Skip to main content
Johnson takes Britain into dangerous new cold war against China   
For Britain to spend billions of pounds on a military build-up against China is a criminal waste of resources and is directly against the economic interests of the British people, says FIONA EDWARDS
A soldier walking on the deck of a Trident nuclear submarine

BRITAIN will be joining the US’s new cold war against China in a move that is both dangerous for the entire world and against the interests of the British people. 

That is the meaning of the Tory government’s latest Defence and Foreign Policy Review, Global Britain in a Competitive Age, that was published on Tuesday March 16. 

Not only will this cold war see Britain waste billions of pounds in a ridiculously provocative and aggressive military build-up against China in the Pacific region but it is also inevitable that engaging in such acts of belligerence will cost Britain many jobs as vital trade and investment from China will be lost.

US offensive against China

Britain’s increasing military aggression against China

The new cold war against China will cost British jobs

We need global co-operation not a new cold war 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
GLOSSING OVER REALITY: Keir Starmer at a roving robot technology workshop sponsored by BAE system in Barrow-in-Furness while viting to lay the keel for first Dreadnought class nuclear-armed submarine, March 2025
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament / 10 July 2026
10 July 2026

We need a government that invests in saving lives not destroying them, argues SOPHIE BOLT

Dan Jarvis
Military Spending / 6 July 2026
6 July 2026
DREADFUL BEGINNINGS: At the time Labour minister for defence procurement and industry, Maria Eagle opens Rolls-Royce Submarines office in Glasgow which will deliver the Dreadnought and AUKUS programmes, November 2024
Nukes / 20 June 2026
20 June 2026

Expanding Britain’s nuclear capability increases the risk of nuclear confrontation. It does not keep us safe – it makes us a target, argues CAROL TURNER

MUCH TO PONDER: President Donald Trump boards Air Force One on May 15 2026, at Beijing Capital International Airport - first from the left is China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi
Features / 21 May 2026
21 May 2026

JENNY CLEGG looks at the key points that defined the China-US relationship, for now