Wednesday, 13 May 2026

From The Throne To The Thrown Out?

The Government's majority is less than 184, and the latest tally of Labour MPs who have called on Keir Starmer to resign is 92, so to whom will the King really be giving his Speech? It will begin "My Lords and Members of the House of Commons", but one of the former, whose effective usurpation of the position of Jess Phillips undoubtedly contributed to Phillips's resignation, is Harriet Harman, who tweeted the offer of a peerage to Arooj Shah following her resignation as Leader of Oldham Council because Labour had lost overall control.

Shah is up to her neck in Oldham's mishandling of the rape gangs, but she is clearly ideal ennoblement material from the point of view of Starmer's Adviser on Women and Girls. Also heavily implicated is Shah's predecessor but two or four, depending on how you counted it, Jim McMahon MP, who is expected to be knighted in the King's Birthday Honours List. Shah is very close to Mohammed Imran Ali, known as "Irish Imy", who is a convicted heroin trafficker and the convicted getaway driver of the convicted cop killer Dale Cregan, but who has since set up vigilante patrols on the streets of Oldham.

Mind you, most parties have such types. Reform UK's initial candidate for Leeds Central and Headingley at the 2024 General Election was Jack Denny, who had done time both for fraud as a bent copper, and for possession of indecent images of children. If Labour raised Shah to the ermine, then why should Reform not elevate Denny? After all, Shaun Davies has just been made an Assistant Government Whip in place of someone who resigned for Wes Streeting before Streeting did not resign, and Davies was Leader of Telford Council when he actively campaigned against a national inquiry into the rape gangs.

The Labour Whips' Office has been a cesspit at least since Phil Woolas, Dan Norris and Ivor Caplin were all in it under Hilary Armstrong, who went on to introduce both Joe Docherty and Matthew Doyle to the House of Lords, and who in those days was advancing both Anna Turley, and Caplin's close friend, closest ally, sometime lover, and now constituency successor, Peter Kyle. Norris has lost the Labour whip, yet his proxy vote is still cast religiously by the Labour Whips. Armstrong and Kyle went on to support the brief 2015 Leadership campaign of Phillips, a campaign chaired by Streeting, who recently accompanied Kyle to The Devil Wears Prada 2. But they will not have been joined by Al Carns, who registered this domain name as long ago as February. And his supporters do not come with puns. They come with guns.

Equity

Excellent news from Haroon Siddique:

A leading human rights barrister has won an appeal against his referral for contempt of court over his closing speech during a trial of Palestine Action activists.

Rajiv Menon KC was accused of breaching the judge’s directions in the trial of six people for a 2024 direct action protest at an arms factory of the Israeli subsidiary Elbit Systems UK in Filton, near Bristol.

The proceedings against Menon – who previously worked on the Stephen Lawrence inquiry, the inquests of victims of the Hillsborough disaster and the Grenfell Tower inquiry – were believed to be the first brought against a barrister in respect of a jury speech in living memory, possibly ever. On Tuesday, the court of appeal allowed the barrister’s challenge to them.

Menon’s solicitor, Jenny Wiltshire, from Hickman & Rose, said: “Rajiv is delighted that the court of appeal has found in his favour and decided that the Filton trial judge did not have the power to refer him directly to the high court to be prosecuted for contempt of court and that the high court did not have the power to accept the reference in the absence of an application by the attorney general in the public interest.”

She said he was grateful to his lawyers and others who supported him during a difficult time and “hopes that this is now the end of the matter. This unprecedented attempt to criminalise lawyers for doing their job and representing their clients fearlessly should never be repeated”.

The trial judge, Mr Justice Johnson, referred Menon because he considered that the barrister had contravened his ruling in which he forbade lawyers from inviting the jury to disregard the court’s rulings of law or to apply the principle of jury equity – the right of a jury to acquit on the basis of conscience regardless of the judge’s directions – or to inform the jury of it.

None of the defendants were convicted of any offence but they were retried and four were convicted last week.

The high court had directed that a summons for contempt be drawn up and served on Menon after a referral from Johnson. The court of appeal said Johnson should reconsider the matter in the light of its ruling.

Defend Our Juries said the fact that contempt proceedings were ever brought against Menon “should deeply concern everyone who cares about the rule of law”.

And from Joshua Carroll:

A prominent barrister who represented a Palestine Action activist has won his appeal against contempt of court proceedings, which began after he allegedly defied a judge’s orders by telling a jury they could acquit based on their conscience.

The attempt by Mr Justice Johnson to penalise Rajiv Menon KC for comments he made in his closing speech is believed to be unprecedented in British history.

Johnson had previously told Menon that he was barred from mentioning the principle of jury equity, under which a jury can acquit someone on the basis that their actions were moral – even if they believe the defendant broke the law.

Four activists were found guilty of criminal damage last week after they took part in a 2024 break-in at a facility near Bristol owned by Israeli weapons company Elbit Systems. Despite being found guilty of criminal damage, they are set to be sentenced under terrorism law, something that was kept secret from the jury.

The contempt of court proceedings stemmed from Menon’s closing comments at a previous trial, in which the activists were acquitted, prompting prosecutors to pursue a retrial.

At the earlier trial, Menon recited an inscription from a plaque at the Old Bailey that highlights a case from 1670 that “established the right of juries to give their verdict according to their convictions”.

The court of appeal on Tuesday ruled that Johnson had no jurisdiction to refer Menon directly to the high court to be prosecuted for contempt, and that the high court had no jurisdiction to consider the allegation against Menon without an application by the attorney general.

A spokesperson for campaign group Defend Our Juries said: “For over 350 years, the right of a jury to follow their conscience has been a cornerstone of British justice, and the last safeguard ordinary people have against the abuse of state power.

“Rajiv Menon KC did what every defence barrister should be free to do in discharging his duty to his client: he told a jury the truth about their own rights. Today the court of appeal has ruled Judge Johnson followed an unlawful process, in directly referring his complaint to the high court, while bypassing the attorney general.”


A leading human rights barrister who represented Palestine Action defendants in the UK has won an appeal against a contempt of court case.

Rajiv Menon KC was accused of breaching the judge’s directions in a closing speech he delivered at the conclusion of the first trial at Woolwich Crown Court involving six Palestine action defendants accused of causing criminal damage to weapons at an Israeli army factory outside Bristol.

The defendants were subsequently cleared of charges of aggravated burglary. They were then retried, with four of them convicted of criminal damage last week.

The proceedings against Menon are thought to be unprecedented in English legal history.

During the trial, the presiding judge, Justice Johnson, directed lawyers that their closing speeches could not invite the jury to disregard the court’s ruling or law, and barred them from reminding the jury of its right to acquit on conscience - known as the principle of “jury equity”.

In his closing remarks, Menon, who has 30 years of experience and who represented defendant Charlotte Head in both trials, read out an inscription on a plaque at the Old Bailey commemorating Bushell’s Case of 1670, which first “established the right of juries to give their verdicts according to their convictions”.

Menon told jurors that the defendants had been “restricted” when giving evidence about their knowledge of Israeli arms company Elbit Systems' role in Israel's war on Gaza, and that it would be “ridiculous” for jurors to ignore that wider context and its impact on the defendants.

He also told the jury that the judge could not direct them to convict.

Justice Johnson said that the effect of Menon’s speech “was to invite the jury to disregard my directions that they should put views of the Middle East and the war in Gaza, and emotion, to one side”, and referred him to the administrative court.

Menon’s lawyers launched an appeal on the grounds that the High Court lacked jurisdiction to handle the case against him without an intervention from the attorney general.

On Monday, the Court of Appeal agreed with Menon’s team, finding that Justice Johnson wrongly initiated proceedings and should have either dealt with the issue himself at the time or referred the matter to the attorney general.

Menon’s solicitor, Jenny Wiltshire, from Hickman & Rose, said that Menon “is delighted that the Court of Appeal has found in his favour”, adding that he “hopes that this is now an end to the matter”.

The case is referred back to the trial judge. It will be halted unless he refers it to the attorney general, Lord Hermer.

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Stalking Horses?

Even Buckingham Palace is briefing against Keir Starmer because of the position in which he will be putting the King in a few hours’ time. Even sooner, though, Starmer will either sack Wes Streeting, or he is too weak to do so and thus unfit to be Prime Minister. No one should take the job of Health Secretary unless Starmer guaranteed to support the uncompromising removal from the NHS of the Palantir of Jeffrey Epstein’s Peter Thiel, the Palantir that was a client of Epstein’s Peter Mandelson, the Palantir with which Mandelson and Starmer had off-the-books meetings in Washington while Mandelson, under whom Streeting had learned so much, was Ambassador there.

In 2015, Streeting chaired the Leadership campaign of Jess Phillips. For months, Natalie Fleet, whose politically useful version of her past is taken entirely at face value, has been telling people that she was going to replace Phillips. Tonight, she has. Graveyards are full of the indispensable. But does Fleet also want the access to every camera phone in the country that Phillips resigned for having been denied, right when Sovereign AI was being placed in the tender hands of Suzanne Ashman, the daughter-in-law of Tony Blair of the Tony Blair Institute, not to say of Donald Trump’s Board of Peace?

“I would stab Jeremy Corbyn in the front,” said Phillips, only now out of the office of “Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and Girls”. She has accused British Pakistanis of importing wives for their disabled sons. She claims to have been rude and abusive towards Diane Abbott, although she may have built her reputation on lying about having used gutter language towards a woman who was old enough to be her mother. Phillips laughs at male suicides, at male cancers, at other men’s health issues, at violence against men, at problems in boys’ educational attainment, and at fathers denied access to their children. She has said that attacks of the kind that were seen in Cologne on the New Year’s Eve of 2015-16 “happen every week in Birmingham”, so the wonder is that it took until last week for there to be no Labour councillors in her constituency.

And on Tuesday 2 September, Phillips told the House of Commons that, “South Yorkshire police should never have been left to investigate themselves in this matter, and moving those investigations to the NCA is absolutely the right thing to do. I would be lying if I said that over the years I had not met girls who talked to me about how police were part of not just the cover-up but the perpetration.” Read again those words of the Minister who refused a statutory inquiry, an inquiry that had been, and still is, demanded by the Muslim candidate whom she had beaten by only 693 votes at Birmingham Yardley, which he intends to contest again, the wonderful investigative journalist Jody McIntyre. Then read the Epstein Files and worry about inferior cultures with no respect for women and with endemic predation on young girls. On a chilly spring day, poor Jenny Chapman was not only made to wait behind with Starmer after Cabinet, but she has been running around in what appeared to be only her slip, having not even been permitted the time to dress herself. What a burden it is that, as Beth Rigby put it, “she probably knows him better than most”.

Critical Juncture


In a last-ditch attempt to save his dying leadership, Keir Starmer had a message for millions of people who are sick and tired of soaring rents, rising bills and endless war: it’s not that bad. ‘Like every government, we’ve made mistakes’, he said, ‘but we got the big political choices right.’ In the wake of Labour’s disastrous local election results, pressure has mounted for the Prime Minister to resign, and lobby journalists have been lining up to ask Starmer how he intends to cling onto power. I would have asked him a different question: why have you failed to use this power to improve ordinary people’s lives?

If the establishment media won’t scrutinise Starmer’s claim that he has got the big political choices right, then we will. Cutting winter fuel. Slashing disability benefits. Refusing to scrap the cruel and immoral two-child benefit cap. After fourteen years of Conservative rule, you’d think that a Labour government would be bursting with impatience to deliver policies to benefit working people. This Labour government couldn’t wait to impoverish them.

Eventually, twenty months into office, following speech after speech in which the government told us they simply did not have the money to lift children out of poverty, they were finally forced to scrap the two-child benefit cap. In doing so, they admitted they had been keeping children in poverty for no reason whatsoever. At the same time, the Labour leadership boasted about record increases in military spending. Austerity for the poor. Profits for war. From the moment this government was elected, it has decided there isn’t any money to feed, house or care for people — but there is always money to bomb, kill and injure them.

Another of Starmer’s ‘big political choices’ was to allow failing water companies to rip us off. Soaring profits. Sewage in our rivers and seas. This is the consequence of our government’s dogmatic refusal to do the common-sense thing: bring water into public ownership. It could have ended the failure of privatisation. Instead, it decided that ordinary people should pay the price for corporate negligence and greed.

This government chose not to bring in wealth taxes, not to implement rent controls, not to make the kind of public investment in council-housing that is needed to tackle the housing crisis, and chose not to redistribute resources from those who wield it to those who need it. It chose to give a top political job to a man with an established relationship to a convicted sex offender — a man who just so happened to pride himself on his opposition to our mass movement for social justice and peace.

Rather than rewriting the rigged rules of corporate Britain, the government also chose to blame a different group of people for the problems in our society: migrants and refugees. It went after the rights of migrants who have contributed so much to this country and demonised human beings seeking asylum. It mimicked the politics of Reform UK and rolled out the red carpet for Nigel Farage.

There is perhaps one political decision that will leave the greatest stain of all. As Israel embarked on the mass murder of Palestinians in Gaza, this government could have defended international law and called for peace. Yet it chose to facilitate war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. And it chose to launch a systematic assault on the civil liberties of those who protested against the government’s complicity (alongside its outrageous decision to erode jury trials, the cornerstone of our justice system). This government’s enduring legacy will be its complicity and participation in the greatest crime of our age. And we will never, ever forget.

These decisions are the root cause of the chaos that Starmer is now trying to temper — and unless these root causes are addressed, we will continue to lurch from one political crisis to the next. It’s not enough for Starmer to go. What needs booting out is the politics he represents: corporate greed, anti-migrant policies and endless war.

For much of our media, the past few weeks and months have been a golden opportunity to indulge the endless psychodrama of Westminster and speculate about Starmer’s successor. For millions of ordinary people, they have been a depressing reminder of how yet another government has refused to implement policies that can improve their lives. I support calls for the Prime Minister to resign for the same reason I refuse to get excited about any of his possible replacements: our political class is unwilling to bring about the transformative change this country needs. I haven’t heard anything from his main contenders about the need to end corporate greed, the need for rent controls, or the need for a mass redistribution of wealth and power. I certainly haven’t heard any calls for an investigation into British complicity in genocide — presumably because that investigation would implicate them as well.

In his speech yesterday, Keir Starmer broke the record for the most number of cliches in half an hour. Yet he managed to hide the real record beneath his rhetoric: child poverty, inequality and genocide. Those are the government’s big decisions. And that is how this government will be remembered.

If we want real change, then we need to mobilise in our hundreds and thousands for the kind of policies Starmer could — and should — have implemented from the start: rent controls, caps on energy prices, controls on basic food prices, public ownership, a National Care Service, an uplift in child and disability benefit, a defence of our civil liberties; and a redistribution of resources away from weapons and war, toward education, housing and our NHS.

We are at a critical juncture in British politics — but we have hope on our side. During last week’s elections, we saw Your Party-backed independents, Green Party candidates and others fighting back against austerity, privatisation and fear. They proved what can happen when grassroots campaigns stand up for all communities, defend the humanity of Palestinians, and vow to make life affordable for all. Alone, there is only so much we can achieve. Together, we can change British politics forever. And we can bring about a new kind of society built on a radical idea: that everyone deserves to live in dignity.

Now Able To Report


A court will seek to sentence four Palestine Action activists found guilty of criminal damage at a site owned by Israel’s biggest weapons manufacturer as terrorists, even though they were not convicted of terror charges, Novara Media is now able to report.

The ‘terror connection’ was kept secret from the jury and UK media outlets were barred from reporting on this due to court-imposed restrictions, which were lifted on 12 May. This is believed to be the first case in British history where a court will attempt to sentence activists taking direct action as terrorists.

Judge Jeremy Johnson is expected to add a ‘terrorist connection’ to the charges of Charlotte Head, Samuel Corner, Leona (Ellie) Kamio and Fatema Rajwani under section 69 of the Sentencing Act 2020, despite the jury only convicting them of criminal damage and having no knowledge that a terror link could be later imposed.

Head, Corner, Kamio and Rajwani – all aged between 21 and 30 – were convicted on 5 May after taking part in a raid on an Elbit factory near Bristol in August 2024 where they damaged Israeli quadcopter drones. Corner was also convicted for a lower category of GBH without intent.

Another two activists, Zoe Rogers, 22, and Jordan Devlin, 31, were cleared of criminal damage charges by a jury at Woolwich Crown Court. All six activists, part of the so-called Filton 24, were previously cleared of the most serious charges of aggravated burglary and violent disorder.

The use of terrorism legislation in this case is based solely on property damage – the fact that Israeli drones and weapons were dismantled. The court will rely on the “serious property damage” clause under the Terrorism Act 2000.

Being sentenced as terrorists means the defendants could face significantly longer time in prison and be listed as terrorists upon release – imposing severe limitations on their lives. Most have already served 18 months on remand, with Corner incarcerated for 21 months.

In a preparatory hearing back in March 2025, the judge ruled that there appeared to be a ‘terrorist connection’ as the activists were attempting to influence the Israeli government by restricting its access to weapons.

Judge Johnson said: “On s1(1)(b) of the Terrorism Act 2000, Rajiv Menon KC and others strongly argued that influencing government was not the purpose of the action – the purpose of the action was to damage weapons and save lives. I accept that this was one motivating factor – but that does not mean that another purpose was not to damage property to be made available to the Israeli government and thereby influence the Israeli government.”

Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori, who defeated the government’s proscription case at the high court in February, told Novara Media: “The judge kept secret from the jury that the defendants would be sentenced as terrorists, presenting that they were only charged for criminal damage which the jury decided four were guilty of. Unknowingly, the jury actually likely convicted them of terrorism.

“This is the first case, and therefore the test case, for trying to convict activists as terrorists, using a manipulated court process. Convicting activists for one charge, then sentencing them as terrorists, is more outrageous than the proscription of Palestine Action. Everyone needs to mobilise against it.”

Stringent restrictions around the trial prevented UK media outlets from reporting that defendants were barred by the judge from speaking on their motivations for joining Palestine Action and providing information on the genocide in Gaza or Elbit Systems. These restrictions have now been lifted.

Ahead of closing speeches, the judge issued an order heavily restricting the contents of their defence teams’ statements, prohibiting the defence from referring to the principle of jury equity (the absolute power of a jury to convict or acquit according to their conscience) or informing the jury that a judge may not direct a jury to convict.

The judge also prohibited the defence from relying on certain legal defences, including that the defendants’ actions were legally justified as they acted out of necessity to save lives, acted to prevent a greater crime, or acted to prevent much greater property damage in Palestine.

The defence were barred from inviting the jury to rely on the following matters when reaching their verdicts: Elbit’s activities in manufacturing weapons and supplying them to Israel; the nature of the property defendants damaged or destroyed; the defendants’ belief that weapons and other technology at Elbit’s factory would be used to kill or injure others, including children; the fact that the defendants were arrested for terrorism offences; the fact that the defendants have been acquitted of aggravated burglary and violent disorder; and the history of the Middle East, including events in the Middle East since 7 October 2023 and Israel’s activities in Gaza.

Coventry South MP Zarah Sultana used parliamentary privilege in April to expose the court order that withheld this important information from both jurors and the British public.

Due to the restrictions, all defendants except for Corner elected to self-represent and deliver their own closing speeches.

Some of the speeches alluded to the restrictions. In her closing speech, Kamio said: “This is not everything that I’d like to tell you, but I’m so scared of the consequences of saying something I’m not permitted to, that I hope this is enough.”

Representing herself, Rogers told the court: “I can say with absolute certainty that this is the best thing I have ever done, because there is a good chance that because of our actions that night, innocent lives were saved.”

In a press conference after her acquittal, she added: “My co-defendants should be outside here with me. I don’t blame the jury for their decision as the truth was withheld from them throughout the trial. This is a miscarriage of justice and the litmus test has been failed for democracy and rule of law in this country.”

Israel has killed a conservative estimate of 72,000 Palestinians in Gaza since October 2023, including 20,000 children.

NATO Is A Dangerous Grift

Thomas Fazi writes:

Trump has once again sent Europeans scrambling. This time, he has announced the withdrawal of around 5,000 soldiers from Germany as part of a Pentagon decision triggered by the president’s public dispute with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz over the Iran war. The cut amounts to roughly 14% of the approximately 35,000-36,000 American troops currently stationed in Germany, and is expected to unfold over six-to-12 months, returning US force levels to where they stood before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Trump has hinted that further cuts may follow. He has framed the move as a “punishment” for Merz’s criticism of Washington’s handling of the war — including Merz’s claim that Iran had “humiliated” the United States.

This is part of a broader offensive Trump has waged against Nato allies in recent weeks, for their refusal to send naval forces to help open the Strait of Hormuz. He told Nato members that they will “have to start learning how to fight for yourself” because “the USA won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us”. Trump has also threatened to withdraw troops from Italy and Spain, and has once again raised the prospect of the US leaving Nato altogether. Asked in a recent interview whether he would reconsider US membership in the alliance, Trump replied: “Oh yes, I would say [it’s] beyond reconsideration”.

In this context, Germany’s sweeping rearmament programme is widely presented as a positive step in the right direction — Europe finally taking charge of its own security. But does this narrative hold up? And how seriously should one take the US’s threat of leaving Nato? A closer look reveals a very different picture.

Last month, Germany published its first-ever official military strategy, presented by Boris Pistorius, the country’s defence minister. Its core ambition is to transform the Bundeswehr into “Europe’s strongest conventional army” by 2035, and a “technologically superior” force by 2039, with the Federal Republic positioned as the continent’s leading military power and the primary partner for its European allies. To achieve this, the strategy envisages massive rearmament with long-range weapons, extensive deployment of AI, automation and autonomous systems, and a total force — including reserves — of 460,000 soldiers. The reserve is explicitly framed as a bridge to civilian society, signalling an intent towards broader social militarisation.

The strategy has drawn sharply divergent reactions. Some hail it as a long-overdue step towards freeing Germany — and by extension Europe — from American military tutelage, given the US’s apparent “disengagement” from Nato. Others view it as a dangerous revival of German military nationalism, one that evokes the darkest chapter of 20th-century European history. Both readings miss the point. Germany’s rearmament is not designed to make the country more militarily sovereign — for better or worse. It is designed to elevate Germany’s role as the “vassal-in-chief” within the US-controlled Nato command structure. In this sense, the Trump-Merz spat should be seen as little more than political theatre. 

The document itself makes this plain. One of its key sentences reads: “Nato must become more European to remain transatlantic”. Germany’s role is conceived not merely as that of a frontline military actor, but as Nato’s logistical and strategic hub — the node linking Eastern, Central and Western Europe while maintaining the transatlantic connection to North America. In other words: Germany must rearm in order to sustain American hegemony on the continent. To paraphrase a famous line from the Italian novel The Leopard: “Everything has to change so that everything can stay the same”.

This was made explicit in a recent post on X by Elbridge Colby, the US Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. Colby welcomed Germany’s new military strategy as a vindication of Trump’s pressure on European allies to rearm, framing it as a step towards what he calls “Nato 3.0”. His core argument is that Europe, led by Germany, must now convert the Hague Commitments — where Europeans committed to a landmark defence investment pledge, aiming to spend 5% of their GDP on defence by 2035 — into concrete military capability. He quoted Nato Secretary-General Rutte approvingly: “Air defense systems, drones, ammunition, radars, space capabilities — that is what will keep us safe”. On Germany specifically, Colby presented the new military strategy as proof that Berlin was finally stepping up after “years of disarmament”, noting that rechristened Department of War was already working closely with the Germans to accelerate the transition.

The strategy itself, as Colby quoted it, acknowledges that Washington “is increasingly shifting its strategic focus towards its Western Hemisphere and the Indo-Pacific” and is demanding allies “step up their efforts to safeguard their own security”. Germany, in this framing, must become “an even stronger military ally to the United States” precisely because the US is repositioning elsewhere.

This is simply a restatement of the “division of labour” that US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced at the very outset of the Trump administration. He made clear that the US needed to pivot elsewhere — we now know that meant Iran, and ultimately China — and that Europe would therefore have to assume responsibility for “managing its own security”, meaning the maintenance of pressure on Russia through Ukraine. Europe duly obliged: it has increased its defence spending and has doubled down on support for Kyiv, including through the recently approved €90 billion loan. We are now watching the natural progression of that logic, as Europe assumes the full financial burden for the continuation of the proxy war against Russia.

In short, the US is not “disengaging from Europe”; it is simply demanding that Europe contribute more to Nato, while remaining firmly embedded within the Alliance’s command structure — in short, that it pays more for its own subordination.

This requires a reassessment of Trump’s broader strategy towards Russia. Though he is routinely accused of “appeasing Putin” — with critics citing his cut-off of US funding to Ukraine and his (failed) attempts to broker a peace deal — the reality is more complicated. Washington has long sought to force Europe to decouple from Russian gas and replace it with American LNG, and the war in Ukraine has allowed them to achieve just that — so much so that one has to wonder if America’s decades-long strategy in Ukraine, from helping topple the democratically elected government in Ukraine in 2014, to drawing the country firmly into Nato’s informal orbit, wasn’t designed precisely to lure the Russians into war. The bombing of the Nord Stream pipeline should always be understood as part of this strategy. This becomes even clearer in light of the latest US National Security Strategy, published in November 2025, which designates “American energy dominance” across oil, gas, coal and nuclear power as a top strategic priority, explicitly framing the expansion of American energy exports as a means to “project power”.

This logic illuminates not only the US’s military campaigns against Venezuela and Iran, but also why, in order to keep Europe dependent on American energy and severed from Russian supplies, Washington has a structural interest in keeping the proxy war going. It’s therefore easy to conclude that the US was never genuine about its intentions to make peace with Russia. The only difference today is that the war is now being waged not only through Ukraine, but through Europe itself. / In this light, the ostensible US “threats” to leave Nato — and the European establishment’s rearmament programme, Germany’s above all — are revealed as components of the same strategy: keeping Europe subordinated to American geopolitical priorities. The new German military strategy is nothing more than Berlin fulfilling the role Washington has assigned it: holding the line against Russia while the US turns towards the Indo-Pacific and the Western Hemisphere. This is not nationalism, military or otherwise, but its opposite: the undermining of German and European core interests at the hands of a transnational elite.

In this context, Germany should be understood as the anchor of a new Europeanised Nato core, comprising Germany, France, the UK — and Ukraine itself (even if formally outside of the alliance). This too reflects a longstanding American design. In his 1997 book The Grand Chessboard, the influential Polish-American diplomat Zbigniew Brzezinski predicted that “Franco-German-Polish-Ukrainian political collaboration… could evolve into a partnership enhancing Europe’s geostrategic depth”, adding that “America’s central geostrategic goal in Europe can be summed up quite simply: it is to consolidate through a more genuine transatlantic partnership the US bridgehead on the Eurasian continent”.

This should dispel any remaining notion that what we are witnessing amounts to a move towards German or European strategic autonomy. It is no coincidence that Germany’s new military strategy identifies Russia as “the most serious and immediate threat” to European security — a claim that forms part of a broader European narrative warning of an inevitable war with Moscow in the coming years. At face value, this anti-Russian posturing might appear to reflect a distinctly “European” stance, one seemingly at odds with Washington’s public position. But this is largely an illusion. Not only has the European transatlantic establishment thoroughly internalised America’s strategic priorities, but the Nato command hierarchy makes the real chain of authority plain.

Real operational control of the proxy war against Russia remains firmly in Anglo-American hands. At the top sits the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) in Mons, Belgium, which translates political decisions into military objectives. The Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) — always an American general, dual-hatted as commander of US European Command — runs it alongside a British deputy. A German general coordinates staff work as Chief of Staff, but effective decision-making stays with the top two.

Below SHAPE, operational command splits into two tracks: three Joint Force Commands (JFCs), the true theatre commanders for large-scale operations, and three Component Commands covering air (Ramstein, Germany), land (Izmir, Turkey) and sea (Northwood, UK). MARCOM, the maritime command, has traditionally been UK-led, but the US recently took control of it, placing all three Component Commands under US command — a significant consolidation that has gone largely undiscussed. Even when a European officer commands a JFC — such as the leadership of JFC Naples, which recently passed from the US to Italy — the overall strategic direction remains under American control; JFC commanders implement objectives set by SHAPE.

Two further structural dependencies reinforce American dominance. The first is the C4ISR concept of Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance: European allies are almost entirely dependent on US satellite, aerial and maritime platforms for real-time intelligence, surveillance and targeting — which together represent the backbone of Nato warfighting. Indeed, it has been acknowledged even by the Wall Street Journal that Ukraine’s deep-strike operations inside Russia — including, recently, against several oil production facilities — could not be conducted without American intelligence and satellite capabilities. The second dependency, less visible in public debate but potentially more consequential, is the dense presence of American staff officers embedded throughout Nato’s command structure at every level of the hierarchy, giving Washington an institutional grip that no change in command titles can easily displace.

All of this should dispel any notion that the US is not deeply involved in the Ukraine war — or that it intends to leave Nato and truly “disengage” from Europe. Beyond the command architecture, the United States operates numerous bases and military installations across the continent, both within the Nato framework and under exclusive American control, which are indispensable to its global power projection. Ramstein Air Base in Germany — home to around 16,000 troops — functions as the hub controlling military drone traffic on a global scale, while coordinating American air operations across Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

A recent Wall Street Journal investigation confirmed that, despite the public protestations of European leaders, US bases across the continent have functioned as the essential infrastructure for the American war on Iran. As the article put it, “Europe remains the bedrock of US force projection in the world”. Even Nato Secretary-General Rutte recently described the purpose of Nato as being a “platform of power projection for the United States”.

Another element is what analysts call the “hidden dividends” of Nato: contracts and orders for American defence industries. This web of 1,300 agreements among the 32 member states that set standards for Nato weapons and equipment — covering everything from ammunition calibres to fuel-tank diameters — were originally imposed by Washington and overwhelmingly favour the American military-industrial complex.

German and European rearmament, then, in the context of a supposedly more “European” Nato, is not strengthening European autonomy, but further eroding it. Not only does it make Europe complicit in Washington’s increasingly reckless military adventures, as the Iran war demonstrates, but more gravely still, it is pushing the continent towards a potentially catastrophic confrontation with Russia. Moscow is watching and responding accordingly. In a recent speech, Foreign Minister Lavrov stated openly: “A war against us has been openly declared. The Kyiv regime is being used as the tip of the spear. However, everyone is aware that this tip is unusable without Western supplies of weapons, intelligence data, satellite systems, training of military personnel and much more”. Lavrov added that Western leaders are actively preparing their publics for war with Russia — using Ukraine to buy time — and that Russia takes the threat very seriously. One cannot overstate the dangers of the path we are treading.

A final observation is warranted. The French historian Emmanuel Todd has argued that much of what passes for nationalism in the West today — from Germany to Japan — is in fact a form of “imaginary” nationalism: vassalage towards the US dressed up as sovereignty. He contrasts this with “real” nationalism, a genuine sovereignty-oriented politics that is today largely absent. German neo-militarism, as argued here, falls squarely into the former category. But this does not mean that a “true” German nationalism — with its attendant aspirations towards continental hegemony — could not resurface. The militarisation of German society and the hardening of anti-Russian sentiment are real and deepening phenomena. There is a historical precedent, after all. A century ago, the Anglo-American establishment tolerated the Nazi military build-up as an anti-Soviet bulwark — only for the German monster to eventually slip its leash. The domestic German context today is obviously very different — and of course one may argue, and hope, that a “true” German nationalism would recognise that the country’s genuine interests lie in peace rather than war. Even so, the parallels are impossible to ignore.

Colonel of Truth?

Champagne corks will soon be popping like cherries in Freshers' Week, but I must not overindulge, since I am on a pretty tight diet to stop people from assuming that I had been hypnotised by Zack Polanski, a sitting member of the London Assembly who by his own admission has not paid the GLA precept for three years.

The four Cabinet Ministers who have been in to tell Keir Starmer to go include David Lammy, who was Foreign Secretary when Peter Mandelson was appointed; Yvette Cooper, who took the job when the operation to keep Mandelson in post was at full throttle, having sat with him in Gordon Brown's Cabinet; and Wes Streeting, who learned more under Mandelson than could ever be articulated in words. The fourth is Shabana Mahmood, she of the electoral irregularities in 2004.

People would once have been musing about Dan Jarvis, who by the way managed to be an MP while Mayor of South Yorkshire. But the role of potential de Gaulle seems to have passed to Al Carns, who was a Conservative-voting Colonel in the Special Forces, nudge nudge wink wink, until June 2024, when he resigned his commission and joined the Labour Party after the General Election had been called. He was then parachuted in a new sense, into the Birmingham Selly Oak seat that had been vacated at the last possible moment by Steve McCabe, Parliamentary Chair of Labour Friends of Israel. The General Election was on 4 July. On 9 July, Carns was made a Defence Minister.

But Labour has held only one council seat in Birmingham Selly Oak, the same number as the Conservatives. A ward of which a very small part was in that constituency has returned two members of Reform UK, and every other councillor on Carns's patch is now a Green. Still, while you do have to be a member of the House of Commons to be Leader of the Labour Party, Alec Douglas-Home was Prime Minister for two weeks while a member of neither House of Parliament. In a Commonwealth Realm, Mark Carney repeated the trick for more than three times as long last year. Andy Burnham, think on.