David Cameron is to shelve plans to call a House of Commons vote to approve British airstrikes against Islamic State (Isis) targets in Syria in a belief that he has failed to win over enough Labour MPs and a recognition that Russia’s military intervention has complicated the picture.
Downing Street has decided that RAF involvement in coalition airstrikes against Isis targets should not be extended from Iraq. There are fears that the prime minister would be weakened on the world stage by a second parliamentary defeat over military action in Syria.
Ministers had been discussing a potential Commons motion with Labour MPs as recently as 10 days ago, but the government has undergone a change of heart after failing to win the support of sufficient Labour MPs to be confident that it can overcome what is likely to be a sizeable Conservative rebellion.
Of course, the US is still bombing Syria (as is Russia), but the UK won't. And stopping them from becoming further entangled in that clusterfuck and making things even worse is a Good Thing.
...which illustrates why we desperately need Parliamentary approval for military deployments here. It would bring democracy to our most important foreign policy decisions, while ensuring that there is in fact majority support for it. But the latter is precisely why successive governments have opposed this change.