161 comments

  • JdeBP 3 hours ago

    It is interesting to look at the details and see who the (news) 'media' are in this case. Going through the details, I find 1 instance (under Kemp) of the BBC, and everyone else is the 'usual suspects', the Telegraph, the Mail, GB News, the Sun, the Times, and so forth.

    The Guardian is only mentioned in context of exposing these conflicts of interests; and whilst I am surprised to find LBC and Nation Cymru as not being transparent about their experts and commentariat, I don't see The National mentioned at all, nor The Herald, The Scotsman, the Metro, the Financial Times, and The i.

    This may tell us that these experts only appear in the 'usual suspect' news media. Or it may tell us that this report didn't look at a wide range of U.K. news media. The latter seems unlikely given the inclusion of some niche publications (I've never even heard of London Loves Business until today.) and things like Nation Cymru, so I am more inclined to suppose the former.

    • k1m 3 hours ago

      The report doesn't say the media mentioned is an exhaustive list of the media that failed to disclose ties to the arms industry, which is what you're assuming.

      You mention the Guardian. I took one of the names listed in the report, Richard Barrons, and quickly found an article in the Guardian where he's quoted but his ties to the arms industry are not disclosed: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/mar/20/britain-def...

      • JdeBP 2 hours ago

        Not quoted as saying that there should be some sort of budget or spending increase, which is the sort of evidence being presented in this report, but merely some historical context statement about how the armed forces had been 'right-sized for the era'; and with his political ties also mentioned.

        That said, I wouldn't be surprised if AOAV had a blind spot with respect to The Guardian. However, that doesn't show one; and they did do lists of news media for several of the 19 (e.g. Richards) indicating that they aren't just picking 1 example publication for each person. Which is why I'm still inclined towards this telling us that there is a certain subset of U.K. publications in which this occurs.

        If they hadn't mentioned Nation Cymru I'd be inclined towards this telling us that the report is highly London-centric and not reflective of 'U.K. media'. But they did.

        • k1m an hour ago

          I'm sorry, that's a real stretch. It's apparent to anyone reading what his comment implies.

          And this is far from an isolated case, if you think the Guardian is an exception. We're all technical here, easy to use Google search and look up the names in the report and see how often the Guardian and the other "better" papers disclose the arms industry links. (Oh and the political party he's affiliated to isn't what's under discussion here.)

          • JdeBP an hour ago

            No, You're the one stretching things. If you want to provide an example from The Guardian that actually works, and it is as easy to do so as you say, go ahead. As I said, I wouldn't be surprised if they had a blind spot, given who is on the staff and the byline of this very piece. But you haven't here.

            Rather, you've showed an article where the primary complaint of the headlined report, that the potential biases of a commentator or a source are not made apparent, does not apply because the bias of the person quoted, that xe is politically connected to the government whose actions are being scrutinized in the piece, is very much given as context.

    • pjc50 3 hours ago

      > the Telegraph, the Mail, GB News, the Sun, the Times

      Indeed. These are pay-to-play propaganda and should not be accorded the dignity of "newspaper". Peter Oborne's resignation from the Telegraph is still worth reading: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-31510152

      • gib444 2 hours ago

        And The Times and The Sun aren't even British. They're owned by News Corp which is American

        And The Telegraph is about to become German

        GB News is quite likely Russian ultimately lol

        • SanjayMehta 2 hours ago

          Why Russian? They're broke. Why not Chinese?

          • tialaramex 30 minutes ago

            It's just statistically more likely. The UK has a lot of Russians and somehow even those who were notionally sanctioned as Putin's puppets found it easy to obtain special case exemptions or conveniently happened to have transferred key assets to somebody who wasn't sanctioned coincidentally as it happened. Russia being "broke" is a macro-economic idea, the Russians involved are wealthy.

            As with the drug trade lawyers are happy to take £££ of your obviously stolen Russian cash to help you argue that you and that money are legitimate. And if you lose? Oops, the payment to the lawyers is magically exempt so they keep that. The incentives to work for people who you know are crooks are very strong, just need to get cash up front because when anything goes wrong they're suddenly penniless and have never met you.

            That's the stupidest thing about Trump's lawyers. These guys must have represented crooks before, so he's not different on that score, but why did so many of them not demand cash up front?

    • jrrv 2 hours ago

      LBC certainly falls within the "usual suspects"

    • kitd 2 hours ago

      The survey excluded veterans with no commercial ties. Maybe those publications not mentioned used them instead.

      • JdeBP an hour ago

        Yes, and I was slightly disappointed, from a statistical point of view, that they didn't tell us how many people they excluded from the original sample for this reason. That could have told us things.

        If (say) they threw out 967 to leave those 33, then one possible explanation that that leaves the door open for is that journalists are so used to there being no conflict of interest, it being the case the majority of the time, that they don't check in the minority of cases where there is.

        I suspect that they didn't throw out anywhere near as many as that, though. But, still, I would have liked to have been told the figure.

  • flumpcakes an hour ago

    Surely all experts are employed in some form in their field? Should we have their entire CV read out before their expertise is given on a subject matter?

    Unless there is a clear conflict of interest, such as an "expert" urging a particular course of action which aligns to benefit their employers, then the audience should probably just engage their critical thinking a bit more.

    The majority of UK experts will probably have opinions that align with UK ethics/morality/society and urge options that benefit the UK state and it's allies. I would assume that would be an absolute given too.

    When I watch Chinese citizens give their expertise on matters, I know that it will probably align with the Chinese state and benefit them (as opposed to strictly the UK state). Have people lost all of their critical thinking skills?

    • k1m 31 minutes ago

      > Unless there is a clear conflict of interest, such as an "expert" urging a particular course of action

      That's exactly the issue

    • epolanski 36 minutes ago

      If somebody is discussing about defense in the media the viewers/readers should know that the person works for the defense industry in a commercial role.

      Presenting them merely as experts because they are "former X" creates a false impression of impartiality.

  • echelon_musk 3 hours ago

    > How the UK Security Services neutralised ‘The Guardian’ newspaper (2019) (dailymaverick.co.za)

    > 3 points by indigodaddy on June 2, 2023 | past | 1 comment

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36170406

    https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2019-09-11-how-the-u...

    • cryo32 3 hours ago

      I'm not sure that the Grauniad has a particularly good global reputation for independent and critical journalism. It publishes the same mix of disguised opinion pieces and rather biased junk articles as the other side of the political spectrum.

      There isn't a single news source that you can trust as such. You have to compile a lot of them, remove the unverified information and see what is left. Usually not a lot.

      • zipy124 3 hours ago

        Whilst not commenting on that, a fascinating quote from the article you are replying to is:

        "Viner also oversaw the breakup of The Guardian’s celebrated investigative team, whose muck-racking journalists were told to apply for other jobs outside of investigations."

        This tells you something about why you might feel that way.

        • cryo32 3 hours ago

          That's what happens when you employ someone on their political stance (CND poster girl) rather than their editorial integrity...

      • piltdownman 3 hours ago

        I mean they operate as a trust and wear their journalistic bias proudly on their sleeve; in terms of intent their altruism is self-evident.

        That said, no British media is exempt from adherence to D Notices and tenets of their legal system like the concept of a super-injuction, whereby a court order prevents the reporting of the fact that the injunction exists at all.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-injunctions_in_English_l...

        That the term was coined by a Guardian journalist covering the 2006 Ivory Coast toxic waste dump scandal should be context enough as to their motives and constraints.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RJW_v_Guardian_News_and_Media_...

        • cryo32 3 hours ago

          Fair points.

          The reformed DSMA notice system which replaced the D notice system in 2015 is somewhat more specific on what should not be reported. I think that's fit for purpose now. And it's still not legally binding. It's an agreement. Thus it does not break press freedom should the notice be found unethical or covering something up.

      • daveshistory 3 hours ago

        I sort of disagree with this. I bet if you asked liberals and progressives in a country like America for a foreign newspaper they read -- if they do read one -- in most cases it is probably the Guardian. So it may be only the best of a bad bunch but it does have that reputation.

        • cryo32 3 hours ago

          Never thought of it from that perspective. They should read multiple sources too. BBC as well, which once the articles have settled, are quite good. (just ignore the breaking stuff which is dubious sometimes)

          • JdeBP an hour ago

            It's an interesting fact. I have been surprised at how often The Guardian sneaks in to stuff that is otherwise overwhelmingly North American sources only. The Legal Eagle channel on YouTube has cited The Guardian a few times that I have seen, for example. And they even present it seemingly on the assumption that they don't have to explain to their viewership what The Guardian is. They just slap it on screen the same as they do the Washington Post or Politico or some such.

          • iso1631 2 hours ago

            Breaking News Broke News

            The BBC used to deride Sky for being "never wrong for long", but the race to "break the news" changed that. If the news is about something that happened today it's barely worth looking at.

            Personally I get my general news from "The Week" magazine each week, which occupies half an hour on a Saturday morning. It has a selection of articles from across the UK and international press, cut down to give an idea. This week I see ones from The Observer, the Financial Times, The Sunday Times and the Spectator. There's a coverage of america, with input from the NYT, Washington Post, National Review, New Republic, Bulwark and Politico. Elsewhere coverage of Cuba includes stuff from Global and Mail in Toronto, Diaro de Cuba and El Salto in Madrid and 14YMedio in Havana.

            • cryo32 an hour ago

              I have actually worked for the BBC. It all went downhill when they moved to media city in Manc. Bit of a disaster for staffing.

          • SanjayMehta 2 hours ago

            The bbc never reported on the pedophiles in their midst and they are the good ones.

            • cryo32 an hour ago

              Yeah that is totally unforgivable.

      • Devasta 41 minutes ago

        The Guardians role in modern UK society is to launder right wing talking points through a few layers of progressive sounding rhetoric so that the average person on the street can say "Well if even The Guardian agrees, maybe there is something to it."

        A worthless rag of a paper.

    • zipy124 3 hours ago

      fascinating article thank you for posting. Everyone should read this!

  • squeegmeister 3 hours ago

    Manufacturing Consent continues being relevant

    • itopaloglu83 an hour ago

      For the unfamiliar.

      Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky

  • alansaber 5 hours ago

    "Ex UK military members discover the private sector pays 10-20x more" underlines the title, but yes, media should disclose it. But even if they were "just" retired ex-military, their bias would be the same (being a member of the UK military).

    • defrost 4 hours ago

      Media in general is poor on declaring any and all bias of their various interviewed "experts".

      Quack doctors spruiking amazing new treatments (that they hold shares in).

      Automotive experts promoting car brands (that they receive advertising and influencer dollars for).

      etc.

      • matsemann 4 hours ago

        One thing I've seen a bit in Norway, and which is relevant this month, is opinion pieces by "concerned parents" that get their writing into national news, but a quick search show that they're often head of some bigoted organization. Of course they should be entitled to their opinion and be able to express it as any other, but the news papers not disclosing this is unethical imo.

        • jeltz 3 hours ago

          There was recently in Swedish media an article about harassment of Jews in Sweden and the guy they talked to was a member of a Zionist organisation who advocates for that Jews should move to Israel. It is fine to interview him, but such a clear conflict of interest should have been disclosed.

          • ifwinterco 2 hours ago

            I would argue it's not fine to interview him when (from the sound of it) he literally works for a hostile foreign intelligence agency

        • pcf 3 hours ago

          Many parts of Norway are much less functioning than many Norwegians understand. The media sector is one of them.

        • vintermann 3 hours ago

          Well of course, if you're a concerned parent or concerned person of any kind in Norway, the first thing you do is start an organization. There are even some who start many, in the hope of cross-pollination.

          What's more extreme to me is people like NRK's economy commentator Cecilie Langum Becker, who I read today went over to a lucrative job as communication chief in Aker. A corporate PR person by trade, for 8 years, she had front page space every day to push austeritarian, interest-scold propaganda that would make The Economist blush. So good of our public broadcaster to promote voices we rarely hear from in the media /s.

          Actual grass roots organizations, even for unsympathetic causes like anti-pride, worry me less than the whole Orkla-Schibsted consensus.

          • jeltz 2 hours ago

            I think you are underestimating these grass roots groups. Some of them are supported by foreign inyerests who want to undermine trust in the government.

            • vintermann 2 hours ago

              So we are told, but generally I don't buy it. Certainly not just for moustache-twirling "destabilization" purposes. If foreign interests bother with fringe Norwegian issues, it's because they get something directly from it. It may of course be that e.g. Israel gives support of various kinds to groups like SIAN or MIFF, or Russia to groups which are critical of Norwegian military support for Ukraine. But even that doesn't give us right to dismiss these groups as insincere - it's quite a way from that to actual front groups and astroturfing.

              Either way, I think the focus should be on the "respectable" corruption, not on unhinged noisy attention seeking outsiders.

      • buran77 4 hours ago

        > Quack doctors spruiking amazing new treatments (that they hold shares in).

        Doctors commonly have kickback arrangements to prescribe specific medication. Sometimes it's the correct course of action they just always go for the particular brand, other times it's the wrong course of action but they prescribe it anyway for the kickback (the OxyContin scandal comes to mind).

        • defrost 4 hours ago

          Pharma reps "bribing" doctors prescribing habits is a thing, for sure, and varies in degree by country.

          This is a separate issue for media reporting on (say) new tanning treatments that are endorsed on screen during traditional "news hours" in undeclared infomercial segments that feature "independant" medical experts gushing over benefits of perineum UV treatments.

          Frequently both the company that paid for the faux news segment and the guest experts that also benefit fail to have fiscal interests disclosed.

          • buran77 3 hours ago

            Oh, I just meant it's not just "quack doctors" doing it. it's a fairly common practice.

            • defrost 3 hours ago

              In a doctors suite:

              Doctors prescribing drugs recommended to them by pharma reps should disclose that connection.

              On a media "news" program:

              Producers of media programs should disclose any connection "experts" they interview on a subject have to the financial returns or funding of that subject.

    • throw_a_grenade 2 hours ago

      10-20× more in private sector for senior leadership/advisory role sounds reasonable, but still, I wonder if some part of that compensation stems from the fact that the person is availing him/herself as an asset of influence, i.e. can be used to push narrative through media while posing as independent, credible expert. Needs further research and/or A/B testing I guess.

  • genewitch 2 hours ago

    how can anyone trust any media report? Even if it is reported from multiple outlets? In the US the sum is around 39 billion dollars for pharma advertising, nevermind our military-industrial complex, as well.

    How can any media that has underwriting or advertisers actually do genuine reporting? Ask yourself this!

    The only way to really report on the "news" is to not be supported by advertisers or underwriting.

    I've known this since Dr. Naji Dahi's class in 2002, with upkeep by Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak, as well as having worked for ABC and a KKR Joint that's all up in "media".

    • coliveira 2 hours ago

      This is the biggest illusion of the media. They portray themselves as informing in an independent way. But any quick analysis will show that they can only report what their clients let them. And in the West their loyalty is to wealthy families and big corporations in the US and Europe.

      • genewitch an hour ago

        i used to have a great way to sum this all up but i stopped arguing with people via that medium so i have since forgotten my spiel. It's not that the media will lie, necessarily - although let's not pretend they're above lying - it's the editorial staff get to choose what runs and what doesn't. If there's a new study saying acetaminophen or whatever is actually more dangerous than we thought, it won't get air on normal media for a long time. Hard to get earnest reporting on wars when defense contractors are a major underwriter, hard to report on businesses when most of them are at least partially owned by the same companies that own the media outlets and/or are major advertisers.

        I really need to sit down and think for a while to remember how i used to explain this, because it nearly always got a "oh... that kinda makes sense... dang"

  • thesamethrowawa an hour ago

    It is interesting that any US-centric article causing political flame wars immediately sinks here, but anything generating similar "debate" on UK issues is allowed to sit on the front page, accumulating hundreds of comments. I don't think the conversation here is evolving in way that HN tries to foster, so hopefully this one is shadow-flagged (or however the internal mod tools work) soon.

  • nephihaha 18 minutes ago

    Tip of the iceberg. The Ministry of Defence and Foreign Office, among others, determine the direction of BBC news.

  • helsinkiandrew 4 hours ago

    > These individuals had also been quoted, featured, or otherwise used as commentators in UK media coverage of defence, conflict, or national security issues.

    If they are promoting defence spending or plugging their employers products that's bad, but using their experience to comment on the Iran war or Ukraine, or Russian/Chinese Spy networks doesn't seem that bad?

    • JdeBP 4 hours ago

      In 17 of the 19 detailed instances, it is stated that they are promoting increases in budgets and spending. The two others are reported as speaking with different conflicts of interest.

      • helsinkiandrew 3 hours ago

        Does it say that in the full report somewhere else? I can't find that in the text.

        I think most people would be surprised if ex senior military Personnel didn't think military spending should be increased.

        • cucumber3732842 3 hours ago

          >I think most people would be surprised if ex senior military Personnel didn't think military spending should be increased.

          When all you know is a hammer...

      • dgroshev 3 hours ago

        "People who have seen the state of the military first hand are saying that we need to fund the military" is not really shocking or sinister.

        • defrost 3 hours ago

          It's not the message spoken that is at issue here, it is the lack of disclosure of the connection of "the expert" to those that benefit (or suffer) from the message.

          • dgroshev 3 hours ago

            Do you expect the same standard to be applied to the NHS? "The expert claiming that cancer is bad was employed by the NHS five years ago"

            • JdeBP 2 hours ago

              A correct analogue would be 'The expert stating that more should be spent on treatment X was employed in the NHS five years ago and currently runs/directs/consults for a business selling supplies for treatment X.'

            • defrost 3 hours ago

              I expect this:

              > "The expert claiming that cancer is bad was employed by the NHS five years ago"

              from any media outlet quoting that "expert", yes. I'd also like the circumstances of their departure to be mentioned, should that be relevant to the claims.

              I expect it as such things are also expected by the press council of the country I'm in, even though it can be an uphill battle getting such compliance.

        • SturgeonsLaw 3 hours ago

          It absolutely is sinister. Everything about the military is, when you decouple the rhetoric from the actions and consider what it is that those organisations actually do.

          • rigonkulous 2 hours ago

            Yes, the military is fed by the one thing all cultures have in common - their susceptibility to warrior narcissism - and indeed in the modern age any military is little more than a criminal murder-class protected by a thin line of paper.

            However, murder is meat. Wars feed people. Not often the 'right' people, but the moment one starts drawing another such thin line about who and who doesn't deserve to be fed, the narcissist demon draws closer and so then, is the warrior devil justified.

            Anti-war rhetoric is unpopular, it is true - but there is more of it out there than most people realize, or else we'd all be ash already. Warrior narcissists are only given the space for such identity by quiet, humble peace-makers. Get louder about making peace and stay proud about it.

            • XorNot 23 minutes ago

              I don't know how you can post something this stupid after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

          • dgroshev 3 hours ago

            This is a luxury belief that requires the privilege of being unbombed. I invite you to explain this to Ukrainians.

            • f6v 23 minutes ago

              You can't deny Ukrainian military suffers from deep corruption.

              • _djo_ 6 minutes ago

                Much less than 5-10 years ago, and orders of magnitude less than the Russian military.

                The pressures of fighting an existential war plus the demands of the public in a democracy have closed off most typical avenues for corruption, forcing a focus on battlefield results and effective supply to the front-line.

                Nobody in the Ukrainian military is advocating for military spending for corrupt reasons, but for the country to remain independent in the face of a Russian military invasion.

              • dgroshev 10 minutes ago

                What compelled you to write this? It's just a random point having no relationship to what you're replying to. Why have you typed this and pressed "reply"?

            • ajsnigrutin 3 hours ago

              It's the UK we're talking about here.

              To skip the currently political sensitive topics of who is helping who with what, who feels the consequences, what prices are affected because of that, let's go a bit further in the past... for example, UK taxpayers money went for bombing Iraq for the "weapons of mass destruction" when Tony Blair already knew those didn't exist.

              At some point you have to ask, is it really for defense, if you're bombing someone a quarter of a planet away? Are you really protecting your people at home by doing that, and are they happy their money is being spent for that instead of eg. healthcare, education, etc.?

              • fakedang 2 hours ago

                And the same UK taxpayer money is now being spent to ferociously defend Ukraine, and in turn European interests. That same UK taxpayer money is spent to promote freedom of the seas for global trade, whether it be the Hormuz, the Malacca Strait, the Indian Ocean, the Atlantic, the Baltic or the Horn of Africa.

                Defence spending is only as good as the government that controls it, but you can't be serious if you're discounting the importance of military readiness at all times, given the world we live in.

                The UK's military spending has always been much more justifiable, especially given that the country actually spends a lot on education and healthcare too (and I will argue that both of them are some of the SOTA systems in the world currently, in spite of their challenges).

              • dgroshev 3 hours ago

                You can't just skip the currently present and urgent defence requirements because they're "politically sensitive" and then go twenty years back to support your point.

                But even if you want to do that, why don't you go just a couple more years further and argue that Bosnians should've been left to be genocided?

                • chadgpt3 2 hours ago

                  Are you arguing the UK involvement in Bosnia was to defend the UK?

    • rigonkulous 2 hours ago

      In the context of Julian Assanges' treatment by UK media, and his subsequent disassembly at Belmarsh, who cares what they have to say about Russia or China.

      • TiredOfLife an hour ago

        In the context of Assange turning out to be russian mouthpiece. Well deserved.

    • RobotToaster 2 hours ago

      There's lots of indirect ways to promote "defence" spending, such as promoting more involvement in a conflict.

  • austinallegro an hour ago

    TL;DR

    Military Experts Named:

    Nick Carter Chris Deverell James Everard Nick Houghton Mark Carleton-Smith Rupert Jones Richard Kemp Stuart Peach David Richards Patrick Sanders Richard Shirreff Sir Peter Wall Ben Wallace Alan West Penny Mordaunt Greg Bagwell Richard Barrons Tim Collins Richard Dannatt

    Media Outlets Named:

    The Telegraph Daily Mail Express The Independent iPaper The Sun LBC Sky News Times Radio Channel 4 News

  • roysting an hour ago

    I wish we had a requirement for every corporation (non-profit, for profit, or politician) to disclose any and all “links”. The fact that there is so much resistance to that notion should tell people all they need to know about how toxic the people’s relationship is to these entities.

  • gyanchawdhary an hour ago

    what's wrong with the defence industry? If we're going to require disclosures, require them for everyone: tech, pharma, energy, NGOs, lobbying groups, former regulators, academics with industry funding, the lot ..

    PS: the UK is not the state of California.

    • br121 27 minutes ago

      "our country isn't ready for war" is more difficult to disproof than "solar panels only last for 15 years", so while I agree that disclosures should go for every conflict on interest, it makes sense that the research focused only on this portion of them

  • shevy-java 3 hours ago

    In other words: institutionalized corruption.

    It's also a problem because who controls those media? So the taxpayers are at the least two times at a disadvantage here, private interests funding private media, to then set the agenda of reporting very selectively - or not at all in certain areas.

    • Npovview 3 hours ago

      The problem isn't good honest journalism can't be done. Think from the point of view a good critical news story, if that news story is gonna disadvantage a powerful entity, that entity will do everything in its power to discredit and stop that news story from publishing. This is also the reason why I like social media, Game Nexus does so much impactful reporting on hardware.

  • einpoklum 5 hours ago

    1. Calling it the "defense sector" is already quite biased. Almost all of that sector's activity involves offensive activity. Or just call it the "arms industry" etc. If we were less charitable, we could well call it the "war industry".

    2. Reading the article we note there's quite some overlap between arms industry links and links to Israel's fundraising and lobbying circles. I wonder whether UK media discloses those links.

    • philipallstar 5 hours ago

      > Almost all of that sector's activity involves offensive activity.

      What do you mean? As in invading other countries?

      • defrost 4 hours ago

        Just on the facts,

        * assisting US offensive actions,

        * weapons sales for offensive usage (eg: The UK government admits that Saudi Arabia has used UK weapons, made by companies around the UK, in its attacks on Yemen.)

        • philipallstar 3 hours ago

          How is that "almost all"?

          • defrost 3 hours ago

            Did I say that?

            Perhaps direct your Socratic Simplicio more accurately.

            • philipallstar 3 hours ago

              You were answering this:

              > > Almost all of that sector's activity involves offensive activity.

              > What do you mean? As in invading other countries?

      • shevy-java 3 hours ago

        He is quite correct though. By calling it "defence" industry, it is insinuated that this is always a moral right use of arms. In reality one would have to look on a case by case basis to see which use really qualifies as defence. In many cases I would not call it defence, for instance, if money is used to overthrow other governments and so forth. Or the Falklands War as an example - technically one could claim the UK had to "defence" its territory, but at the same time one has to question the use of colonies in the first place.

        • philipallstar 3 hours ago

          The Falklands weren't colonised by the British in the way you probably mean. They were settled by them - the people of the Falklands are the descendents of British settlers.

          Why wouldn't you call a military action to stop Argentina invading them "defence"?

    • flumpcakes 4 hours ago

      The UK doesn't have some imperialist policy of land grabs like Russia, or diplomacy through violence. In the current Iranian war the UK is only allowing it's bases to launch defensive missions, i.e. strike offensive capability or incoming missiles. So no, it is in fact the defense sector.

      What countries have a defense sector, if the UK doesn't?

      • TheOtherHobbes 4 hours ago

        Iraq and Afghanistan might disagree with your first point.

        Last time I looked Iran and the UK are quite some distance from each other, and Iran has inexplicably neither been launching missiles at the UK, nor threatening to, and is apparently not even capable of it.

        https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crm120x4lzxo

        So the justification for these "defensive" bombing runs on Iranian mountain sites from Fairford remains mysterious.

        The UK's arms industry is - like most things associated with the establishment - an exercise in turning privilege into cash, so it's not a surprise to see Senior Figures doing the media rounds in establishment narrative factories like The Telegraph and The Daily Mail.

        Readers with the money and connections to make a difference already know how the game is played.

        Readers who don't should perhaps be allowed to keep their happy fantasy that the UK isn't one of the most corrupt countries in the world, as a mercy.

        • graemep 3 hours ago

          Iran attacked the British base in Cyprus with drones so has directly attacked British territory. Iran has also been sponsoring terrorism in the UK. Iran has also attacked an American base on British territory.

          > one of the most corrupt countries in the world

          A ridiculous exaggeration given what a lot of other countries are like.

          • megous an hour ago

            Helping the aggressor with its offense or defense during the aggressive acts is taking part in the aggression. States have international obligation to not engage in or promote aggression and to not take part in it. UK voluntarily took this obligation on itself.

            I guess it's debatable whether the drone attack was proportional. I'd say that attack on clearly military installation of active ally is proportionate. Bombing bases in Britain would be more appropriate I think, since that's where the bombers that attacked Iran flew from and were loaded with weapons.

        • cryo32 3 hours ago

          Iran has been funding terrorist networks who are active in the UK and has taken direct action against UK citizens before on numerous occasions.

          They are also allied with Russia who are doing the same.

          They aren't some innocent party here. Geopolitics is complicated and not some black and white good guy bad guy mechanics.

      • roenxi 4 hours ago

        > In the current Iranian war the UK is only allowing it's bases to launch defensive missions, i.e. strike offensive capability or incoming missiles.

        Claiming that the UK doesn't support diplomacy through violence then transitioning into this gem has to be one of the wildest juxtapositions I've seen this year. Do you classify the US strikes on Iran as uniformly offensive or defensive in nature? Or do you think there is a mix? How would you classify a US bombing run on anti-air defences in the opening phase of the conflict?

        • flumpcakes an hour ago

          The UK has only allowed the US to use their air bases to strike Iranian offensive capability and intercept missiles launched towards middle eastern cities. Iran bombed an airport in Kuwait yesterday, for example.

          It's pretty obvious how the the UK's actions vs. Iran's, or even the US's, are different.

          • megous an hour ago

            Yeah, "striking offensive capability" of a country is aggression and the country that strikes, and it's helpers are all aggressors and in the wrong as far as intl. law goes. You need to work on understanding how causality works. What happened yesterday has no bearing on what happened 2 months ago.

            If UK/US wanted to be in the in the clear they could have asked UNSC to authorize use of force against Iran.

            • _djo_ 2 minutes ago

              Nope. The UK only responded after its own territory had been struck, as had that of allies in the region who were not part of the US and Israel’s actions.

              Its role has been entirely defensive, and legal under international law as part of the right to self-defence.

      • themgt 4 hours ago

        > In the current Iranian war the UK is only allowing it's bases to launch defensive missions, i.e. strike offensive capability ...

        Reminds of the old joke, "What propaganda? We don't have propaganda."

      • CrzyLngPwd 4 hours ago

        Iran.

        It didn't attack anyone until it was attacked.

        It has been defending itself.

        • _djo_ a minute ago

          Iran attacked countries that played absolutely no role in the US and Israel’s attack on it, including some (like Oman) that have been fairly closely allied to the regime.

          That goes far beyond what’s permissible in international law in response to an attack.

        • cryo32 3 hours ago

          They have been trying to kill people in the UK for years. And have been funding proxies everywhere, some of whom have attacked the UK. We're not really even involved and I find it hard to agree with this point.

          However it should have been dealt with earlier rather than latent bombing.

          • CrzyLngPwd 3 hours ago

            You could easily be describing the UK, Israel, and the USA, lol.

            Anyway, I live in the UK, and I don't swallow the same propaganda as you.

            • cryo32 3 hours ago

              Which bit is the propaganda?

              Do you know any actual Iranians? I do!

              • jeltz 2 hours ago

                I do and I agree with him. Iran is just one of many on a long list of supporters of terrorism which includes the US, the UK and Israel, plus many more countries like Turkey and Russia.

                • cryo32 2 hours ago

                  I made exactly no comments about other countries or a comparison. That is a different argument.

      • anonymousDan 4 hours ago

        I can't tell if your first sentence is a joke or not...

      • tardedmeme 3 hours ago

        > In the current Iranian war the UK is only allowing it's bases to launch defensive missions, i.e. strike offensive capability

        If Iran struck all of the UK's missile factories and military bases, would it be considered a defensive or offensive action?

        • flumpcakes an hour ago

          Context matters. Did the UK start a war with Iran? Or did the UK decide to hit surrounding countries (France, Norway, Netherlands, etc.) to destabilise the region and target an Iranian airbase in Spain?

          I would assume there's a bunch of countries around Iran that appreciate UK's help in intercepting missiles.

          I would assume there's a bunch of countries around Iran that don't appreciate the US starting a war of choice.

      • RobotToaster 4 hours ago

        Defending those launching illegal strikes is still offensive, in both meanings of the term.

      • einpoklum an hour ago

        > The UK doesn't have some imperialist policy of land grabs

        Not directly, mostly; and not through land grabs. The age of land grabs is pretty much over - but imperialism lives on in different form - including massive military interventions and covert operations for manipulating or replacing regimes, more that properly conquering and settling lands.

        Today's UK is not an independent empire of this kind. It used to be; but now it is relegated to being a junior partner in its alliance with the US empire, mostly, and with the EU, to a lesser extent. This is reflected in its top 10 arms recipients, e.g. for 2024 [1]:

        Saudi Arabia, £14bn United States of America, £8.3bn France, £5.2bn Qatar, £3.5bn Italy, £2.8bn Oman, £2.5bn Turkey, £2.3bn India, £2.3bn Norway, £2.2bn United Arab Emirates, £1.7bn

        and there are also arms Israel for about £0.572bn; and the arming of Ukraine, a cooperation with both the US and European powers, as part of NATO's struggle against Russia.

        The UK also sends troops as part of US imperial interventions, e.g. in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya. There are also UK-dominated or UK-only interventions abroad, but mostly if we go a few decades back [2].

        [1] : https://www.thenational.scot/news/24272310.uk-arms-exports--...

        [2] : https://www.declassifieduk.org/the-uks-83-military-intervent...

      • holoduke 15 minutes ago

        You are quite the hypocrite to call the UK not a imperialistic country. They are probably the greatest of them all. They have far more blood on their hands in foreign interventions than Russia and China combined. In fact they are still occupied with abuse and destruction throughout the world. You are naive and victim of propoganda for not seeing this.

      • throawayonthe 3 hours ago

        war is peace etc etc

        • Npovview 3 hours ago

          "Department of War" was renamed as "Department of Defense" because Edward Bernays (the greatest propagandist who ever lived) said so.

          • enoint 3 hours ago

            Maybe not directly. In 1947, it became the Department of the Army, and in 1949 the Department of Defense. Bernays was working on Engineering of Consent at the time, and applied psychoanalysis was very subtle compared to simple Orwellian name changes. For example, Bernays wanted to get women to smoke cigarettes.

      • keybored 3 hours ago

        They still own Falkland Islands.

        • flumpcakes an hour ago

          Who "owned" it before? There were no people on that land before it was settled.

          • keybored 13 minutes ago

            I don’t know terribly much about it. Wikipedia says that the British Government decided to colonize it in 1840.

            Why did British people decide to move from the Northern Hemisphere to this island? Because the climate looked similar?

            And yes, here is a dispute between a historically imperialist versus a settler state. It’s weird.

      • pbiggar 4 hours ago

        Defensive missions? Was the UK under attack?

        • flumpcakes an hour ago

          The UK has allies in the region. Kuwait was bombed just yesterday. And a UK airbase was targeted.

          Are you arguing that the entire world should never provide aid to other countries? Surely you're just calling for imperialist powers to gobble up the planet piece by piece.

        • subscribed 2 hours ago

          I guess schoolgirls were naughty and saying bad words about the UK, hence arming the American planes with bombs to use on civilians and civilian infrastructure.

      • coldtea 4 hours ago

        >The UK doesn't have some imperialist policy of land grabs

        It has centuries of exactly that at a global scale, and continued post-war neo-colonial land grabbing and pressuring, plus eager participation in all the imperialist games of its larger brother.

        I mean, just mentioning "Tony Blair" is enough...

        • happymellon 4 hours ago

          20 years since he was in power...

        • foldr 4 hours ago

          What land did Tony Blair grab? You can disagree with the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq without making the exaggerated claim that this was part of some kind of long-term imperialist occupation. The UK currently has fewer military personnel in Iraq than it has in, say, Germany. And Britain doesn’t control the Iraqi government.

          • specproc 4 hours ago

            I think something Brits don't fully understand is the extent of our vassalage under the US.

            We do, as you rightly note have quite the history of a policy of imperialist land grabs, now we just play a support function to somebody else's empire.

            • foldr 4 hours ago

              Ok, but you can say the same for the US. It also has vastly more troops in Germany than Iraq, and it also does not control the Iraqi government. And the less said about Afghanistan the better. So where is the land grab?

              • specproc 3 hours ago

                One does not need to dictate every item of policy to control a country, one just needs to ensure that there's alignment on strategic issues. I think this was America's key point of learning when it took over the reins of the European empires after WW2.

                In Germany, historically the strategic issue was anti-communism, but now it serves as a military logistics hub; in Iraq, it's about trade in oil in dollars and access to Iraqi oil fields for US companies.

                The UK is more complex and more total, ranging from support in the security council, to access to markets for US goods and services, to stationing of US troops and hardware. Most of our economy is geared up for the benefit of US investment funds.

                Any government, whether it be Germany, Iraq or the UK, which tries to alter any of these fundamentals will quickly find out the extent to which their land has been grabbed.

                • foldr 3 hours ago

                  Or, to put it more succinctly, Iraq is occupied by the US in about the same sense that Germany is. And while the US no doubt exerts influence over Germany in part via its military power, I think the position that the US military presence in Germany is part of a “land grab” would be a rather fringe one.

                  • specproc 3 hours ago

                    It depends where you're sat and when. It's almost certainly a fringe perspective in the US, because I don't believe American's really think about it that much.

                    Whether troop presence is viewed as occupation or not in each of the >50 [1] countries currently "hosting" troops is very much a matter of personal perspective, the fringeness of which will vary from country to country.

                    I don't believe that it really changes the fact that yes, US troops occupy the UK, Germany and Iraq, and many more. The most substantial deployments, e.g., Germany, Japan, South Korea, and until recently Iraq and Afghanistan, were very much the product of invasions. At the time of those invasions, many of those on the receiving end would have very much felt on the receiving end of a land grab. It's just their grandchildren have been conditioned to view this state of affairs as natural.

                    The general pattern is "bomb the bejesus" [2] out of a country. Plant base. Install a friendly government and ensure a favourable operating environment for US interests. The UK is an exception in that it wasn't bombed by the US, but the upshot is the same. We're a wholely-owned subsidiary of corporate America, and a giant aircraft carrier on the other side of the Atlantic -- as the US's latest adventure in Iran has clearly demonstrated.

                    You may quibble over the "land" in land-grab, but the strategic bits (e.g., oil fields, bases) are very much owned, and the territory as a whole controlled by pliant governments.

                    [^1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_with_oversea...

                    [^2]: Kissenger, 1972

          • coldtea 4 hours ago

            >What land did Tony Blair grab? You can disagree with the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq without making the exaggerated claim that this was part of some kind of long-term imperialist occupation.

            Yeah, just a few decades years, to secure oil deals and/or keep control of the region. No biggie.

            That this can be said with a straight face about invasions to two countries that created civil war, suffering, hundreds of thousands of deaths, displacement, etc, is telling of the ever-present colonialist mindset.

            • foldr 4 hours ago

              My post wasn’t defending the Iraq war. It was just pointing out that the war was not a land grab. Iraq is not now a part of the UK or US (in contrast to the situation with Russia and Crimea, for example).

              • roenxi 4 hours ago

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_military...

                For anyone else interested, negotiations that could lead to the US leaving Iraq and fully returning control to the Iraqi people are also going swimmingly, according to reports.

                • foldr 3 hours ago

                  The US military presence in Iraq is already far smaller than its presence in Germany and many other countries. Certainly, the US is a global superpower (albeit a declining one) that exerts influence via its military strength. But Iraq is not occupied by the US any more than Germany is.

                  • roenxi 3 hours ago

                    If Germany wants the US to leave, do they have to negotiate to get that to happen?

            • dgroshev 3 hours ago

              Saying that it's the invasions that created civil wars and suffering in Afghanistan and Iraq is just exceptionally ignorant. Here's a taster: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_Ba%27athist_Ir...

              For all their failures, the allies never bombed cities with nerve agents.

              • ZeroGravitas 2 hours ago

                Your page says:

                > Saddam committed crimes of aggression during the Iran–Iraq War

                Which links to a page about the war:

                > Iraq was aided by [...] the United States, the United Kingdom,

                > After years of military and economic losses, decreasing morale, intensifying Iran–U.S. relations, and little international action against Iraqi attacks on Iranian civilians, Iran agreed to a ceasefire with Iraq under United Nations Security Council Resolution 598.

                So they basically did.

                • dgroshev 2 hours ago

                  I don't think anyone engaging in a good faith discussion would make the conclusion you just made.

                  • ZeroGravitas an hour ago

                    Why not?

                    What do you think an llm would say if you asked it:

                    > Did the US and UK support Saddam Hussein when he was using weapons of mass destruction on Iranian civilians?

                    • dgroshev 15 minutes ago

                      The question is completely different from the point I was making. "X did bad things on their own" and "Y had absolutely no relationship with X at any point" are two points so blindingly obviously different that I'm having a hard time accepting that you are genuinely confused about the difference.

                      It's a motte-and-bailey fallacy that starts with countries and leaders having relationships in a global, interwoven world and ends with excusing a blood-thirsty dictator as if they had no agency.

        • thrownthatway 4 hours ago

          Your biases are hanging out. Like hemorrhoids.

          The British empire has been completely wound down, other than a handful of small overseas territories.

          How long do you plan on holding the currency set of British people responsible for things they didn’t do?

          • coldtea 4 hours ago

            >The British empire has been completely wound down, other than a handful of small overseas territories.

            Just because Britain couldn't afford it anymore. And after bloodshed, in India, Kenya, Cyprus, Malaysia, and elsewhere. Not out of the bigness of their heart.

            And the post-colonialism never ended. The same grabby hands get everywhere they can get.

            And why exactly are those "small overseas territories" unquestionably retained? "No biggie, just an island here, an island there, and island there, some land in here"

            • thrownthatway 4 minutes ago

              I really would have expected a much more reasoned approach from the likes of you Mr coldtea.

              Historically I’ve found your comments informative, well thought out, and entertaining.

              Here’s the Wikipedia article on the BOTs https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Overseas_Territories

              I’m willing to acknowledge those locales probably remain British territories, at least some of them, as an spect of projecting force, in addition the to historical quirks.

              I probably don’t know enough.

              And, ultimately, it would be nice if everyone got along and was generally content to stay in their lane.

              Would the former British colonies be doing better or worse had they never been colonised? Quite possibly better. We’ll never know. At least some of the former colonies have failed spectacularly. That’s probably a good enough reason to never try any of that again.

              I’m trying to steelman your arguments here Mr coldtea. Not only that, I have also raged against what happened in a similar manner from time to time.

          • znort_ 4 hours ago

            oh, i see you misunderstanding. he obviously meant the ruling class, those epsteinites. nobody cares about british people, they're just ... people!

            • thrownthatway 3 minutes ago

              Fuck up cunt.

              It’s obvious no body cares about the British people.

    • tempfile 5 hours ago

      "war industry" is still very charitable! If you have any standards that distinguish a war from indiscriminate killing, they probably violate those standards in a large proportion of their business.

      • philipallstar 5 hours ago

        What informs your "probably"?

        • tempfile 4 hours ago

          When I said "If you have standards" I did not specify what those standards are. So I said "probably", because I have to guess you have similar standards to me. If you do, then you can drop the "probably".

          As the other commenter correctly guesses, you only have to open the news to find examples. Iran, Palestine, Iraq (way back when). Most "wars" are not really wars these days, they're just exercises in western aggression.

          • philipallstar 3 hours ago

            Okay - I see. I thought it was a qualifier of "in a large proportion of their business".

            In that case - why do you think it's "in a large proportion of their business"?

  • meta_gunslinger 2 hours ago

    Not surprised, UK media fails to report more important and obvious issues like the country's native population being second-class citizens and racism being enshrined in law. Always serving the capitalist class that is funding them I guess.

    • chadgpt3 2 hours ago

      What racism is enshrined in law?

      • thesamethrowawa an hour ago

        meta_gunsligner is just going back through Elons X posts to find us some examples.

    • gib444 an hour ago

      Special shout-out to the BBC who just embellish and release ahistorical nonsense, brainwashing kids

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6M-qsVS8zeU

      On top of ton of social programming with an overrepresentation of eg mixed race couples in shows

  • sourcegrift 5 hours ago

    No wonder they are so pro russia (but pretend otherwise ), they want the war to go on and on, have people die on both sides.

    • cwillu 5 hours ago

      “This research does not suggest that any individual cited in this report deliberately concealed their commercial affiliations from journalists. Rather, it highlights a recurring failure by news organisations to disclose potentially relevant industry interests when presenting former senior military figures as independent expert commentators on defence, conflict, and national security issues.”

      “Of course, holding private-sector roles after military service is both lawful and commonplace. This is not the point of this report. Rather, the concern highlighted here is about the UK’s media.”

      “The findings presented here do not argue that the individuals identified are acting improperly, nor that their analyses lack merit, however we assert that the public has a right to full and relevant information when evaluating expert commentary, particularly where it involves lives, public expenditure, and international security.”

      “It is important to note that this report does not allege wrongdoing on the part of the individuals identified, nor on the part of the publications presented within the pages of this report.”

      Practically every third paragraph reiterates this.

      • daveshistory 4 hours ago

        They are anticipating a flood of complaints from various well-connected groups and individuals that it's an unfair hit piece. They want to be able to point to all the "Hey, we didn't say this ACTUALLY MATTERED" disclaimers they front-loaded it with.

        • br121 4 minutes ago

          Except they said that it actually matter. The reason they didn't said that all those people with a potential conflict of interest lied is that it's not necessarily true. After all the article didn't reveal some secret conspiracy, it higlited the use of not disclosing some public, easily accessible informations by some media outlets, which are the ones to blame

    • flumpcakes 4 hours ago

      Source? The UK has been extremely vocal about defending Ukraine's sovereign rights and has spent a lot of money supplying it with defensive equipment.

      Russia despises the UK. The UK does have a few right wing pro Russia people, just like the US does. Just like most of Europe does. It is the fringe view and not reflected in state policy.

      • SuddsMcDuff 2 hours ago

        > The UK does have a few right wing pro Russia people

        "Right wing" people like George Galloway? Put your obvious bias aside for a moment and just say "a few pro Russia people".

        • flumpcakes an hour ago

          You are of course correct. I completely forgot about him. Jeremy Corbyn could probably be lumped in as an elected official. There is a pretty virulent form of left wing in the UK who argue that Russia is good because it's imperialism is someone justified (I think it boils down to anti-NATO sentiment.)

          > obvious bias

          The rise of a few right parties with sympathy to Russia was on my mind. Although that talk has seemed to have quieted with more national issues taking up breath.