In a development that has sent tremors through the chancelleries of the world (and caused a minor spike in gin sales at Heathrow), the US Secretary of Defence, one Mr Hegseth, has issued a clarion call for Asia to 'boost defence' while simultaneously anointing the United Kingdom as the 'bedrock of global security'. One can almost hear the collective sigh of relief from Whitehall, interrupted only by the sound of crumbling masonry.
Let us parse this announcement with the care of a bomb disposal expert examining a suspicious briefcase. Hegseth, a man whose name sounds like a sneeze on a windy day, has essentially told our allies in the Orient to start spending money on things that go bang. This is not an unreasonable request: when a neighbour starts building a navy and you are still using sampans, it is perhaps time to reassess your procurement strategy. But the underlying message is clear. America, that great and glorious republic, is tired of being the world's policeman. They want to put the baton down and have a rest. Or rather, they want to pass the baton to other people who will do the running for them.
And what of the UK? We are the 'bedrock'. A lovely sedimentary metaphor. We are the solid foundation upon which the global security edifice rests. But is that edifice a stately home or a garden shed? The Prime Minister, no doubt, is thrilled. He can now stand at the dispatch box and declare that Britain is as vital to world peace as ever. But let us not forget that 'bedrock' is often the thing you build on, but it is also the thing you trip over. We are the stone that the builders rejected? No, we are the stone that the builders are sitting on.
The truth is that the UK's military is a shadow of its former self. We have ships that leak, planes that are grounded, and a nuclear deterrent that is one maintenance delay away from becoming a very expensive paperweight. And yet we are told we are the bedrock. It is a comforting fiction, like telling a man with a hangover that he looks robust.
What Hegseth really means is that America wants its allies to shoulder more of the burden. And in Asia, that burden is heavy. The South China Sea is a simmering cauldron, North Korea is an unpredictable boy with a firework, and Taiwan is the spark that could ignite a conflagration. So yes, Japan, South Korea, Australia: it is time to dig deep. Buy more F-35s. Build more submarines. And perhaps, just perhaps, consider what happens when the American security guarantee is no longer unconditional.
Meanwhile, the UK can bask in the warmth of being the bedrock. We can continue to host US airbases, contribute to NATO, and participate in coalition of the willing operations. We can send our brave men and women into harm's way, underfunded and overstretched. And we can do it all with a stiff upper lip and a cup of tea. Because that is what bedrocks do. We endure.
But let us not be naive. The bedrock is also the place where you store things you want to forget. Perhaps Hegseth's compliment is code for: 'You are too important to let go, but too weak to be a front-line power.' We are the dependable uncle who will always lend you a tenner, but who can no longer run for the bus. It is a role that suits our national character. We are the wet nurse, the plodding anchor, the eternal second fiddle.
So raise a glass of the finest airport gin to the bedrock of global security. We may be crumbling, but we are crumbling with dignity. And while Hegseth tells Asia to spend more, we will continue to spend what little we have on maintaining the illusion that Britain still matters. For in this absurd theatre of global politics, it is not the truth that counts, but the performance. And no one performs the role of the steadfast, stoic ally quite like us.









