UK
Workers' Weekly Internet Edition Year 2026 Volume 56 Number 2
Workers' Weekly Internet Edition Year 2026 Volume 56 Number 2
Volume 56 Number 2, January 31,
2026
ARCHIVE
JBCENTRE
Armed Forces Bill 2026
Continuing the Direction of Taking the Country
away from Peace and towards War
Workers' Weekly Internet Edition
Article Index :
Armed Forces Bill 2026:
Continuing the Direction of Taking the Country away from Peace
and towards War
Government Refusing to give basic details about the US
military presence in Britain:
Secrecy Over US Bases in Britain Deepens Amid Signs of New
Middle East Military Build-Up
40th anniversary of the Wapping strike:
The Challenge Today Facing the Working Class
From the Party Press:
Lessons of the Year-Long Print Workers' Struggle
Armed
Forces Bill 2026
Continuing the Direction of Taking the Country away from Peace
and towards War
The Armed Forces Bill 2026 was presented to the House of Commons for its
Second Reading on Monday, January 26 [1]. John Healey, the Defence Secretary,
introduced the Bill in such a grandiose manner that showed he expected no
challenge from any part of the House, and indeed many MPs from all the cartel
parties felt obliged to echo the Defence Secretary in saying that it was
"a privilege" to speak in the debate, including the Shadow Defence
Secretary in his contribution.
John Healey began: "It is a rare privilege to open this debate. This is
only the second ever Labour Armed Forces Bill, yet the provenance of this
legislation reaches all the way back to the Bill of Rights, and more than three
centuries on, granting authority to maintain our armed forces remains one of
the most important - if not the most important - formal constitutional
responsibilities of Members of this House." He used these words designed
to secure responses in Parliament that were broadly supportive of the Bill's
aims, but with the scrutiny of MPs mainly focusing on the welfare of those in
the armed forces, on their housing and justice reform, whilst skirting around
the huge-scale increases in defence spending as the government's particular aim
with this legislation.
These measures in the Armed Forces Bill are being put in the service of the
government's Strategic Defence Review announced by Prime Minister Sir Keir
Starmer in June [2]. This, as Starmer said then, aims to turn Britain's
already military-dominated economy into a fully militarised economy and to put
British society on a war footing. This is why Healey went on to say in
his statement to Parliament that the Armed Forces Bill was a "substantial
Bill - a reflection of just how much the world has changed over the past five
years. It is more dangerous and much less certain, and this new era of threat
demands a new era for defence." He avoided completely Britain's role in
the creation of this dangerous world, in Britain's role in the escalation of
Anglo-US and NATO proxy war in Ukraine against Russia and their direct military
support and complicity in Israel's genocide against the Palestinians, as well
as the government's complicity in US interference and threats of war to
Venezuela, I ran and in every part of the globe.
The history of the Armed Forces Bill is that it is required every five years
to maintain the legal basis for the UK's armed forces "in peacetime".
This although Britain's interventions and wars abroad have continued since the
end of World War II almost unabated. The lineage of the legislation goes back
to the 1688 Bill of Rights [3], which requires Parliament to authorise a
standing army in peacetime. The 2026 Bill does more than simply renew the Armed
Forces Act 2006, an Act which consolidated the previous separate service acts
into a single system of service law. Since then, new Armed Forces Acts have
been passed in 2011, 2016, and 2021 to renew the 2006 Act. Even according to
some media reports, the 2026 Bill "is being used as a major policy vehicle
to reshape defence for what ministers describe as a 'more dangerous and much
less certain world'." Healey's justification for the Bill was not welfare
of armed forces service members "in peacetime" but rather the plans
for escalating wars. This was further revealed when the Defence Secretary said,
"It is why we are proposing, through this Bill, to increase our war
fighting readiness and homeland security, and why we are putting the men and
women in our armed forces at the heart of defence plans."
In other words, the main point is overall the focus on the military, given
what the government, not to mention the other cartel parties, are calling a
more dangerous global situation. They have to give support to the armed forces
personnel, but, like the "outrage" over Trump's remarks about the
role of British forces in Afghanistan staying "a little back", they
gloss over who is the aggressor, who is causing the danger, and the direction
they are taking the country away from peace and towards war. As Declassified,
pointed out a number of years ago: "Britain has deployed its armed forces
for combat over 80 times in 47 countries since the end of the Second World War,
in episodes ranging from brutal colonial wars and covert operations to efforts
to prop up favoured governments or to deter civil unrest." Other estimates
have put the number of military interventions by Britain at over one hundred in
this time.
What is noticeable today is that the use of violence and dictate is being
used by the likes of the US and Britain on an increasing scale, and the Armed
Forces Bill fits into this context. This is the meaning of the government's
talks of a "new era for defence", in which, for example, it is the
Secretary of State who wields the power to recall of reservists, and oversees
the "largest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the
Cold War". For the working class and people, this emphasises that they
have to work to consolidate themselves as the power to combat this
warmongering, violence, dictate and militarism, with their sights set on
constituting themselves as an Anti-War Government, and all that entails about
authority and power resting with the people who desire peace. The youth must
not be made cannon-fodder in the wars of the ruling elite and the armaments
industry, and nor should the more elderly reservists! This is what the working
class and people demand, tearing away the cloak of being "privileged"
which emerged as a theme from the Armed Forces Bill second reading.
For Your Reference - the key measures in the Armed Forces Bill 2026 are:
Full legal enshrinement of the Armed Forces Covenant, expanding the duty on
public bodies and bringing UK and devolved governments into scope [4].
Creation of a Defence Housing Service to improve and manage service
accommodation, regenerate defence land, and support service communities.
Drone-related security powers, allowing Defence personnel to use approved
equipment to detect and prevent drone offences at Defence sites.
Readiness reforms, including:
Raising the maximum recall age for reservists from 55 to 65
Allowing seamless transfer between regulars and reserves
Giving the Secretary of State powers to authorise recall for warlike
operations in preparation or underway
Service Justice System reforms, including improved victim support and
clearer complaint mechanisms. The Government frames the Bill as part of a
broader shift to a "new era for defence", backed by £5 billion
in additional defence spending this year and the "largest sustained
increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War".
The Second Reading debate showed cross-party support for what are being
referred to as "welfare-focused measures", in that MPs repeatedly
emphasised the importance of improving service life, housing, and family
support. Government voices in the debate claimed it was the largest pay rise in
two decades and with expanded wraparound childcare. However, there were also
areas of scrutiny and concern, particularly around housing delivery, justice
reforms, and whether the Bill goes far enough on readiness and personnel
welfare, and questioning as to whether there were commitments to safe, decent
housing for all forces families. These were characterised as overdue steps to
"renew the nation's contract with those who serve".
The Bill now goes to a Select Committee, which is to report to the Commons
on or before April 30, 2026. Then follows consideration by a Committee of the
whole House and a third reading, before the Bill goes before the House of
Lords.
Notes
1. Armed Forces Bill
The Second Reading debate can be found at:
2. Strategic Defence Review: Starmer's Attempt to Put Britain on
"War-Fighting Readiness" Cannot Be Accepted,
Workers' Weekly
June 7 2025
3. 1688 Bill of Rights
4. The "Armed Forces Covenant" was first published in 2011 and is
said to ensure that "the Armed Forces Community are not disadvantaged in
comparison to other British citizens, such as accessing public or commercial
services, while also being treated with fairness and respect."
Article Index
Government Refusing to
give basic details about the US military presence in Britain
Secrecy
Over US Bases in Britain Deepens Amid Signs of New Middle East Military
Build-Up
The British government is refusing to disclose key information about US
military activity on British soil at the very moment Washington appears to be
preparing for a significant escalation in the Middle East. A
Declassified
UK
investigation dated January 20 reveals a tightening veil of secrecy
around American operations at RAF bases across England, raising questions about
Britain's role in any future conflict involving Iran.
For the first time in years, ministers have declined to reveal how many US
military personnel are stationed at each of the 13 American-operated or
American-shared bases in Britain. While the government acknowledges that
roughly 11,000 US personnel are present overall, it now refuses to break down
the numbers by location, citing "personnel security" concerns.
"In the interests of personnel security, I will not currently share
specific numbers of US [visiting forces] personnel at each individual
site," armed forces minister Al Carns said in response to a parliamentary
question.
This marks a reversal from 2024, when the Ministry of Defence (MoD) did
provide base-specific figures. The MoD also declined to clarify what
authorisation the US would require to launch military operations from British
territory. Successive governments have long insisted that Britain must approve
any such action, but ministers now avoid confirming whether this principle
still holds. Whether or not the government has ever refused is a moot point.
For instance, RAF Lakenheath is notorious for having played a key role in US
air operations against Libya for decades. Notable missions include the 1986
Operation El Dorado Canyon using F-111s, supporting the 2011 aggression against
Gaddafi with F-15Es, and conducting strikes against ISIS in 2015.
Recent aircraft tracking data have indicated a surge of US military flights
from RAF Lakenheath to Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan, a key hub for
operations in the Middle East. Recent movements reportedly include at least 12
F-15 fighter jets, 4 KC-135 refuelling aircraft, and multiple C-17 transport
planes. RAF transport planes have made multiple trips in recent days to Tel
Aviv, Beersheba, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia. While the MoD has not
explained the purpose of these flights, their timing raises questions about
whether Britain is supporting or co-ordinating with US regional operations.
These deployments align with broader US preparations for potential action
against Iran or even Greenland, following escalating rhetoric from the US
President. The
Declassified UK
report paints a picture of a government
increasingly reluctant to reveal the extent of US military activity on British
soil, even as evidence mounts of a new US build-up in the Middle East and
Trump's threats of military action against Iran. The report underscores how
deeply embedded US military infrastructure is in Britain's military structure.
US forces must be removed from Britain and there must be no US military
action launched from British soil. This is a crucial demand of the anti-war
movement.
Sign the Stop the War Coalition Petition, Remove all US military from
Britain!
Article Index
40th anniversary of the
Wapping strike
The
Challenge Today Facing the Working Class
Rally in Trafalgar Square supporting print workers, April
6 1986 - Photo: Morning Star.
2026 marks the 40th anniversary of the Wapping dispute, a pivotal
confrontation provoked when Rupert Murdoch's News International relocated
production of its major newspapers from the traditional Fleet Street to a new,
heavily secured, high-tech facility at Wapping, in January 1986.
News International controlled a significant section of the British press at
that time, publishing
The Sun, News of the World, The Times,
and
The
Sunday Times
. At the same time as the move, the company opened a new
parallel plant at Kinning Park, Glasgow.
The relocation had been years in the planning. Both new facilities had been
developed in secret, and for Wapping in particular, a cover story of a fake
newspaper, "The London Post", was circulated to disorient opposition
[1].
The dispute was a deliberate strategic move by Murdoch in alliance with the
Thatcher government, part of the restructuring of the state around powerful
monopoly interests and the overhaul of social relations that was to do away
with the social-democratic arrangements that had held since the end of the War.
The Miners' Strike had ended in defeat less than a year earlier, and the
important Warrington Messenger newspaper group dispute of 1983-4 had proven
that union opposition can be broken using the recently-introduced new
anti-union laws.
When production shifted to Wapping, 6,000 members of the main print unions -
the National Graphical Association (NGA) and the Society of Graphical and
Allied Trades (SOGAT) - declared strike action on January 24, 1986. News
International immediately sacked these workers while on strike to avoid
redundancy payments amounting to some £40 million [2].
The open rule by police powers so brutally used during the Miners' Strike
was again deployed by the state at Wapping. Daily demonstrations and pickets
began outside the Wapping plant, met by thousands of officers who had been sent
to protect the site and distribution trucks. Over the protracted year-long
conflict, hundreds of people, both striking workers and police, were injured,
and over 1,200 arrests were made.
While a significant uniformed police presence was evident for the protection
of the Wapping plant, an undercover operation by Special Branch operated
simultaneously [3]. This covert operation aimed at intense surveillance of
strikers and protesters, producing daily intelligence briefs and maintaining
detailed files on union leaders and MPs. Special Branch utilised informants and
meticulously documented various aspects of the protests, including banners and
chants, as well as the individuals involved and their lives [4].
The strike ended on February 5, 1987 after 54 weeks - three weeks longer
than the Miners' Strike itself - of no pay and was unable to sustain itself
further.
Prior to the dispute, the phrase "Words and Spaces" had
highlighted the impact of the transition to computerised typesetting [5]. The
adoption of modems, digital production techniques and automation resulted in
redundancies, undermining the previously established relationship between
workers and management. The organisational shift was to use new technology for
maximising productivity while systematically dismantling the very workforce
that had built the printing industry. What News International produced
previously with 6,800 workers they now produced with just 670. The neoliberal
view of workers as things rather than human beings, and the monopolies'
relentless push for efficiency and productivity, were fully backed by the
state. The Wapping, Miners' and Messenger disputes were the prototypes of the
kind of imposition that is the norm in so many present-day disputes. It was the
new
modus operandi
, presenting a serious challenge for the unions as the
civil society of which they were part was smashed to pieces, a challenge which
remains to the present day as they seek to remain effective as the self-defence
organisations of the workers in the current reality.
Not only was technology used to drive efficiency, not only was it used to
increase control over labour, but it was also used to create a form and content
of journalism appropriate to the new neoliberalism. By decimating the staff,
Murdoch overhauled the very makeup of the journalism and printing workforce,
changing its very character as an industry. Production could be fast, change
dynamically, and the product itself could be cheaply made in full colour. The
method of organisation in the workplace had changed, and the management held
all the cards. The age of the monopoly-controlled media had truly been born.
The issue could not then have been to push back the clock, on any front. In
fact, the strike pointed to the need for the New on all fronts.
It was notable that the dismissed print workers, using their skills,
produced their own newspaper
The Wapping Post
over the course of the
strike, which served as a crucial instrument for organising and informing the
strikers and their community as well as the public at large. Significantly, it
effectively communicated the workers' own independent viewpoint, speaking in
their own name, overcoming a media blackout imposed by the company [6].
This experience of the need to build the independent voice of the workers,
the workers' independent press, relates to developing an independent outlook on
the economy and politics. It is on this basis that technological progress can
enhance human well-being, not detract from it. Workers themselves are integral
to this transformation, requiring their voices to be central in discussions
about how technology is developed and applied.
The silencing on the one hand of the alternative, of the direct voice of
working people, and on the other, the disequilibrium of the social relation
between employer and employed with the negation of "big labour" that
characterise the neoliberalism that aggressively took hold in the 1980s are
critical factors in the profound political crisis that exists today.
The Wapping strike exposed the inadequacies of a political system that fails
to express the interests and voices of workers. It also threw down the
challenge to working people as to how to organise to make their defence
organisations effective in the period of the retreat of revolution. The legacy
of the strike remains relevant in the present in the need for deep-going
democratic renewal that empowers the working people to be in control over the
matters that affect their lives, particularly now when the productive forces
are growing exponentially and the response of the ruling elites is to smash
what they cannot control.
The need then and now is for a system of authority rooted in collective
decision-making rather than imposition. Modern movements, such as that embodied
by the phrase "Enough Is Enough," aim to empower workers to make
their claims on society, which they must, and claim their agency, so that any
form of change, technological or otherwise, is not posed as a force outside of
their control.
Workers' Weekly
has confidence in the working class that they can
rise to the occasion in the present phase of historical development, and meet
this challenge. In this respect, it puts on the agenda to creatively work
itself to continually improve the content and form of its journalism.
Notes
1. Annie Brown, "Wapping dispute 30 years on: How Murdoch and Thatcher
united to crush British workers",
Daily Record
, October 1, 2016
2. "Wapping dispute", Wikipedia, retrieved January 29, 2026
3. Nicola Cutcher, "Wapping strike - story: Special Branch kept close
watch of the industrial dispute", Special Branch Files Project, January
12, 2016
4. In this regard, see:
"The Undercover Policing Inquiry and the Fight for Accountability",
Workers' Weekly
, October 12, 2024
5. The phrase related to the move towards computerised typesetting systems,
which used digital "words" composed with the "spaces" in
between them, enabling journalists (and others) to have direct input into the
system, rather than traditional methods that required physical typesetting by
compositors. This shift meant that fewer workers were needed, as machines could
handle tasks previously performed by several printworkers. The phrase
highlighted the broader transformation in the industry towards automation, with
computers taking over roles that were once labour-intensive. How to deal with
this move was one of the challenges facing the print workers and their unions
at that time, at the beginning of, and then throughout, the 1980s.
6. "Wapping Dispute", Marx Memorial Library
Article Index
From the Party
Press
Lessons
of the Year-Long Print Workers' Struggle
Workers' Weekly, January 24,
1987
One year has passed since the brutal sacking of five and a half thousand
print workers by Rupert Murdoch's News International and the move of Murdoch's
titles to Wapping.
This act was a savage onslaught on the print workers and their rights,
representing the decisive move by Murdoch in his single-minded pursuit of
maximum profits in the conditions of the capitalist crisis. It was an integral
part of the offensive against the workers by the capitalist class as a whole to
unload the whole burden of the crisis onto their backs, involving throwing
workers out of their jobs on a massive scale, as well as further attacking and
restricting their trade union rights.
News International is still arrogantly refusing to consider for a moment the
reinstatement of the sacked workers. It is still, as it has done from the
beginning, pursuing its attacks on the workers and their unions, utilising the
Employment Acts to obtain injunctions, issue writs claiming damages and so
forth, in order to force the workers to their knees and liquidate their
resistance. The police have been used from the outset to attack and intimidate
the pickets, to ensure the continued production of Murdoch's newspapers, and
enforce the court injunctions outlawing mass pickets. [...]
The offensive at News International opened the way for further attacks,
sackings and introduction of new technology in the newspaper industry as a
whole, as the press barons saw that Murdoch through his vicious actions had
strengthened their hand, and were able to cite the cut-throat competition with
Murdoch as "justification" for their own offensive against the
workers.
The whole history of the struggle, from the well-laid and vicious plans of
Murdoch to carry out wholesale sackings and transfer printing to the heavily
fortified Wapping plant, the continual unprovoked and savage attacks by the
police on the print workers' pickets and demonstrations, the use of the Tory
government's anti-worker legislation to impose massive fines on the print
unions and sequester their assets, Murdoch's employing every tactic so as to
utilise this legislation to the full and bring the forces of the state and the
courts to bear against the workers - all show that the workers can have no
illusions about the nature of the capitalists, their state and their
government. It reveals this nature to be most ugly, rapacious, vicious,
violent, deceitful and bullying, and that as the crisis intensified, the
capitalists will stop at nothing to unload its burden onto the working people,
to exploit them to the bone, to club them into submission, to split their unity
against exploitation, and to attempt to smash their dignity. It shows they will
do everything in their power to make the working class and people pay for the
crisis and to maintain in existence their system of wage slavery and extraction
of maximum profit.
[...]
It is the workers' own struggles that are decisive in winning their demands.
The workers' rights - the right to strike, to a livelihood, and so on - and
their interests can only be served through their principled, vigorous,
uncompromising and independent class struggle, through self-sacrifice and
keeping the initiative in their own hands.
The workers have refused to be cowed by the attacks on them, they have twice
rejected attempts to impose on them "final offers" [...] which would
have compromised their dignity and their just demands for reinstatement and for
their full democratic and trade union rights. They have continued their pickets
and demonstrations outside the Wapping plant.
The workers are justly outraged by the sackings and the continual savage
attacks on them and their right over the past year. [...]
It has shown that the workers can have no illusions bout the viciousness of
their class enemy, about the lengths to which it will go to maximise profits,
to trample on the workers' rights, and to maintain its system of wage slavery.
[...]
The struggle has shown that the workers are not prepared to lie down in the
face of the capitalist offensive, to see their dignity trampled in the mud
[...].
The fact is that the viciousness of the attacks on the working people by the
capitalist class reflects also the depths of the crisis of their system, to
which neither the capitalists [nor] their political parties [...] are able to
offer any solution. It is only the working class that can lead the people in
solving the grave problems which confront them. [...]
Article Index
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