If as expected the United Kingdom leaves the European Union later this year, the one-time colonial power will again shift its gaze towards Asia.
That was confirmed last week when Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson said that Britain aims to establish a new naval base somewhere in Asia in the coming years.
“This is our biggest moment as a nation since the end of the Second World War,” Williamson said. “This is our moment to be that true global player once more – and I think the armed forces play a really important role as part of that.”
Singapore or Brunei, two of Britain’s old colonies in Southeast Asia, could be potential sites for the broached new base, a source close to Williamson told the Sunday Telegraph, a British newspaper.
Brunei already hosts a small British military base, where a battalion of the Royal Gurkha Rifles is stationed and paid for by the country’s ruling Sultan.
Malaysia, another former British colony but whose government is now controlled by a known anti-British prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, appears ill-fit for the role.

It also seems unlikely that Britain would opt for an Asian country that is not part of its Commonwealth, a political association mostly composed of the UK’s former territories.
Regardless of where the prospective base is located, or how significant it will be militarily, it is yet another indication that Britain aims to play a much bigger role in Asian affairs than it has for decades.
It’s all part of the ruling Conservative party’s axiom to forge a new “global Britain.” But the move comes at a confusing time, both in Europe and Asia.
In recent years, geopolitical tensions in Asia have escalated between an assertive China, which has spread its diplomacy far and wide through its US$1 trillion Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) investment scheme, and a revanchist United States keen to regain the influence and power it has lost due to China’s rise.
Britain, virtually absent from the Asia-Pacific since de-colonization more than half a century ago, appears to feel there is a place to reposition itself in the region amid the rift, to reemerge as a “true global player” in Williamson’s words.
It has certain regional backers. Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, who was told by China’s paramount leader Xi Jinping recently that he might consider using military force to achieve “reunification” of the two nations, said on January 5 that she welcomed a new British military base in the region.
“Any actions that will be helpful towards maintaining peace in the South China Sea, as well as maintaining freedom of passage,” she said would be supported by Taiwan.

Few other Asian governments have publicly commented on the Britain’s planned new naval base, but it might have gone down well in regional capitals that oppose China’s expansionist moves in the South China Sea, parts of which are contested by Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines and Taiwan.
“It is clearly a muscle-flexing gesture targeting China and shows closer engagement of external powers in the South China Sea disputes,” Xu Liping, a professor at the Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the South China Morning Post.
Since the Brexit referendum in June 2016, at which a slim majority of voters opted to leave the European Union, successive Conservative governments ill-prepared for such an outcome have scrambled not only to sort out an exit deal but also how to define Britain’s place in the world post-Brexit.
Back in January 2017, Prime Minister Theresa May said she wanted to build a “global Britain.” Months later, then Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson stated that Britain would be “more committed to the Asia-Pacific region” and after decades of moving its military interests westwards away from Asia the UK’s forces would be heading “back east of Suez.”
At the time, few analysts thought such utterances were more than platitudes or even delusions. For critics, it was the government trying to put a positive spin on the Brexit deal.
But, in April of last year, Britain opened a new naval base in Bahrain, its first new base east of Suez since 1971. A new training base in Oman is set to open this year. With 16 military bases across the world, Britain is second only to the US in scale.
While for decades previous governments have had nothing similar to America’s “Pivot to Asia” or Russia’s “Look East” policies, Britain has nonetheless maintained significant military interests in the Asia-Pacific.

For instance, it still holds regular military exercises with its Commonwealth partners, Malaysia, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand, all of whom are still party to the Five Power Defense Arrangements, a defense relationship formed in the 1970s.
In September, one of its warships took part in a “freedom of navigation” exercise in the South China Sea, much to the chagrin of China, which considered it a hostile gesture.
Much like current and past American presidents, British ministers now speak of their renewed interest in Asia with a degree of moral and political benevolence.
Britain, said Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt during a speech in Singapore last week, can “act as an invisible chain linking together the democracies of the world, those countries which share our values and support our belief in free trade, the rule of law and open societies.”
Ironically, perhaps, Hunt was speaking in an island state which has been controlled by one repressive party since its independence in 1965 and no democratic transfer looks likely any time soon.
Moreover, one likely location for Britain’s new Asia military base is Brunei, an oil rich state of less than a million people dominated by Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah for more than 50 years which doesn’t make any pretense of multi-party democracy.
But Hunt’s comments about upholding “free trade” were likely better received than his rhetoric on “open societies.”

China, Japan, South Korea and Vietnam all count Britain as an important trading partner, though by no means their most important. Yet trade will certainly be affected when (or if) the UK finally leaves the European Union, with which several Asian nations have or are negotiating free trade agreements (FTAs).
Senior British ministers have spent a considerable part of the last two years touring Asia to drum up support for new bilateral economic agreements once Britain is removed from the EU’s pacts.
Certain FTAs have been discussed, but formal negotiations will have to wait until after Britain leaves the EU. In that connection, Hunt toured Singapore and Malaysia last week to talk about British trade with Southeast Asia once it exits the EU.
While Japan and South Korea tend to export as much as they import from Britain, most Southeast Asia nations have gaping trade deficits.
Vietnam, which has recently agreed to an FTA with the EU, exported some US$4 billion worth of goods to Britain in 2016, according to UK trade data. Thailand exported almost the same worth of goods, while Cambodia sent almost US$1 billion. For all three, imports from Britain were worth less than a third of their exports.

It would thus be of interest for these exporters to be on friendly terms with Britain post-Brexit, lest they suffer future trade slumps. But trade, per se, isn’t enough: Vietnam, for example, trades more with Germany than with the UK.
Moreover, soon-to-be economic powerhouses like Indonesia and, quite far behind, Vietnam, are almost entirely absent in public or political conversation in Britain.
A new military base in Asia would, at least physically, demonstrate that Britain aims to be another protector of international rule of law, including in regards to freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, a strategic role that could translate into greater economic access to the fast-growing region.

No opium but opioids war !
No opium but opioids war !
Chin: You forget that in return, at the end of that Great War, the aggressor got a warm rewards – two Nukes on two cities which were reduced ashes! Remember ! Now go back to study elementary history, you moron ????!
Chin: You forget that in return, at the end of that Great War, the aggressor got a warm rewards – two Nukes on two cities which were reduced ashes! Remember ! Now go back to study elementary history, you moron ????!
Poor England. Looking forward to the past that is not coming back.
The fish rots from the head, and so are the English. King Farooq of Egypt in 1952, who upon being deposed by Nasser quipped:
“ .. In the end there will be only 5 kings left in the world: Four in the deck of cards, and one in England."
And all five of them, equally worthless.
In 4 centuries from Elizabeth to Elizabeth, England went from sublime to ridiculous, from the Queen of Shakespeare – ascendant, humane, progressive, opening to the world, to today Elizabeth when Scots want out, and English to exit Europe in self-doubt and self-pity, turning inwards.
Elizabeth I was vivacious, flirtatious, supremely feminine, powerful, Elizabeth II is staid, robotic, manly, heartless, pesty, having driven the real nobility, the people’s Queen Diana to her early fate.
One day some 25 years ago I was visiting my late mother in an ex-British Colony watching the Queen on TV. “I pity this woman”, said my mother, with a mix of empathy and scorn, recalling the trouble this Queen’s wayward children were putting her through. From then on I felt a kind of reverence for my mother as never before, and a newfound confidence. With a mother like mine now it will be not me who blinks first before a Royalist. England was cooked, nay fried. I was right.
The 20th century was defined by Anglos – USA and UK – divide and rule. Today. both have bit dust. Tomorrow is defined by unification – of Asia, Africa, and continental Europe in one land mass common market. UK, USA, Japan, Austalia are distant islands unconnected with action.
The days of sea are gone (except for commodities). It takes 45-60 days to ship products from China to Europe. BRI plans to cut this to 34 hours – high speed trains at 250 km/hr. The English can build all the bases they can to no use. Who needs snail paced sea lanes? The Anglos have not only lost their colonies and influence, they have lost their minds.
Lament for a people who ruled the world for 250 years.
Poor England. Looking forward to the past that is not coming back.
The fish rots from the head, and so are the English. King Farooq of Egypt in 1952, who upon being deposed by Nasser quipped:
“ .. In the end there will be only 5 kings left in the world: Four in the deck of cards, and one in England."
And all five of them, equally worthless.
In 4 centuries from Elizabeth to Elizabeth, England went from sublime to ridiculous, from the Queen of Shakespeare – ascendant, humane, progressive, opening to the world, to today Elizabeth when Scots want out, and English to exit Europe in self-doubt and self-pity, turning inwards.
Elizabeth I was vivacious, flirtatious, supremely feminine, powerful, Elizabeth II is staid, robotic, manly, heartless, pesty, having driven the real nobility, the people’s Queen Diana to her early fate.
One day some 25 years ago I was visiting my late mother in an ex-British Colony watching the Queen on TV. “I pity this woman”, said my mother, with a mix of empathy and scorn, recalling the trouble this Queen’s wayward children were putting her through. From then on I felt a kind of reverence for my mother as never before, and a newfound confidence. With a mother like mine now it will be not me who blinks first before a Royalist. England was cooked, nay fried. I was right.
The 20th century was defined by Anglos – USA and UK – divide and rule. Today. both have bit dust. Tomorrow is defined by unification – of Asia, Africa, and continental Europe in one land mass common market. UK, USA, Japan, Austalia are distant islands unconnected with action.
The days of sea are gone (except for commodities). It takes 45-60 days to ship products from China to Europe. BRI plans to cut this to 34 hours – high speed trains at 250 km/hr. The English can build all the bases they can to no use. Who needs snail paced sea lanes? The Anglos have not only lost their colonies and influence, they have lost their minds.
Lament for a people who ruled the world for 250 years.
Seems third opium war is brewing
Seems third opium war is brewing
“This is our moment to be that true global player once more" .. what a farce. The UK lacks the money to replace their current aging fleet.
Oh how the conservatives wish they could make UK great again. Little Borismust have a vision of himself as the next Chruchill.
“This is our moment to be that true global player once more" .. what a farce. The UK lacks the money to replace their current aging fleet.
Oh how the conservatives wish they could make UK great again. Little Borismust have a vision of himself as the next Chruchill.
It’s all bluster, with a minimum 10% GDP contraction after Brexit, Scotland leaving the UK and problems in Ireland . . . they can waste money flag waving in Asia if they want to, instead of putting out the fires burning at home. It’s entirely up to them 🙂
It’s all bluster, with a minimum 10% GDP contraction after Brexit, Scotland leaving the UK and problems in Ireland . . . they can waste money flag waving in Asia if they want to, instead of putting out the fires burning at home. It’s entirely up to them 🙂
The Brits never learn from its bankrupted situation causing the previous pullout from Singapore.
The Brits never learn from its bankrupted situation causing the previous pullout from Singapore.
Stretching a but thin arnt they? 1 aircraft carrier and hardly any nuclear submarines? Desperately trrying to be relevant? The last time they fired a shot in anger in Asia, they lost 2 brand new battleships
Stretching a but thin arnt they? 1 aircraft carrier and hardly any nuclear submarines? Desperately trrying to be relevant? The last time they fired a shot in anger in Asia, they lost 2 brand new battleships
Coming to kill wumaos and ccp like the street dog they are.
Coming to kill wumaos and ccp like the street dog they are.
Let them come and be buried the way they were before.
Let them come and be buried the way they were before.