Ah! OK, yes, that's fine, I just thought it was advice about preserving the VCU or lowering loads on the IRD. Again, going back to the X-Trail, the slightly different gear ratios in the front and rear half of the drivetrain meant that they were always "fighting" each other very slightly and you could reduce that by having the tyres with the bigger overall rolling radius on the back. I've got a set of "Event" tyres on at present and I have the least worn on the back, but they're noisy as hell, so I think I'll put the least worn ones on the front, so I can even out the wear on all 4, and then replace them with something more "road" orientated. Otherwise, I'll end up with too much tread on the back ones and then I'll feel obliged to replace the fronts with the same sort when they wear out, because otherwise I'd be wasting some life on the back ones!
The thing about having the better tyres on the back (for any car, not just a Freelander or X-Trail) that you outline above, is still hotly debated. In a straight line (assuming the front and rear track are the same), it is still regarded as best practice to have the deeper tread on the front because you're less likely to aquaplane as the rear wheels will tend to run in the "shadow" of the fronts, in the area of tarmac already "squeegeed" dry by the front tyres. But there has been a realisation, over time, that this isn't where the most danger occurs.
As you say, once the car is going round a bend, the rear tyres don't follow the path of the front ones and could then aquaplane anyway and once you're at the point where one or other end is going to let go, understeer is the preferred way to lose adhesion because it's easier for the driver to correct. Instinctively, people lift off when they realise the car isn't going where they point it and that, in itself, helps to tame understeer. With more and more cars having electronic stability control, it's easier to control understeer because the ESC system can take over control of the throttle as well as the brakes. Plus, of course, if it all goes very badly wrong, all the car's passive safety systems (seat belts, airbags, crumple zones) are set up to work best if you go forwards into something, rather than backwards or sideways. Pretty much all cars are set up to understeer at the limit for those reasons. The clincher, I think, is that as most cars these days are front wheel drive, they'll wear out the front tyres first, so having the most worn ones on the front, forces you to replace them sooner. You then put the new ones on the back and the back ones on the front, wearing out the front ones (which used to be rear rear ones) sooner, meaning that all 4 tyres are never as old as they would be if they're rotated to even out the wear all the time.