Abstract

British post-war security policy and use of military power is not subjugated by the structures of or interaction in the international system. Rather, British use of military power is strongly influenced by a territorially sovereign identity and an institutional balance between Crown and Parliament. British national identity originate in the historical struggle to maintain cohesion and political stability in Britain. From the Glories Revolution to the Second World War territorial sovereignty and institutional independence have defined Britain as an international actor and framed its security policy. Consequently, the territorially sovereign identity and institutional balance between Crown and Parliament continuously influence British security policy. The post-war use of British military power from the Suez Crisis in 1956 to the European Security and Defence Policy, thus, primarily recovers an internal institutional balance. An institutional balance that also played an underlying role in the British withdrawal from the European Union.

Highlights

  • For four hundred years the foreign policy of England has been to oppose the strongest, most aggressive, most dominating Power on the Continent... [...] it would have been easy and must have been very tempting to join with the stronger and share the fruits of his conquest

  • From Pitt and Newcastle to Palmerston and Churchill, great power balancing became a law of public policy and primed Britain’s role in the world and the general understanding of British exceptionalism

  • The institutionally balanced and territorially sovereign national identity directed the immediate post-war security policy to protecting the British Isles and sustaining a balance of deterrence in continental Europe: We must, honour our undertaking to maintain our contribution to the N.A.T.O. forces in Europe in time of peace

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Summary

MILITARY STUDIES

Mathiasen, J. W. (2020). For Queen and Country! National Identity and British Post-War Use of Military Power. Scandinavian Journal of Military Studies, 3(1), pp. 274–287. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31374/sjms.33

Jan Werner Mathiasen
Introduction
Recovering independence and territorial sovereignty
Options for change in the European Defence Cooperation
Conclusion
Brexit and the national identity
Full Text
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