So here we are again, standing at the precipice of a grand, symbolic gesture that will do precisely nothing to alter the course of history. News arrives that Britain is leading a global effort to phase out Russian diesel and jet fuel imports by the new year. A noble endeavour, no doubt. A clarion call for moral clarity in a murky world. But let us not mistake a gesture for a solution. We have seen this play before: the grand pronouncement, the backslapping in Westminster, the quiet murmur of lobbyists in the corridors of power. The question is not whether we can cut off Russian fuel by January, but whether we have the stomach for the consequences.
Let us examine the historical parallels. In the late Roman Empire, the emperors grew fond of issuing edicts against barbarian trade: no amber from the Goths, no furs from the Huns. These decrees were met with cheers in the Forum, while the provinces quietly continued business as usual. The reality of empire was that the tentacles of commerce could not be severed by a stroke of a pen. Today’s global energy market is no different. Russian diesel and jet fuel do not flow directly from a Siberian well to a British airport; they are blended, traded, and disguised through a labyrinth of intermediaries. The new year deadline is a political fiction, a fiction that will be maintained through creative accounting and the quiet complicity of nations less eager to posture.
Moreover, consider the intellectual decadence of our age. We believe that by banning a substance we exorcise the demon. But fuel is fuel. It has no moral valence. The same diesel that powers a Russian tank can propel a British lorry. The same jet fuel that fuels a Russian bomber can lift a British holidaymaker to Spain. The sin is not in the molecule, but in the regime that sells it. Yet we treat the fuel as if it were tainted by association, a relic of magical thinking in a supposedly rational age. This is the decadence of the late Victorian era: the belief that moral suasion and symbolic acts could reform a world that ran on coal and empire. It did not work then, and it will not work now.
But let us not be entirely cynical. There is something admirable in Britain’s attempt to lead, even if the effort is quixotic. The nation that once ruled the waves now seeks to rule the carbon markets. The impulse to set a deadline, to force a crisis, is quintessentially British: a bulldog spirit that prefers a clean break to a messy compromise. And perhaps, just perhaps, the deadline will force a reckoning. As the new year approaches, and Russian fuel becomes a pariah, we will see whether the market can adapt. Will we turn to American shale? Will we revive the nuclear dreams of the 1950s? Or will we simply find new routes for the same old product, like the Romans trading with the “barbarians” through neutral ports?
The real question, however, is one of national identity. What does it mean for Britain to be a leader in a world where leadership often means grand gestures? The Victorians would have understood: they built empires on the back of coal and steam. They did not shy from the dirt of reality. Today, we prefer the clean air of moral certainty. But the energy transition will not be clean. It will be messy, bloody even. A ban on Russian fuel is a necessary step, but it is not a solution. It is a prelude to a longer struggle, one that will test our resolve long after the champagne corks pop on New Year’s Eve.
So let us have our ban. Let us make our statement. But let us not pretend that the new year will bring a new dawn. The sun will rise on a world still dependent on fossil fuels, still entangled with Russia, still wrestling with the contradictions of a global economy. Britain’s push is a move, but the game is far from over. And as a contrarian intellectual, I can only say: enjoy the gesture. Reality will have its say soon enough.









