Ian Blackford has pushed back on any suggestion that the SNP should drop they party’s commitment to getting rid of Trident following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.In a provocative move the SNP Westminster leader said the UK’s nuclear deterrent should go precisely because there is a “threat to the world from nuclear weapons”.Russian President Vladimir Putin has raised the spectre of a nuclear war following the Ukraine invasion putting his land, air and sea nuclear forces were on high alert as warning signal to the west.
But asked whether Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had changed his party’s position on the nuclear deterrent, Blackford restated the SNP commitment that the UK gets rid of the Trident nuclear deterrent.
The submarine-based deterrent operates out of the Faslane nuclear base on the Clyde and removing it from Scotland is keyplank of the SNP's independence agenda.
In an interview with the PA news agency, he said: “No, (the party position has not changed). Absolutely not at all, because there is a threat to the world from nuclear weapons.“The idea that having nuclear weapons provides a deterrence that removes that threat is far-fetched, to say the least.”Blackford also rejected claims put forward by Defence Secretary Ben Wallace that an independent Scotland would be more vulnerable to terrorism threats and Russian aggression if it became independent.He said: “Well, I think he makes a lot of wrong assumptions.
Read more on dailyrecord.co.uk