The United States has imposed new tariffs on goods linked to forced labour, a strategic pivot that British manufacturers now warn will trigger supply chain chaos. This is not a trade squabble, it is a threat vector aimed at the logistical backbone of our industrial base. Downing Street has been caught flat-footed, yet again ignoring the cold calculus of economic warfare.
The move targets specific products from regions with known labour abuses, but the intelligence failure here is clear: we have allowed our supply chains to become dangerously dependent on opaque sourcing. British manufacturers are scrambling for alternatives, but the chessboard has been reset. The real question is whether our cyber resilience and military readiness can withstand the cascading effects of this disruption.
Hostile state actors will exploit this chaos, probing our logistics and testing our response times. We must treat this as a strategic warning, not a policy disagreement.








