Well, bugger me sideways with a bumbershoot. Her Majesty's finest purveyors of paranoia, the Joint Intelligence Committee, have finally emerged from their subterranean gin palaces to issue a grave warning: Iranian proxy groups might, possibly, perhaps, do something. This after the US and Iran engaged in what can only be described as a game of international whack-a-mole with cruise missiles in the Gulf. The headlines scream 'Urgent', but one suspects the only thing truly urgent is the need for a stiff drink and a lie down.
Let us parse this farce with the surgical precision of a man using a sledgehammer to crack a walnut. The Americans, bless their cowboy hearts, decided to 'send a message' by bombing some Iranian-backed militias in Syria. Iran, not to be outdone in the theatre of masculine posturing, retaliated by targeting a US base in Iraq with a drone that probably cost less than a used Toyota. Now the British intelligence establishment, those paragons of cool detachment, are wailing like toddlers denied a second biscuit. 'Iranian proxies might strike Western interests!' they bleat, as if this were not as predictable as a hangover after a whisky bender.
The great tragedy of modern foreign policy is that everyone involved seems to have confused statecraft with a video game. The Gulf is now a pinball machine, with missiles pinging off oil tankers and military installations. And where is Britain in all this? Sitting on the sidelines, tutting loudly while clutching a copy of the Geneva Convention, muttering about 'proportional responses' and 'de-escalation'. It is the role of the ageing aunt who smells faintly of lavender and regret, dispensing unwanted advice to teenagers high on ketamine.
But this is not merely geopolitical incompetence; it is a moral panic dressed up in three-piece suits. The Intelligence Committee's warning is a classic case of covering one's arse in case the balloon goes up. 'We told you so' is the default position of the civil service, a mantra chanted through gritted teeth at committee hearings. Never mind that the entire region is a powder keg of our own making, from the invasion of Iraq to the delightful mess of the Arab Spring. Now we must pretend surprise that Iran has friends who would do its bidding.
The sheer banality of this crisis is almost beautiful. There are no heroes here, only a cast of rogues and fools. The Americans are the drunk uncle who punches walls at weddings. Iran is the sulking teenager who sets fire to garden sheds. And Britain? We are the family dog, barking at shadows while the house burns down.
So let us pour a double gin, flick a V-sign at the telly, and revel in the glorious absurdity of it all. Iranian proxies are real, yes. But so is the absurdity of a species that believes bombing people makes them love you. The intelligence warn, the politicians bluster, and the missiles fly. But in the end, the only thing that changes is the label on the gin bottle.
The sun will set on the Gulf tonight, and the oil tankers will still float, and the spooks will still peer at their screens, and the rest of us will still be left wondering: did anyone actually read the memo about how to stop this nonsense? Of course not. They were too busy preparing for the next urgent meeting, the one that will decide the fate of humanity over stale biscuits and tepid coffee. Cheers.









