Only one battle matters to the 
Ministry of Defence – the battle for resources. In this the Taliban is not an 
enemy, but an ally.
Next week Nato defence ministers meet in Brussels, reportedly to start planning 
an Afghan army "retraining mission" next year. Start planning? What have they 
been doing for over a decade? When will spades be called spades and retreats 
retreats?
Afghanistan has become another war of the Spanish succession, its cause long 
forgotten by the opponents but an unending parade of pride, money, heroism and 
national prestige. It is no longer a war of retribution for 9/11, no longer a 
war of democratic nation building. It is merely a place where soldiers are sent 
by politicians to pretend to win, even as they die.
The one straw at which ministers and generals will grasp is that as long as the 
war lasts, it helps them lobby for money. Ever since Nato lost its reason for 
existing, its task has been to find a purpose. It has dragged out the insane 
Afghan conflict for 11 years. Why stop now? In the one battle that matters to a 
modern army – the battle for resources – the Taliban is not an enemy but an 
ally.
What do officials say nowadays to the relatives of the 433 British and 2,000 
American who have died fighting in Afghanistan. Do they say they have avenged 
the dead of 9/11, taught the Taliban a lesson, "sent a message" to militant 
Islam, helped rebuild a poor country? They cannot surely be repeating Gordon 
Brown's line, that their deaths are making Britain's streets safer. London now 
has to be patrolled by armed policemen, and a billion pounds spent protecting 
the Olympics.
The truth is that British troops are dying in Afghanistan because no British 
government has the guts to admit they are there to no purpose. Military 
lobbyists shelter behind the "bravery of our boys" to sustain defence spending. 
No party dares question the war or its objective, for fear of demeaning heroism. 
The war is not mentioned at party conferences. Money is poured into drone 
bombing, despite its manifest counter-productivity. The coalition claims to be 
"training" a 350,000-strong local army and police force, but knows them to be 
unreliable, a new Taliban in the making.
There is evidence that Philip Hammond, the least gullible of defence 
secretaries, is starting to cleanse the Augean stables of defence spending. 
Trident is being mothballed. Regiments are being disbanded. Hammond is demanding 
the army get below 100,000 soldiers, given that after Afghanistan it will have 
little to do beyond changing the guard. The navy and air force crave another 
Libya, where they "bravely" spent half a billion pounds replacing a nutcase with 
a bunch of bandits. Their reckless procurements are at last being addressed.
Whether Hammond survives long enough to do more than scrape the surface of his 
£37bn budget has yet to be seen. He is still buying jet fighters, destroyers and 
"hunter-killer" submarines, designed by military lunatics to fight Hitler. In 
2010 Cameron was bamboozled by the defence lobby into the nonsense that it would 
cost more to cancel aircraft carriers than to build them. He then found adapting 
F-35 fighters to use them (one day) had tripled in cost.
These are not sums attributable to the vagaries of war. They are normal 
day-to-day spending, as on schools and hospitals. If any other government 
department, let alone a council or private company, behaved like the MoD it 
would be bankrupted and replaced, its officials probably up before the Old 
Bailey.
Senior politicians are putty in the hands of military posturing and hard-graft 
lobbying. That is how Britain has come to spend more on defence than Germany, 
Japan, India and even Russia. The MoD has seen 250 senior staff leave to work 
for defence contractors in a single year, without batting an eyelid. Defence 
spending is one vast job-creation scheme. It has not made Britons safer, merely 
some Britons richer.
Each attempt to cancel or cut a programme is greeted with howls from the 
lobbyists. A marine general, Julian Thompson, popped up recently to say that 
"the Falklands war would be lost today", so deep are the cuts. Admirals deplore 
the "hollowed out navy, holed below the waterline". Dan Jarvis, an 
ex-paratrooper and Labour MP, wails to the Guardian thatarmy cuts damage "our 
ability to leverage influence in the world". Spending on defence is like the 
Olympics, a matter not of security but of global leverage and influence.
Afghanistan policy no longer uses the word victory. It needs only to engineer a 
future that preserves Nato dignity and saves its generals from humiliation, 
however long it takes. Today's wars of intervention are like medieval conflicts, 
causes so lofty that mere mortals cannot see the point. They are an outlet for 
heroism, a reason for lucrative taxation and, with luck, a source of glory.
I have never read a coherent explanation, in simple English, of why Britain 
still spends money on defence, long after the cold war is over. If anyone were 
to emerge to pose a conventional and existential threat to the British state, 
which is wildly unlikely, we would have time to rearm. As for our current 
obsession with fighting wars in small countries, the future is said to lie with 
hi-tech cyber-weapons, not lumbering armies and manned weapon platforms.
Nothing illustrates the thinness of the case for military spending so much as 
the airy language nowadays used to  it. We no longer need to stop 
invasion. We merely need to "punch above our weight" and "stand tall in the 
world". This is fatuous. An attaché swaggering at an embassy drinks party is not 
influence. China and Germany are proving that influence in the modern world 
comes from working hard, from a tight budget and a sound economy. Britain has 
neither.
When public money is spent to no purpose it is usually wasted. Defence money 
merely encourages government to indulge in one stupid war after another, killing 
Britons and foreigners in conflicts we are never going to win. Rory Stewart's 
recent television history of Afghan disasters was irrefutable.
This week another British soldier is likely to die in Afghanistan. His death 
will be greeted with heroic rhetoric, intended to imply that his sacrifice is 
keeping this country safe. That will be a lie. Britain is less safe for fighting 
this war. Soldiers are dying to defend a Whitehall budget, enrich a commercial 
lobby and protect a politician's back. They are wretched reasons.
Simon Jenkins
The Guardian, Tuesday 2 October 2012