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Criticism grows over a ‘global Britain’ with more WMD at the cost of world’s poorest
Why is money being poured into increasing Britain's nuclear arsenal while the Tories say we cannot afford to maintain our commitments to international aid for the world's crisis zones, asks RAOUL WALAWALKER
The concept of increasing the millions spent on weapons of mass destruction, unlikely to ever be used, while signing the death warrant of tens if not hundreds of thousands of desperate people has horrified charities, over a hundred of whom have already written to the government to condemn these cuts

FOR charities, the government’s plan to cut foreign aid from 0.7 per cent to 0.5 per cent of GDP is clearly the worst stain on Boris Johnson’s vision for Global Britain in a Competitive Age, outlined last week, as the coronavirus pandemic ramps up the pressure on the world’s poorest countries already ravaged by prolonged crises of violence and poverty.

Johnson’s “vision” — the Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Development and Foreign Policy — includes boosting the cap of Britain’s nuclear weapons stockpile from 180 to 260 while cutting the aid budget until the “fiscal situation allows” it to be restored; no date specified.

The concept of increasing the millions spent on weapons of mass destruction, unlikely to ever be used, while signing the death warrant of tens if not hundreds of thousands of desperate people has horrified charities, over a hundred of which have already written to the government to condemn these cuts.

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