Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Glossary
- Introduction
- 1 A Little Ray of Sunshine: Britain, and the Origins of the FPDA – A Retrospective on Objectives, Problems and Solutions
- 2 On the Establishment of the Five Power Defence Arrangements
- 3 Malaysian Foreign Policy and the Five Power Defence Arrangements
- 4 The Five Power Defence Arrangements Exercises, 2004–10
- 5 The FPDA's Contribution to Regional Security: The Maritime Dimension
- 6 An FPDA Role in Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief?: It's More than Just the Armed Forces
- 7 A Quasi-Pact of Enduring Value: A Malaysian Perspective of the FPDA
- 8 The FPDA and Asia's Changing Strategic Environment: A View from New Zealand
- 9 The Future of the FPDA in an Evolving Regional Strategic Environment
- Index
1 - A Little Ray of Sunshine: Britain, and the Origins of the FPDA – A Retrospective on Objectives, Problems and Solutions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Glossary
- Introduction
- 1 A Little Ray of Sunshine: Britain, and the Origins of the FPDA – A Retrospective on Objectives, Problems and Solutions
- 2 On the Establishment of the Five Power Defence Arrangements
- 3 Malaysian Foreign Policy and the Five Power Defence Arrangements
- 4 The Five Power Defence Arrangements Exercises, 2004–10
- 5 The FPDA's Contribution to Regional Security: The Maritime Dimension
- 6 An FPDA Role in Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief?: It's More than Just the Armed Forces
- 7 A Quasi-Pact of Enduring Value: A Malaysian Perspective of the FPDA
- 8 The FPDA and Asia's Changing Strategic Environment: A View from New Zealand
- 9 The Future of the FPDA in an Evolving Regional Strategic Environment
- Index
Summary
In the 1950s and early 1960s few doubted that the United Kingdom had a world role and the responsibilities that went with it: “In those days, more than a quarter of a century ago”, remarked Lord Carrington the British Foreign Secretary, “it seemed clear that we had indeed such a role and must be ready to play it — and the next few years justified the assumption.” Across the board of British politics the simple abandonment of existing commitments was considered unthinkable. Even Edward Heath, that arch-European, when in opposition was adamantly opposed to the cuts decided on by the Labour Government in 1966–68.
Moreover, the British had the forces to put their policy into effect. In 1964 when Healey took over as Defence Secretary, there were more land forces East of Suez than there were confronting the Russians in Germany. The Royal Navy thought of itself as a world-wide actor in defence of the British Empire and Commonwealth, not just as a counter to the Soviet Northern and Baltic fleets, burgeoning as they were. The Royal Navy had major bases in Singapore, Aden, Bahrain and Labuan in Borneo; the Royal Air Force staging posts at Ascension Island and Gan; and the Army maintained garrisons in Malaya, Hong Kong and Borneo.
This did not, however, imply that the British saw themselves simply as wanting to defend the status quo. The British had always maintained the empire on the cheap because they were basically interested in trade, not territory, and were reluctant to assume the burdens of an empire. For this reason, the British relied on consent of a sort. British imperial historians have for years been making the point that the empire rested essentially on such consent. How else could the British “rule” India, a region of 225–250 million people, with just 1,250 senior civil servants and at most 35,000 British troops? With the growth of nationalism, this consent was withdrawn and the British recognized with considerably greater insight than the Dutch or the French that the status quo was unsustainable.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Five Power Defence Arrangements at Forty , pp. 1 - 23Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2011