Bypassing parliament, or: How the Tories learnt to stop worrying and renew the bomb

Kate Hudson reveals the extraordinary sums spent on Trident without any scrutiny by parliament.

By Kate Hudson, CND’s general secretary

Following last week’s announcement that the Nick Harvey-led ‘Trident Alternatives Review’ would not be made public, the Government has admitted that it has committed a further £2 billion to replacing Trident.

This spending is in addition to the £4 billion which it is already known will be spent before 2016, when a Parliamentary decision is due to take place on whether or not to replace Britain’s nuclear weapons system. Of this £4 billion, £1 billion has already been spent on items including steel for the submarine hulls themselves.

In a response to a parliamentary question from Green MP Caroline Lucas, junior defence minister Peter Luff itemised MoD spending at the atomic weapons establishment (AWE) at Aldermaston. The disclosure revealed some significant expenditure.

£734 million will be spent on the ‘Mensa’ warhead assembly/disassembly plant. ‘Pegasus’, a highly enriched uranium plant will cost £634 million, and a further £231 million will go on a high explosives facility – ‘Circinus’. Other infrastructure costs bring this to just under £2 billion.

Further expenditure was excluded on the basis of departmental “commercial interests” and will no doubt be dripped out in the future to reduce the impact of the costs as a whole.

In October 2010, the government announced that it would be postponing the decision on whether or not to replace Britain’s nuclear weapons system until the next parliament in 2016. But by investing in the infrastructure of developing warheads and highly enriched uranium etc. they are pre-empting parliamentary authorisation.

Caroline Lucas has decried the “culture of secrecy” around military decision-making. It is hard not to come to the same conclusion.

First the only serious challenge to Tory hegemony on the question of Trident replacement is being buried. This is in spite of the fact that just two months ago Nick Harvey was claiming that his review would be a “game-changer”.

Now the full scale of investment in a new nuclear weapons system is coming to light: to the tune of £6bn. The lack of parliamentary scrutiny is to be deplored, and MPs like Caroline Lucas are rightly outraged at the Tories sidestepping democratic accountability.

See also:

Tories plan to suppress Trident debateKate Hudson, November 24th 2011

We can still fight Trident: Here’s howDaniel Blaney, November 10th 2011

Scrapping Trident for the savings is a losing argument; CND need realistic oppositionAndrew Gibson, November 4th 2011

Government ramps up Trident work despite coalition pledgeKate Hudson, February 18th 2011

Cost of Trident delay inevitable result of the compromise of coalitionMarcus Roberts, November 11th 2010

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11 Responses to “Bypassing parliament, or: How the Tories learnt to stop worrying and renew the bomb”

  1. Anne Schulthess

    RT @leftfootfwd: Bypassing parliament, or: How the Tories learnt to stop worrying and renew the bomb http://t.co/s58JnomD

  2. Ron Wilson

    RT @leftfootfwd: Bypassing parliament, or: How the Tories learnt to stop worrying and renew the bomb http://t.co/6tMJfuVd

  3. Robin T Cox

    RT @leftfootfwd: Bypassing parliament, or: How the Tories learnt to stop worrying and renew the bomb http://t.co/DhWm6beO

  4. David Phipps

    http://t.co/VlLHaxP1 Bypassing Parliament: And when were the majority of those in Parliament not content with 'bypassing' Parliament? EU?

  5. dalekcats blackberry

    MoD bypassing Parliament on Trident: read Kate Hudson on @leftfootfwd http://t.co/hK77vQ5s @ns_mehdihasan @SeumasMilne @mrmatthewtaylor

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