Tom Watson writes:
Almost all first impressions of RAF Croughton – a
small airbase that sits amid green fields, about 20 miles north-east of the
prime minister's Witney constituency – are misleading.
From the road running
out of the nearby Northamptonshire village from which it takes its name, it is
visible as a series of anonymous, barn-like buildings. An understated sign on a
low brick wall and a couple of cold-war-era jets, no longer in use, would
appear to mark it out as a relic; a sleepy airbase whose heyday has passed.
But scratch the surface and the reality is very
different. RAF Croughton, which despite its name has in fact been a US base for
more than six decades, is a crucial hub for the operations of today's "war
on terror".
The US military describes it as the headquarters
for the provision of "world-class … communications and global strike
operations".
BT provides state of the art links between it and a US base
in Djibouti, from which highly secretive drone strikes in Yemen are launched.
And recent reports have demonstrated the central role played by Croughton in
the NSA's mass surveillance programme, even implicating it in the US bugging of Angela Merkel's phone.
The picture that emerges suggests that US bases
in the UK – and elsewhere in Europe – are central not only to mass surveillance
but also to the secret drone campaign being waged by the CIA and American
special forces.
This campaign is one of the worst excesses of the
'war on terror'.
Strikes carried out in Yemen – a country with which the US is
not at war – by robotic aircraft have killed large numbers of civilians, and
are widely opposed by civil society and the country's parliament.
Earlier this
year, the Obama administration was forced to open an investigation – a
depressingly rare event – into a drone strike that hit a wedding party in
Yemen, after evidence was unearthed by human rights charity Reprieve.
Yet despite the position of bases such as
Croughton at the bleeding edge of the hi-tech war on terror, the way they are
regulated is stuck in the stone age.
When I asked the government about the
arrangements under which it operates, I was told: "RAF Croughton is made
available for use by the United States visiting forces under the terms of the
Nato status of forces agreement of 1951."
I subsequently asked whether this would be
updated, in the light of the considerable changes in technology since the
1950s, but the minister replied that, in his view, "There is no
requirement for an additional agreement regarding the use of RAF Croughton by
the United States visiting forces" and, "The Department has no plans
to review this arrangement nor review the activities undertaken by the US at
the base".
That is why this week's moves in the House of
Lords to update and strengthen oversight of these bases are as welcome as they
are overdue.
Amendments to the defence reform bill, tabled by a cross-party
group of peers, are aiming to drag the regulation of these bases into the 21st
century.
They will require the defence secretary to report to parliament on
what is going on at these sites; provide a scrutiny group, headed by a senior
judge, to carry out oversight; and bring the bases under the remit of the
Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, which oversees the use of surveillance
in the UK.
It is shocking that ministers have so far
displayed such complacency over the very real risk that activities undertaken
by the US on British soil may be resulting in the deaths of innocent civilians
and serious violations of international law; and it seems obvious that, in a
world where drone strikes and mass surveillance on a previously unimaginable
scale have become a daily reality, rules drawn up in the 1950s need to be
updated.
My view has been reinforced by the expert advice
of Jemima Stratford QC, which I commissioned as chair of the all-party
parliamentary group on drones.
Stratford advises that the government has a duty
to investigate and prevent unlawful activity at US bases.
She concludes that
the amendments proposed may well help, where the Ministry of Defence does not
"hold information" on US activities at the base.
The agreements that govern how these bases are
used are almost as old as George Orwell's dystopian portrayal of the UK as
"Airstrip One", subservient to a US-led super-state.
That this
portrayal now seems in some ways more up-to-date than the government's feeble
regulation of US bases in this country is surely a compelling reason for
ministers to support these eminently reasonable amendments.
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