourage S.A. to stop indirectly funding ISIS through Turkey, encourage Iran to withdraw Hezbollah, encourage the Russians to help Assad to stop the armed struggle. Encourage the Kurds to negotiate with the PKK to stop fighting the Assad regime. Stop aerial bombing that’s killing civilians.
There are plenty of things we could be doing instead of lobbing munitions at the problem
ninfanFree MemberWhere do the pilots and support crew live in peace time? How are food, water, entertainment, fuel, missiles and the planes themselves transported to the area in which sorties are flown from?
These are examples of additional costs above and beyond the costs incurred by peacetime training exercises…
you might have a point if we hadn’t had men and planes based at RAF Akrotiri for sixty years.
allthepiesFree MemberYou’ve got the money out of the bank and on the table ready ? 😀
mattjgFree Member> How are … the planes themselves transported to the area in which sorties are flown from?
I know this one! They fly them!
nickcFull Memberthere’s some francs, and few euros, and maybe even the odd bit of proper currency… 😆
wobbliscottFree MemberCopa – the do nothing case needs just as much, if not more justification than the do something case. Both options can be just as deadly and risky. History teaches us that on both counts. I’ve not seen a compelling argument for either point of view – that is why this is not a clear cut decision and is a very difficult decision that has divided opinion with politicians. The real world is just not that simple and not made easier by JC’s openly critical opinions of military action in any circumstances – it just undermines his point of view and people assume he never went into this with an open mind and capable of being persuaded.
mattjgFree Member> How about cutting off the supply of weapons that allows ISIS to continue expanding their territory through sanctions on those who trade with them?
Bit late for that, didn’t they grab, ironically, all the weapons the US supplied to the Iraqi army, which then abandoned them?
jimjamFree Memberdragon
But they fly and maintain the planes regardless so most of that cost would happen in peace time anyway. Plus we are already flying recon missions, so the only extra cost is the price of a missile if fired.
Curious to know what the seemingly insignificant cost* of one of these missiles is. Anyone?
*I mean, quite apart from the collateral damage they are likely to cause, the innocent people they’ll kill, the infrastructure they’ll destroy, the hearts and minds they’ll lose, the propaganda they provide ISIS with.
nickcFull MemberSky news did a piece a while ago that put the cost of Brimstone (2 on each plane) at £102,000 each, and then there’s paveway (4 on each plane) at £22,000 each
so that insignificant cost is about £300K per sortie per plane in missiles alone,
mattjgFree MemberIf it costs more to knock a house down then it’s worth, perhaps the RAF could just buy it?
jambalayaFree Member@nickc I was quoting from the Guardian headline, “on the border” is a bit vague though. You are quite right it needs to be approved by the German Parliament but EU law states they must assist. It’s why Hollande invoked the treaty and used the term “at war” immediately after the Paris attacks.
@jj, as above Akatori in Cypru and the defence budget has contingencies for actually using the weaponry which in effect we’ve already paid for. It will of course need to be replaced. We’ve offered Akatori for French use if they wish although they are currently focused on their aircraft carrier as they might as well use what they’ve got and already paid for, using it for real provides valuable information and experience
ninfanFree Membereven weapons and ammo have a finite shelf life, so ultimately stocks have to be rotated and if not used would have to be disposed of in training or safe decommissioning or disposal, which costs a fortune.
jimjamFree Membernickc
Sky news did a piece a while ago that put the cost of Brimstone (2 on each plane) at £102,000 each, and then there’s paveway (4 on each plane) at £22,000 eachso that insignificant cost is about £300K per sortie per plane in missiles alone,
Pffft. And here was me thinking it might be expensive. I lose more than that running for the bus.
jambalaya
using it for real provides valuable information and experience
Yep. That information will be in history books years from now, remarking on the fact that western powers STILL had no coherent strategy or policy in the middle east.
just5minutesFree MemberI suppose the £300K cost of the missiles needs to be balanced alongside the potential costs of achieving the same result through ground based forces.
As well as the direct cost, the avoided cost of injured servicemen and associated compensation and rehabilitation probably make air strikes quite cheap in comparison.
wobbliscottFree MemberIt’s not expensive relatively speaking. £300k is about how much it costs to run the NHS for about 4 seconds. A proverbial drop in the ocean.
binnersFull MemberHow much does one of these cost?
surely from an economic view it makes more sense? They cost us a packet, and we never get to use them
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