Zarah Sultana’s call for Britain to withdraw from NATO is the latest example of moral outrage turning into strategic confusion.

In a tweet this week, the exLabour MP wrote: “NATO isn’t about ‘peace’ or ‘security’. It’s an imperialist war machine. Just look at Afghanistan and Libya… We must withdraw from NATO immediately.”

It is a sweeping denunciation that fits comfortably within a certain left-wing tradition of anti-imperialist politics. But when you read it alongside Sultana’s own words from the early weeks of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, it makes little sense.

On 24 February 2022, the day of the invasion, she tweeted: “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is deplorable. Putin must immediately withdraw Russian forces and cease his bombardment.” Two days later she praised “incredibly courageous anti-war protestors in Russia who are risking repression to stand up for peace and against Putin’s invasion.”

Those were clear statements of solidarity with a people under attack and a recognition of who was responsible. Yet the position she takes today, treating NATO as the true source of global instability, sits awkwardly beside that earlier clarity.

The uncomfortable truth is that the only reason Ukraine’s neighbours have not shared its fate is because they are part of the alliance Sultana wants Britain to leave. Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland have been secure because NATO’s collective defence guarantee deters invasion. Countries outside that shield, such as Georgia and Ukraine, have not been so lucky. The difference is not theoretical; it is visible on the map.

To understand how she arrived at this contradiction, it helps to recall that in February 2022 Sultana was one of eleven Labour MPs who signed a statement by the Stop the War Coalition. That statement questioned NATO’s legitimacy and suggested that the alliance’s “eastward expansion” had contributed to the tensions leading to the war. The Labour leadership immediately warned that any MP who continued to back it would lose the whip. Sultana and the others withdrew their signatures within hours.

She has never herself said that NATO provoked the invasion. But by endorsing and then retracting a statement that made that argument, she placed herself briefly on the side of those who see Western power as the main driver of conflict rather than the Russian regime that launched it. Her current call for withdrawal from NATO repeats that same one-sided framing, stripped of any recognition of what deterrence actually does.

Her domestic argument fares no better. “Wages, not weapons. Welfare, not warfare,” she wrote this week. It is a catchy slogan but a misleading one. Britain’s defence budget is around two per cent of GDP. Even if it were cut dramatically, it would not come close to fixing the structural problems of the NHS or reversing child poverty. The idea that disarming would somehow fund social justice is politically convenient but economically shallow.

Last year Sultana laid a wreath in Coventry’s War Memorial Park “in memory of all those from Coventry and around the world who have died in the horrors of war.” Her instinct to seek peace is sincere, but peace is not secured by hope alone. It depends on the ability to deter those who use force to achieve their goals. NATO, for all its flaws and misjudgments, has provided that deterrence for three generations.

When Sultana denounces the alliance as imperialist while condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, she ends up attacking the very structure that keeps most of Europe safe from similar aggression. It is not a position grounded in realism or evidence. It is a moral gesture that collapses under scrutiny.

In my view, the whole thing is baffling. You cannot demand solidarity with Ukrainians fighting for survival and then call for Britain to leave the alliance that prevents such invasions elsewhere. It is incoherent, detached from reality and, frankly, really strange.

She condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as “deplorable” and expressed solidarity with Ukrainians under attack. Yet she now demands that Britain withdraw from NATO, the only institution that has successfully deterred further Russian aggression in Europe. If NATO were dismantled or if Britain left it, states like Poland and the Baltic countries would become far more vulnerable. In effect, her policy would make the kind of invasion she condemns more likely. That is a fundamental contradiction.

George Allison
George Allison is the founder and editor of the UK Defence Journal. He holds a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and specialises in naval and cyber security topics. George has appeared on national radio and television to provide commentary on defence and security issues. Twitter: @geoallison

63 COMMENTS

    • Voters in Britain are about to get the government they deserve.

      All the whack jobs in charge from Nigel Farrage to Zoe Sultana.

      It’s mental to think nearly half of people in Britain are willing to vote for people literally on the kremlin payroll.

      Let’s see them whining about small boats or the corporations when their NHS is gone and the country is left defenceless.

      • Some bedtime reading:

        ‘Universal Healthcare without the NHS’ IEA report.

        Then visit the Netherlands and get hospitalised. See how you get on; come back and report once you know what you are talking about.

        • How much does the Netherlands spend on healthcare per capita? And the UK? (clue, it’s about 25% less)

          I don’t know why the likes of the IEA persist with such easily debunked BS

          • …is to completely miss the point.

            Healthcare is far better in the Netherlands than in this country because the amount spent on health in the Netherlands is not determined by the Netherlands government.

            In insurance-based health systems, such as that of the Netherlands, politicians cannot directly control the level of healthcare spending. Insurers are free to set their own premium rates, and if those rates are insufficient to cover their expenses, they can raise them. They do not have to ask politicians for permission first, or wait until a government sympathetic to their position is voted in. Not complicated and so much more efficient.

            It is the state controlled/politically controlled health system, the NHS, that is the problem. Get politics out of healthcare as the Netherlands has done…and, while you are at it, do the same for education via a voucher system.

            The IEA have simply pointed out an evidenced to be better way of running a universally available and equitable national healthcare system.

            We know what to do but no-one has the backbone to do it….as with defence/conventional deterrence so another war on continental Europe results….!

  1. She talks drivel all the time, every time she opens her mouth. That’s a known fact and it’s all the article need have said really because what else would you expect?

      • Depends how one defines the centre, it’s all quite subjective. I see Reform as a moderate centre right party with all the other main parties to the left of it and no party of substance to the right of it.

        • Whereas I see Reform as traitorous Fascist loons effectively working for Russia trying to destroy the West from within.

          They started this process with Brexit and continue to attack Britain’s interests at every point.

          In the run up to the last election this website on its own saw seven calls for a military coup if Labour were to win. These came from four people. Three of them responsible for six of the calls were open about supporting Reform.

          They are our real enemy within.

          • That perception of Reform probably closely aligns to the Zarah Sultana’s of this world. I’m not convinced that’s a mainstream opinion.

            • The disconnect to reality in some posters on this site is very worrying.

              Check the latest opinion poll for UK elections. 73% of the population will be voting for parties to the left of Reform. There are none to the right of it.

              So the left wing of Reform are significantly right wing, the right wing are the far right having subsumed all the neo-nazi groups.

              They are not centre right. I am.

              I am on the right wing of the Lib Dems. This puts 44% of the population to the right on me. Maybe a quarter of the Lib Dems are with me, 4% of the vote. The other 52% are the rest of the Lib Dems and all the parties to the left of them.

              I am slightly right of centre for the UK at the moment

              • As I said before I believe the political spectrum is subjective. I see the Lib Dems firmly of the left. I dont think any far right political party of any substance exists in the UK and Reform are a moderate party of the centre right.

                • I think the term subjective is misleading. I think left and right are relative terms, so to have any real meaning they must always be used for a time and place.

                  By the standards of all sides in the English civil war our entire current political spectrum are social radicals (With the possible exception of anyone hiding in Reform who thinks the Handmaids Tale is a workable manifesto, and there might be).

                  If the worst fears of Green radicals occur then in a hundred years the bulk of people might see us all as conservative fake reformers who fiddled while the planet burned.

          • Always enjoy your ludicrous posts that never pertain to Defence matters and exist solely to forlornly defend the indefensible – who pays you “Chris”, Soros or the TUC?

            • See my reply to Andrew above.

              I would happily be paid by George Soros. He is one of the strongest defenders of western values on the planet. Less keen on the TUC.

              Question.

              Are you the same FSB Officer as Andrew or are you just one of the useful idiots of Reform?

          • From memory I think they pledged 3.5% to defence at the last election and Farage has consistantly attacked cuts over the last couple of decades. I doubt there will be any detailed policies until the general election as things can change so quickly.

            • Farage hasn’t got any policies so far, just vague aims. He talked about massive budget cuts across the board but then pulled the pledge when experts said the numbers didn’t even vaguely add up. Farage is clearly a russian asset, so highly unlikely he will not cut defence.

              • I would be very surprised if defence does not increase under Reform (although most of the increase should have happened by 2029). Farage has been very consistent over decades now on the issue, often comparing defence to home insurance. The Russian asset stuff I just see as a wacky conspiracy theory.

                • Is it now, so he didn’t work for Russia today, his Wales leader hasn’t been prosecuted in court and admit to taking russian money. He hasnt been dodging every question on the topic rather than clearing the record. He didn’t say the same talking points that the guy admits came from russia. His clearly a russian asset, just a question of how that would influence him if he came to power.

            • As I recall, they pledged 2.5% in 2027 and 3% in 2030. Pretty close to what Labour is working towards right now. You mostly can’t put a Rizla between the defence policies of most UK political parties. However I believe Reform also said something about large scale Army recruitment that was different.

                • Yes about the same time they pledged to privatised the NHS.

                  We can easily afford 3% on defence once we get rid of the NHS.

                  • If healthcare is free at the point of use, no matter how much money one has (Reforms policy) then I don’t really care what acronym provides the care.

                    • The NHS is cheap as chips. Private providers cost significantly more (Source: I have paid quite a few actual invoices for both)

                      So scrapping (or even reducing) the NHS objectively won’t save any money (unless of course, the real intention is to stop providing free at the point of use healthcare)

                  • Hi C.
                    And Reform.
                    Look it up, linking would be pointless.
                    I studied their Defence policy, financially it is similar to the others but with the army addition, which I believe is unrealistic given recruitment realities.

        • Nope!
          Try googling the political spectrum. Then you will see that reform are on the right. It’s objective not subjective

            • It’s objective, and reform are demonstrably not center right. Your opinion is irrelevant, the facts are the only thing that is important

              • The only relevant fact is that the placing someone or something on a political spectrum is fundamentally subjective! And since facts are apparently the only thing that matters then I consider the matter closed 😉

      • Currently they are. Labour has only had 1 year to turn around the mess that the was left by the conservatives. The voters turned up to vote them out because of it, but have unrealistic expectations on how fast the current government can turn things around. Still 4 years to the next election, so early days, still time to turn things around.

        During the same year reform councils have been imploding and breaking all their promises. Demonstrating to the electroate what will happen if they get into central government. Plus already had their Wales leader admit to accepting money for russian speaking points.

        Right now reform have all the advantages, they can promise everything without needing actual policies. Closer to the election they will need to start coming up with actual policies and the mess that is their local government will be brought up regularly. They won’t have as easy a ride.

        • Labour are making things worse, the more time we give them the more damage will be done. I’m not convinced they’ll limp to 2029 as a financial meltdown might force an election before then.

          As for the May council elections, I know of promises made and kept, so I don’t recognise your statement that all promises have been broken.

          • That is actually an increasing risk.

            A melt down that causes cuts that causes the Labour left to rebel that leads to a vote of no confidence that leads to an election.

            All in the hands of that genius Reeves!

          • They have only been in power for a year, most of their policies aren’t even through parliament, let alone having an impact on anything. The stuff that is getting worse is a result of the burn earth policy that the conservatives left. The economy is like a ship it won’t turn on a dime.

            What they have done is increase investment on infustructure that will long term improve the economy after 15 years of zero investment. Improved workers and renters rights. And importantly here increased defense expenditure.

            Time will tell if what they have done will result in a easing of the costing of living, but it’s only a year things take time

            In that year the conservatives and reform have had scandle after scandle that involves financial mismanagement and fraud/corruption and not to mention outright racism, and I can’t see how that is going to get better once reform has more local councils. How in their sane mind would vote for them.

            • The fact Labour have been in power 15 months with a massive majority and still haven’t passed most of their legislative agenda shows they came to power with no real plan and are stumbling from one scandal to the next.

              The problem with Labours plan with investment is that they see it in the prism of government spending, which has its uses but it’s the private sector that drives growth. The very sector Labour has hammered.

  2. There’s always one in every country that says nonsense.. sometimes it’s an MP, sometimes its the president of the most powerful country in the world

    • Trouble is we are having more than one aren’t we? SNP ,Greens and as said the enemy within are becoming more vocal by the day!

  3. difficult for the Left to speak about russia. nato expanded east when putin showed his colours and the biggest example is finland which defiantly remained neutral but has recently joined nato. the Left may have said (who knows) why were we trying to make a western democracy in afghan, i would have agreed with them

  4. The article is wrong, she isn’t a labour MP, the whip was removed, she is now part of “Your Party”, which is Corbyn party.

    • I never get the fine nuance of what is a Labour MP. When the whip is withdrawn you don’t lose membership of the Labour Party, just the Parliamentary Labour Party. So are you then an MP who is Labour but not a Labour MP?

      After a while, Sultana quit the Labour Party too, so in her case I suppose it’s moot.

  5. Sultana is nothing but an overgrown Student Union activist who thinks soundbites and cliches are going to solve the worlds problems equitably.

    I think George here has been very respectful here in his analysis. I’m kind of surprised he’s bothered at all giving it oxygen of publicity.

  6. There’s a lot of digging in going on in UK politics; politicians on extreme right and left adopting fanatical positions and offering appealing, simplistic silver bullet solutions to all our problems. The conservatives got thrown out because they let the free market run away with itself. Labour will be thrown out if they try to convert the country into some kind of giant socialist multi-cultural, Bevanite Welsh valley idyll. IMO the current govt is behaving in a pragmatic and fair fashion but is being undermined by vested capital interests who know how to profit from chaos, by ‘traditional’ socialist their own party and by MPs like Sultana who have a sectarian agenda.

    • That’s a very fair assessment. I’d add that IMO neoliberal economics has run it’s course as the Truss meltdown amply demonstrated.

      The UK is in a particular bind due to policies (by previous governments of all stripes) to promote the City, trading and finance over a more balanced economy with more industrial & technological depth. Thus a certain amount of intervention is required to encourage more value-creating (rather than extractive) investment.

      However many very wealthy folks have profited handsomely from essentially parasitic business models (Farage himself is an ex commodity trader) so of course they will fight (or fund others to fight) changes hard.

      But the far Left is equally dangerous politically, as they promote fantasy ideas that there are no real limits on public spending; it’s just the government being mean. Ironically, by implying that spending trade-offs are indeed necessary, Sultana’s argument actually undermines that very common left-populist position (even if her sums don’t add up, and proposals for defence cuts at this juncture won’t land well with any voters beside the extremist tankie fringe).

      • What Farage and Polanski have in common is that they both have big mouths and big egos. And the potential to screw up the country.

  7. The toxic alliance of the extreme leftists and Islamists.

    They care more about Gaza than anything going on in the UK.

    “Wages, not weapons” Makes no sense as the military industries we do have provide jobs, especially shipbuilding, which has just won foreign orders

    Typical leftist idealism: “Leave the rest of the world alone and it will leave us alone”

    You can take a basic lesson which most of us learned in school:
    If you look weak and passive, you will attract bullies. Global politics is no different

  8. Articles like this just get the same old left right warfare and respective echo chambers sniping at each other, and the tired russian asset nonsense thrown like confetti.
    I made my mind up years ago, so have many, many others.
    On Sultana, a Corbyn accolyte. Enough said.

    • Hear hear.
      Given that we know Russia has been using migration as a weapon against western countries, why would a Russian asset be so vehemently opposed to it? Reform have also had the most defence friendly rhetoric and policies of all the main parties, so how is a stronger UK military in Russia’s interests.

      It’s illogical, counter-intuitive, incoherent nonsense.

      • I think so. But, everyone has an opinion. I want proof.
        When the establishment is scared, the establishment goes into overdrive, throwing mud.
        An old, old tactic. Starmer was at it a few weeks ago.
        Both Tory and Labour are at heart globalists, and arm in arm with big corporations and mass migration.
        Reform are not, neither are Russia, obviously.
        That doesn’t make them bedfellows.
        I’ve watched Farage several times talk regards defence, including in person and also a face to face.
        So whatever propaganda is spread here has no effect on me.
        Where do posters seriously expect voters to go????
        Back to the Tories and Labour AGAIN?
        Look at the polls to see who is listening. Too many have woken up.

    • As this govt are being outed as Chinese assets it’s a bit rich to keep going on about Reform isn’t it? Talk about being desperate👍

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