Former Labour Defence Minister, Lord Gilbert, shocked the normally staid British House of Lords by suggesting the use of neutron bombs to establish a “cordon sanitaire” on the Pak-Afghan border. Funnily enough, he proposed this during a debate on nuclear disarmament and drew the ire of his former boss, former Labour Defence Secretary Lord Browne of Layton, who accused him of being at his ‘most contrarian and challenging’, while the current government spokesman, Lord Wallace of Saltaire, said that the government did not share these views, saying that the government retained a commitment to ‘a world without nuclear weapons’. Apart from the truism that a politician will say anything to regain the limelight, especially if out of office, Lord Gilbert ridiculous estimation that the mountainous border between Pakistan and Afghanistan is only inhabited by “a few goats” and their herders displays a comical ignorance and a disdainful superiority which can only be enjoyed by someone safely ensconced in a majesterial realm, with absolutely no on-ground experience in the region he is busy delivering prescriptions for.






