by Oliver JJ Lane
The UK government is very seriously concerned about the potential for domestic conflict but has to dress up preparations for such an eventuality under the “logically absurd” pretext of a land invasion of the British Isles by Russia, a professor of war has asserted.
“For the first time in many years, we have to actively prepare for the possibility of the UK homeland coming under direct threat”, the UK government said in its 2025 National Security Strategy last month, warning that “critical national infrastructure – including undersea cables, energy pipelines, transportation and logistics hubs” are a major target. Responding to the contents of the long-anticipated Whitehall paper, Professor David Betz of King’s College London called the government attempting to pass off work to harden critical national infrastructure against sabotage by invoking a foreign invasion by countries like “Russia, China, Iran and North Korea” expedient but essentially dishonest.
Betz is an emerging voice in the public sphere on the risks Western nations run with low-quality political decision making pushing their respective societies toward civil conflict, something he says normalcy bias and a lingering perspective that civil war is something that only happens to poor, non-Western countries has blinded many leaders and thinkers to. In remarks broadcast from a discussion with Professor Lewis Halsey, Professor Betz reflected: “there is growing apprehension about the security of Britain, the security of its infrastructure specifically, and about the potential for active conflict at home in a very direct manner, effecting people in a very direct manner.
“But that’s not external in origin, that’s internal, and that has to do with the way our society is now configured, it is highly fractured. Low trust, highly fractured, and highly politically factionalised which is leading us increasingly inevitably into civil conflict.”
Specifically reacting to the government briefing in recent weeks that it is now preparing for a potential foreign military invasion of the British Isles — despite the country being several hundred if not thousands of miles away from any conceivable aggressors — Betz said: “the government when they talk about this, tends to talk about Russia.
“The fact of the matter is there is a great distance between us and Russia… we are not militarily threatened in a direct way on the ground by any obvious external enemy, even Russia. Which isn’t to say there aren’t things which Russia could do to attack the UK should they wish to, but one of those is not occupying the village green with Russian soldiers, that simply, frankly, is a rather bizarre assertion.”
