Asked by Lord Touhig To ask Her Majesty’s
Government what progress they have made in discussions with other
NATO countries about ensuring that all member states commit to
spending two per cent of GDP on defence. Lord Touhig (Lab) My
Lords, in the two weeks since he was sworn in as the 45th...Request free trial
Asked by
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To ask Her Majesty’s Government what progress they have
made in discussions with other NATO countries about
ensuring that all member states commit to spending two per
cent of GDP on defence.
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(Lab)
My Lords, in the two weeks since he was sworn in as the
45th President of the United States, Donald Trump has been
in the news every day. An anxious world has sometimes been
stunned by his words, whether spoken or tweeted in the
middle of the night. But I recall the words of another
United States President, who said:
“To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means
of preserving peace”.
Those words were spoken by America’s first President,
George Washington, in the very first State of the Union
Address in 1790. I am not suggesting that a conflict is
looming, but I echo Washington in saying that to keep the
peace, we must be always be prepared for conflict. Do I
believe that Britain is prepared for a sudden and
unexpected conflict? Sadly, my answer is that I have
serious doubts, and I am not alone in that, as I will show
in my remarks.
As I stand at the Dispatch Box this evening, one word comes
to mind about the Government’s commitment to the NATO 2%
spend: disappointed. I am disappointed that our Government
are playing fast and loose with defence spending. The
Government continue to say that we have the fifth largest
defence budget in the world and that we are one of five
nations out of 28 NATO members committed to the 2% target.
However, in the SDSR 2015, a new creative accounting was
orchestrated by the Government so that they could reach
that 2%. Professor Malcolm Chalmers, the deputy director at
RUSI, told the Defence Select Committee that the Government
had included £820 million on war pensions, £400 million on
UN peacekeeping and £200 million on pensions paid to
retired civil servants. The committee concluded that this
“redefinition”, as it described it, of defence expenditure
undermined the credibility of the Government’s assertion
that the 2% represents a significant increase in defence
spending. The Government responded by saying that all they
were doing was capturing all spending contributing to our
defence in the 2%. I am certainly interested to see whether
the Minister will explain how paying pensions to civil
servants contributes to Britain’s defence.
On these Benches we welcomed the Government’s commitment to
spending 2% of GDP on defence. However, how can we persuade
other member states to reach that 2% target if we are using
creative accounting to reach that goal ourselves? Let us
not forget that 2% is the minimum spend, not the maximum.
It must concern all of us that the other 23 members of NATO
are in no rush to increase their defence budgets when we
see Russia spending $90 billion and China spending $150
billion on modernising their forces. Russia has placed a
number of nuclear-capable missiles in Kaliningrad, on the
border of Lithuania and Poland. That is but one measure of
the challenge that we and NATO face.
I have been encouraged by the comments attributed to US
Defence Secretary James Mattis, who has reassured our
Defence Secretary of the United States’s “unshakable
commitment to NATO”. I was more encouraged when, following
her meeting with President Trump, our Prime Minister spoke
of his unshakable commitment to NATO, although I would like
to have heard the man himself say it. I remember candidate
Trump’s comments about NATO in the election campaign. He
said then:
“We have many NATO members that aren’t paying their bills …
Many NATO nations are not making payments, are not making
what they’re supposed to make”.
The new President has been busy signing executive orders
almost every day since he walked into the White House. I
hope we will not wake up one morning to see that he has
tweeted in the middle of the night his intention to sign an
executive order reducing American support for NATO.
Our NATO partners have to wake up to the fact that the
Americans may well do things differently under this
President and must take seriously his challenge about their
GDP spend on defence. NATO is the bulwark of our defence
and the United States plays the leading role. At the start
of January, NATO began deploying 4,000 troops to the Baltic
states. Britain, rightly, in support, committed 800
personnel to Estonia, four Typhoon aircraft in Romania and
150 personnel to Poland. A resurgent Russia is testing our
resolve to deter and defend. Only last week, the Royal Navy
was tasked with escorting the Russian aircraft carrier and
its support group through the channel. We are also having
to monitor increasing numbers of Russian submarines in the
waters around the UK, and we do so without any marine
patrol aircraft. In addition, we are seeing more and more
Russian military aircraft flying dangerously close to our
airspace. There is much more we have to do and my concern
is that the Government, driven by a passion for an
austerity policy which has failed miserably, are not
sufficiently engaged to meet these challenges, and nor will
they ever do so without increased defence spending, at
least to a genuine minimum spend of 2% of GDP.
No one put it better than my noble friend ,
who said in a speech in 2015 that,
“the 2% only makes sense if it is spent on the right
things—deployable troops, precision weapons, logistics and
specialist people”.
He was quite right on that. When he opened the defence
debate in this House on 12 January, he warned that we were
sleepwalking into a potential calamity. Like my noble
friend, I worry about our ability to meet the unforeseen.
I think that all the more having read the report from the
Centre for Historical Analysis and Conflict Research. Based
at Sandhurst, the centre examines past and current
operations, carries out analyses and research, and acts as
the Army’s think tank. The participants, some of the Army’s
brightest minds and all serving officers and soldiers, are
encouraged to speak out of turn to help inform our approach
to requirement setting and procurement and to influence the
perception of the Army. The report said that we may not be
facing an immediate military threat but that there are
several scenarios in which our allies may face a threat and
we may need to engage. It asked the question: is the
British Army ready if we become engaged in a war that we
did not foresee? The soldier-scholars concluded:
“If one merely sees preparedness through net manpower and
kinetic force capacity, the answer might be a simple ‘no’:
the British Army is at its smallest and has faced years of
budget cuts”.
I make no criticism of the Army, but I am critical of the
way the Government have starved our Armed Forces of
investment. We can have the latest equipment at our
disposal but, if we do not have the manpower, how do the
Government expect our Armed Forces to defend the liberties
that we uphold?
I am proud of the fact that during the 13 years of the
Labour Government, we spent an average of 2.5% of GDP on
defence. This excluded the cost of conflicts in Iraq and
Afghanistan, where expenditure was met from the Treasury
reserve and not the defence budget.
In a recent Written Question, my noble friend asked the
Government whether there had been any consideration of
reviewing the decision made by the previous Chancellor on
funding for the new Dreadnought nuclear submarines. He and
I agree that the funds should come from the contingency
controlled by the Treasury and not from an overstretched
defence budget. The Minister responded by saying that the
funding of the new submarines—around £31 billion—would
remain part of the defence budget. This is disappointing,
and yet another example of the way in which this Government
are stretching a limited defence budget and, at the same
time, shamelessly massaging the figures to give the
impression of meeting the 2% spend of GDP on defence.
Britain and the United States must be at one, doing
everything possible to persuade our NATO partners to meet
the 2% pledge they made in 2014. If Britain is to join the
US in taking a moral lead, we can do so only if we spend a
genuine 2% of GDP on defence.
7.17 pm
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(Con)
My Lords, I am sure we are all grateful to the noble Lord
for having instigated this debate. I congratulate him on
that and would like to follow on from some of the points
that he has helpfully made. It is timely that we should
have this debate so soon after the change in the
Administration in the United States. Quite frankly, there
has not been too much to cheer President Trump for over the
past few weeks. However, we must begin by expressing a
sense of relief that during the Prime Minister’s visit to
Washington, he managed to bring himself to say that he has
100% support for NATO. That is most welcome and a relief.
We must especially commend him for again raising the way in
which some NATO states, especially in the European sector,
remain freeloaders in supporting NATO.
As the noble Lord said, it was only two years ago, in 2014,
that all the NATO countries solemnly got together at the
Welsh summit and committed themselves to spending 2% of GDP
on defence. Following on from what the noble Lord said
about the UK spending 2%, according to the statistics in
the most helpful Library briefing pack, current UK spending
on defence is 2.1%. When the Minister replies, will he say
whether the Government believe that this is the correct
figure? If it is, surely it kills all the arguments of
those who say that in justifying 2% we are loading various
other costs on to the defence budget. The costs to which
the noble Lord referred—pensions is one—are easily absorbed
in the excess over 2% which the UK is now spending.
Where have we got to two years after the Welsh summit? I
find it quite extraordinary that four European states are
still spending less than 1% of GDP on defence. For many
years I have been a delegate to the NATO Parliamentary
Assembly. I was very recently vice-president and I am
currently chairman of one of the committees and a member of
the standing committee and the bureau. For years it has
been thought rather bad form and bad manners to draw
attention to those states that do not shape up. The time
has come to put the record straight. Let us put it on the
record now. According to the statistics in the Library’s
briefing, Slovenia is still spending 0.94%, Spain 0.91%,
Belgium, if you please, 0.85%, and Luxembourg, one of the
richest countries in Europe, 0.44%—less than half of 1%.
The noble Lord referred to the background we face, with
Russia rattling its sabre on NATO’s eastern frontier.
Following the outrageous transgressions of Russia in recent
years in Georgia, South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Crimea and
Ukraine and, as the noble Lord said specifically, in
placing highly offensive weapons in the Kaliningrad part of
Russia next to the Baltic states, it is worth pointing out
that NATO is responding to the situation, which reflects
the urgency that NATO clearly feels. We are in the process
of deploying battalion-sized battle groups to three Baltic
states and Poland—the United States leading the one to
Poland, Canada to Latvia, Germany to Lithuania, and the
United Kingdom to Estonia. The battle groups will be in
place in order to ensure that any offensive action by the
Russians in any of those states in taking on the battle
groups will be a clear transgression of Article 5 of the
NATO treaty.
I have already referred to the member states who spend less
than 1% of GDP on defence, but, there are 14 who are still
spending less than 1.5%. The figures on page 5 of the
Library briefing are extraordinarily helpful. They include
rich countries which should not be in this position. I have
already referred to Belgium and Luxembourg in the under 1%
group, but those in the under 1.5% group include rich
countries such as Denmark, Germany, Italy and the
Netherlands.
One might ask what they are doing to put defence spending
closer to their solemn commitments. This makes dismal
reading. Looking again at the statistics the Library has
produced, in the last year Belgium has decreased its
spending by 5.3%, Croatia by 8.8% and Poland, surprisingly,
by 7.8%. It is a dismal picture—it is a disgrace, quite
frankly—given the antics of Mr Putin as we see them. I hope
the Government will tell us of the positive and timely
steps they are taking to name and shame, as I have tried to
do tonight in the House, and that they will use every
effort to persuade these countries in the strongest terms
to come to the figure they all solemnly agreed two years
ago at the Welsh summit.
7.26 pm
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(Lab)
My Lords, it is a great pleasure to follow the noble Lord,
, with all his
experience of NATO and the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, and
to agree with every single word that he said. It is also
always a great pleasure to follow my noble friend , who often reminds
the House in debates of this nature that NATO was founded
in many ways by a Labour Government and that over all the
decades since then, whenever there has been a Labour
Government there has been absolute support for NATO—as
indeed there has been from every Conservative Government
that we have had since the war as well.
My noble friend quite rightly reminded us that we live in
troubled, turbulent and dangerous times, that the threat
from Russia is a real one in many respects, and that these
points were made a few weeks ago in a debate in this House
led by my noble friend Lord Robertson. He also reminded us
that the election of Mr Trump as the President of the
United States of America has set us all thinking. I am no
fan of President Trump but he quite rightly said that NATO
members in Europe, as the noble Lord, , mentioned, are not
pulling their weight in providing the necessary resources
for the organisation.
Noble Lords will know that defence spending in NATO fell
considerably during last year to this year and that the
United States pays 70% of NATO’s spending. You can
understand President Trump’s feelings when only the United
States, ourselves, Poland, Estonia and Greece—unlikely
countries some of them—met the 2% target set down in
Newport in 2014 when NATO visited Wales. The noble Lord,
, quite rightly
referred to some of the culprits in this regard—Spain,
Canada, France, Belgium, Germany and others. In November
last year the Secretary-General of NATO, Jens Stoltenberg,
said that if all NATO countries were to meet the 2% target
then tens of billions of pounds would be added to the NATO
budget for its use.
It is interesting that we are speaking at a time when by
now, I assume, the Brexit vote on triggering Article 50 has
gone through the other place because that will have an
effect on our relationship as a NATO member with non-EU
allies. Eighty per cent of NATO spending when we leave the
European Union will be the responsibility of non-EU
countries, including ourselves. Moreover, three out of the
four NATO battle groups in Poland and the Baltic states are
currently from non-EU members.
I do not agree, as I have read somewhere, that our leaving
the European Union means that we will no longer hold the
position of second-in-command in NATO. I think that that is
fanciful in terms of the importance of our Armed Forces.
However, Brexit will affect spending in the Ministry of
Defence, not least because of the fall in the value of the
pound and the effect that will have on procurement. Defence
cuts over the years will undoubtedly affect our capability
as a leading NATO member. I also agree with my noble friend
that 2% of GDP should be a minimum, not a target, and that
more should be spent.
I want now to spend a few moments on the point made by my
noble friend and others with regard to the legitimacy of
the 2% figure, something that was touched on a few weeks
ago and to which the Minister referred in his speech
winding up that debate; no doubt he will do so again today.
I reiterate: included in that figure of 2% is £820 million
for war pensions, £400 million for UN peacekeeping
missions, £200 million for Ministry of Defence civilian
pensions, one-off spends that are unable to be carried
over, and so on. I welcome the extra £5.7 billion that the
Government have put into defence and of course I welcome
the new joint security fund, but we have to be honest both
with ourselves and with the country—the figures which now
make up the 2% spend are very different from what they used
to be. My noble friend referred to the House of Commons
Defence Select Committee, which has argued that 2% does not
mean that we are adequately resourced. It also noted,
“that the NATO minimum would not have been fulfilled if UK
accounting practices had not been modified”—
this is what the Minister will tell us later—
“albeit in ways permitted by NATO guidelines”.
The committee went on to say:
“We believe that this ‘redefinition’ of defence expenditure
undermines, to some extent, the credibility of the
Government’s assertion that the 2% figure represents a
significant increase in defence expenditure”.
I have had a look at the Government’s response to the 28
recommendations made by the Select Committee and I have to
say that it is a model of obfuscation. It really does not
answer the points and totally ignores the fact that, if you
are now putting into that 2% sums of money that were not
included before and which have no direct impact at all on
how an army, navy and air force operate, because those sums
are mainly going on pensions, of course it means in effect
that we are now putting in less than we used to before the
2% figure was arrived at. RUSI has said that under the old
system it would in fact amount to 1.97%, not 2.1%, so it is
effectively a reduction in what used to be counted towards
that 2%. I am not saying that NATO disregards these things
because it does not, but it is what we as a country and as
a Government have been doing over the last years that
matters most. My plea is for honesty in these things and
not some rather spurious reasoning.
Despite all that, I do not doubt the Government’s
commitment to NATO because it is the bedrock of our
defence, of Europe’s defence, and indeed of the world’s
defence. There is a need for the Government and all of us
to exercise our influence on the other members of NATO to
meet that 2% target but we have to be in such a position
that, in arguing that other countries should meet the
target, we are responsible about what goes into the 2%.
My noble friend and others have mentioned the US President,
but I shall come back to him. Today in the House of Commons
the Prime Minister was asked two questions about NATO, two
questions about defence spending and two questions about
the President of the United States and his commitment. She
said that she had received assurances from the President
that he was now in favour of NATO, even though he called it
“obsolete” during the course of his election campaign.
While I agree that NATO members must come up to the mark
with regard to their NATO spend, I think that it is
stretching it a bit in terms of what he said. All I could
make out during the President’s press conference with the
Prime Minister was, frankly, no more than a grunt and a nod
because he said nothing. What the Prime Minister or perhaps
the British ambassador must now do is press the point that
the President should come out and say something about NATO
which indicates that he is in favour of it. A second-hand
account of what he said and the sight of a nod simply do
not come up to the mark.
This is an extremely important debate being held late in
the evening. The Minister knows that the supports him and his
Government in these matters. It is therefore important that
when he and his colleagues in the Ministry of Defence are
in the international forums, they should indicate to our
fellow members of NATO that they simply have to come up to
the mark.
7.35 pm
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(Lab)
My Lords, I am delighted to take part in this debate and I
congratulate my noble friend on calling it. I am
also delighted to follow my old friend the noble Lord,
, and my noble
friend Lord Murphy because they have shown their deep
commitment to issues of defence over the years, as I hope I
have as well. Looking back, I realise that it is now 37
years since I was on the Front Bench in the other place
responsible for defence, and over that time I have seen
many changes. I want to reflect on some of them this
evening and perhaps give some indication of the dangers we
might face in the immediate future. But I certainly agree
with the basic point that since it was formed, NATO has
been the cornerstone of our defence spending and activity.
Indeed, without NATO it would have been very difficult for
us to do many of our defence activities.
As I say, we have seen many changes over the years. The
noble Lord, , and I remember
clearly the Cold War. Being on the NATO PA during those
years, I well recall the horror and the difficulties of
trying at least to engage with the Russians, although we as
parliamentarians were able to achieve some success in ways
that were not always easy for Governments. I thought that
was very helpful.
The amazing thing is that the cornerstone of NATO is
Article 5, which sets out the right of a nation to
assistance if its sovereignty is under attack. It is worth
reflecting for a moment on the fact that the first time
Article 5 was used was in circumstances completely contrary
to those for which it had been envisaged. It was used after
9/11. The most powerful country in the world was the
recipient of that assurance from the rest of NATO. But the
uncanny thing is that NATO was designed to counter enemy
action by other states, but it was not a state that forced
the invocation of Article 5, it was a terrorist attack.
That change means we need another dimension to the way we
look at our defence efforts.
I will reflect again on the work of the noble Lord,
, who did so much in
NATO. With the collapse of communism, the emancipation of
the countries of eastern Europe and the symbolic fall of
the Berlin Wall, things changed and perhaps we relaxed a
little too much. Perhaps we ought to have been examining
the role and the nature of NATO because the demands being
made of it had changed. It is interesting that when these
nations gained their independence, the very first thing
most of them did was to bear in mind the remit we often
mention in this House, which is that the first duty of any
state is to protect its citizens. So what did they do? They
all ran to NATO. Indeed, before they got into NATO, most
were accepted as members of the NATO Parliamentary
Assembly. The noble Lord, , and I had a
bipartisan approach to that across both Governments and
both sets of parliamentarians. We led the way and paved
opinion in that respect. That was a very worthwhile job for
parliamentarians to do. It is interesting that those
nations applied to NATO; they did not initially apply to
the European Union. I will come back to that a little
later.
I am not going to debate whether the 2% is 2.1% or 2.08%,
because that has been raised. I think it is above 2%. I
accept that it is within the NATO rules, but the basic
point my noble friend Lord Murphy made was that it is not
as much as it had been previously. That is the key point to
bear in mind.
Having made that point, I will develop one or two things.
For five years I was the shadow Secretary of State for
Defence. In that time I repositioned the , with the help of
colleagues. As my noble friends have said, Labour
Governments have always been loyal to the defence of this
country, because it is our country just as it is every
other citizen’s country. Therefore, one of my basic desires
was to develop as far as possible—it was not always
possible—a bipartisan approach to defence. I do not see
anything wrong with that. If we are talking about an issue
as fundamental as defence, of course we have to criticise
and hold whichever Government to account, but there is no
reason why we should not be working together for the common
good and safety of the British people.
It is a question not only of the money spent, but often of
attitude. I believe that the British Armed Forces are
second to none in the world. They are absolutely brilliant.
I have seen them in action—I mean in action—all over the
world. The one thing that taught me was that this was
because of not only the training and skill of the Armed
Forces, but the equipment. In some areas of action I felt
that not many countries did not have the equipment we had
to do the job. The Americans are excluded from that; we did
not have the variety they had.
When one then looks at the figures, it is mind-boggling
that after Brexit, at current spending, 80% of NATO’s
budget will be provided by non-European Union members.
Surely the Europeans cannot let that continue. Although we
saw times 15 or 20 years ago when there were moves for
Europe to develop its own defence, a number of us had to
fight quite hard—Governments of both parties were on the
same side on this—to argue that we could not forsake NATO.
NATO was still the bedrock. The situation I just described
reinforces the point made by everyone who has spoken in the
debate so far: we must get the European Union countries to
increase their contribution to at least 2%.
I end with a point on change. We are talking about not only
hardware or armed forces when talk about security. The
lesson of Article 5 and 9/11 is that we have to fight Daesh
and terrorist groups wherever they are. That means there is
also a challenge for things such as cyberwarfare and
intelligence. I approve of the Government’s £1.6 billion
joint security fund. That is the right way to do it. It
probably has to be integrated more into the defence budget
as time goes on, but that might happen. My key point is we
need to work together. We have to be prepared for changes,
especially after Brexit.
7.45 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, I am grateful to the noble Lord, , for introducing his
QSD. I remind the House of my technical interest. While I
agree with some of his points, I am a little disappointed
with his approach. He complains about creative accounting,
but so far as I can see, the United Kingdom’s 2% is totally
compliant with the NATO guidelines. Furthermore, noble
Lords should note that gendarmeries, carabinieri or forces
of that type can also be included in the 2% figure,
provided they are realistically deployable. We have no such
forces. The term “realistically deployable” is very
elastic. I would be very surprised if other EU states are
not taking advantage of it.
From what the noble Lord told the House, I hope we can look
forward to a commitment on his party’s part in its next
election manifesto to increasing defence expenditure—my
noble friend the Minister and my party would then have to
match that commitment—while maintaining a continuous at-sea
nuclear deterrent.
The honest answer to the noble Lord’s Question is “not very
much progress”, because other NATO states are quite happy
to have Article 5 protection without having to pay for it.
I am sure that my noble friend will have a positive reply
to the QSD. UK Ministers and officials will of course
constantly pressurise other EU states to increase their
defence expenditure, but they are sovereign states. The UK
itself cannot be faulted. Despite economic challenges the
UK still meets the 2% target—yes, I know with a little bit
of creative accounting—and the 0.7% of GDP target on
international aid: a proud record indeed. Of course, it is
not just hard power, but soft power. We do both.
In case any noble Lords think that I am a sycophantic
Back-Bencher, I gently point out to my noble friend that 2%
of GDP is not enough in the current circumstances.
Secondly, I remind him that, as we have said, the United
States is spending 3.5% of GDP on defence. I suspect that
that is a bit too much, but noble Lords can see why the
United States is getting a bit fed up with our EU partners
not pulling their weight.
It is a question not just of what percentage of GDP we
spend on defence—of course, percentage of GDP is the only
sensible comparable measure. The UK has been very careful
to have a balanced capability. We spend on the right
things. There is no point having a row of shiny platforms
when the equipment is not sustainable, you cannot move it
to where it is needed, or you have no ISTAR capability to
determine where the enemy is. We are not perfect in this
regard—noble Lords have mentioned maritime patrol aircraft,
but that was capability management: the threat has
increased slightly, so we have decided to bring back a
maritime patrol aircraft capability—but overall, we have a
very good record of capability management and having a
balanced capability.
Everything has a Brexit dimension nowadays. According to a
calculation done on my behalf by the Library, without the
UK, the EU 27 will spend only 1.18% of GDP on defence. The
noble Lord, Lord Clark, put it slightly differently by
saying that 80% of NATO defence expenditure would be from
outside the EU. Clearly, the US will not tolerate this for
ever.
As a nation, we should be proud of what we do to keep
ourselves, our partners and our friends around the world
safe and secure. I hope that my noble friend the Minister
will have a robust reply.
7.50 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, this debate takes place at a time of considerable
instability in the world, but it is easy to forget that,
apart from the horrors of Syria and aspects of the Middle
East and Ukraine, the world is far more peaceful than it
has ever been. The danger is one of complacency. I would
not accuse the noble Earl who has just sat down of being a
sycophantic Back-Bencher—I will leave him to decide
that—but I am just a bit worried about complacency.
I raised two years ago the rapid rise in Russian defence
spending—I think that at that time it was 10%. I was
concerned that such an increase indicated why Russia was
thinking of developing its potential. We have seriously
underestimated President Putin’s intentions, particularly
in Syria and to a considerable extent in Ukraine and
elsewhere, as well as—and totally unexpected by me—in the
world of cyber warfare. Those are serious threats to the
stability of the world. One then has an unknown entity in
the form of President Trump and an unknown situation in
relation to Europe and Brexit. So instability should be our
watchword. If instability exists—this goes back to
something my noble friend said in his
excellent introduction—we should be mindful of the
statement that if you want peace, you should prepare for
war. We should perhaps bear that in mind, too, in relation
to defence spending, because 2% is probably too low in the
present circumstances. I know of all the economic
difficulties, but if we want peace—which I think we all
do—we must recognise that until human beings have better
ways of keeping peace, this is probably the best way of
doing it.
There is another point which is profoundly important. My
noble friend referred to
pensions, particularly civilian pensions, and contributions
to United Nations peacekeeping and so on being included in
the defence budget. The noble Lord, , read out the
excellent and helpful list that is available from the
Library of the expenditure of other countries on defence.
The issue is not just one of creative accountancy, as the
noble Earl, Lord Attlee, said; it is also that if we are
claiming that we can include those things in our defence
expenditure then so also can those countries that the noble
Lord, , read out. If we
think of how little some of them are paying and if they
have the same practice, it would be very useful for the
House to know—I am sure that the Minister will not be able
to answer right now—what the accountancy procedure is in
those various countries. If they are including things such
as pensions and contributions to United Nations
peacekeeping, the position is even more serious than I
thought.
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My Lords, that was exactly my point about gendarmeries and
the carabinieri. I put it very clumsily, but it was exactly
that point.
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I accept that clarification; it is very helpful. I must
admit that I am more concerned in a way about things such
as pensions, particularly civilian pensions. What on earth
are we doing including those in defence spending? If was in
Luxembourg right now, I would be thinking very hard about
our accountancy system. I say to the Minister and to my own
Front Bench that we should ask all NATO members to spell
out what is included in that defence spending. I would not
expect to see pensions and contributions to United Nations
peace- keeping. We should take quite a hard line on that
because, if we did, the figures would look much worse, but
at least we could address the matter more seriously.
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It might be helpful to have what the noble Lord suggests,
but also let us point out that if defence spending is
2.21%, which the Library says it is—that same figure
appeared in the Times only a few weeks back—it is worth
roughly £4 billion, which is a massive amount of spending
on top of the 2%.
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I understand and accept that point, which the noble Lord
made very clear in his contribution, but I simply say that
if we have a system where we include such things as defence
expenditure, first, it opens the door to other countries
which are paying in very little to do exactly the same—if
they are not already doing it—and, secondly, it does not
really help to say, “Well, because we’re spending a bit
more, it covers that up”. Covering it up is not the answer.
We are here to hold Governments to account, as I am sure
the Minister will know. The aim is not to have accountancy
of this type. That is where the Government have to answer.
I want to conclude on a wider point which is entirely
political. We have talked about the potential threat from
Russia, terrorism and other issues. What we do not look at
in this current debate about Brexit is how Europe will
change. We are so focused on the changes that the United
Kingdom has to make, but we need also to focus on what will
happen in the European Union, which cannot stay the same as
it is now unless it is to have more problems of the type it
has had with Brexit. There is discontent in Europe for a
variety of reasons—they are not all the same as those here,
but many are similar.
One of my concerns in this context was brought out by Mr
Tusk’s comments on Mr Trump. He said that we should now see
the United States as one of the risks faced by Europe. That
is a dangerously unwise statement to make, but where it is
true is that there is a problem about the relationship now
between the European Union, the United Kingdom and the
United States. We need to think that through in other
areas. My strong view is that we need a settlement where
Britain comes out of the European Union—I do not think that
there is any going back on that in the near future; some
people may disagree—but it does not come out of Europe. We
must recognise that we need, and Europe needs, a very close
relationship—indeed, a special relationship—between the EU
and the UK. One way to do that—and it is not discussed in
the present debate about Brexit—is via our expertise and
our contribution in defence and international relations.
Europe needs that as much as we do. In the current
situation, we need to do more than just step up to the
plate; we need to take a lead on defence and international
relations in a way that not only reassures Europe that we
are not walking away from it but helps cement what will
have to become a special relationship between the European
Union and the United Kingdom.
For all those reasons—and I recognise the economic
priorities around—we need to increase the spending, not to
get back to Cold War proportions but to recognise the
threat from President Putin and the threats in the rest of
world. I would also make a special plea for paying a bit
more attention to how all the nations within NATO account
for the money they provide. It is not sufficient to say
that it is all right to use it for pensions and United
Nations peacekeeping. If we allow that philosophy to go any
further, let us not be surprised if other countries use it,
too. That is a seriously bad idea for all of us.
7.59 pm
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The Minister of State, Ministry of Defence (Earl Howe)
(Con)
My Lords, I congratulate the noble Lord, , on his Question and
on highlighting the importance to the alliance of all member
states meeting the NATO target to spend at least 2% of their
GDP on defence. I am grateful to all noble Lords who spoke
this evening.
The alliance remains the world’s most powerful defensive
organisation. For 68 years it has kept the UK and our allies
safe. Today, it plays a critical role in deterring Russian
aggression, strengthening Iraqi institutions, training local
troops to stop Daesh and helping Afghanistan rebuild its
security structure, to name but the most important of its
current tasks. However, as a number of noble Lords today
stressed, in today’s world of growing dangers, NATO is
becoming more important than ever. It is worth mentioning
what the new US Defense Secretary, James Mattis, said at his
confirmation hearing:
“If we did not have NATO today, we would have to create it”.
The trouble is that in recent decades we have seen a marked
decline in defence spending. Today, the UK remains one of
only five nations to meet the 2% target. The best estimate
for 2016 is in fact 2.21%, as my noble friend pointed out. I also
take the opportunity to remind noble Lords that the budget
will increase by 0.5% in real terms each year of the
Parliament. However, five countries in the alliance invest
less than 1%. That approach is no longer sustainable. In the
face of multiple and diverse threats, NATO must become
adaptable by design: that is, transparent, flexible and able
to take tough decisions swiftly. In turn, that requires us to
spend more, more consistently and more efficiently. That is
why from the Wales summit in 2014 through to the Warsaw
summit in 2016 and beyond, the UK, alongside our US
counterparts, has led efforts to encourage nations to put
their money where their mouths are.
So, on the noble Lord’s Question, what progress have we made?
Here I depart slightly from my noble friend Lord Attlee, with
great respect to him, because the answer is quite a
significant amount. Thanks to the defence investment pledge
signed by NATO nations in Cardiff, we not only halted NATO’s
decline in defence spending but reversed it. In addition to
the five allies who meet the alliance target, a further 20
increased their defence spending and seven others plan to
reach the 2% target by 2024. At the same time, we should not
forget that overall spending is not the only metric we use to
measure NATO progress. Three other factors are worth
mentioning.
First, we have also seen 10 nations increase the proportion
of their investment dedicated to new capability. The noble
Lord, Lord Clark, was absolutely right to highlight how
critical that is. At a time when our adversaries are making
exponential advances in fifth-generation airframe technology
and advanced communications, NATO must dedicate itself to
developing vital disruptive capabilities, from cyber to
space, and from autonomy to big data, to avoid obsolescence
and keep ahead of the curve.
Secondly, NATO is becoming far more agile in being able to
deploy its forces when the call comes, whether that is Daesh
terror in the south or Russian aggression in the east. Since
the Wales summit, NATO set up a very high readiness joint
task force, the VJTF, to respond in short order to a full
range of security challenges from crisis management to
collective defence. We have also seen NATO planes policing
Baltic and Black Sea skies and we established an enhanced
forward presence in eastern Europe. That is currently in
train. I am proud that the UK takes a leading role in all
these areas. We are leading on the VJTF, we are sending our
Typhoons to safeguard Romanian and Polish airspace, and we
are deploying around 800 troops to Estonia, alongside around
200 troops from France and Denmark. We are also deploying a
reconnaissance squadron to Poland of approximately 150
personnel, who will come under US command.
Thirdly, we are seeing the alliance become more
interoperable. One of the NATO alliance’s greatest
achievements has been enabling multiple nations to
communicate, plan and operate together. Yet there remains
work to be done, especially when aligning the defence
aspirations of the European Union and NATO. Rather than be
distracted by the prospect of European armies or joint HQs,
we encouraged our EU colleagues to build on progress already
made on tackling migration, applying sanctions to Russia and
strategic communications. The joint declaration at Warsaw was
about making these two organisations complementary not
contradictory, working together on countering hybrid threats,
enhancing resilience, building defence capacity, cyber
defence, maritime security, and exercises. Clearly, that
declaration was a welcome step in the right direction.
The noble Lord, , focused on the budget
and in particular the 2%. He expressed his concern about
creative accounting and, I was sorry to hear, accused the
Government of shamelessly massaging the figures. I gently
point out to him that the House of Commons Defence Committee
disagreed with that view. It said that there had been no
creative accounting. Indeed, the prime reason it said so is
that NATO determines the definitions for categorising defence
spending, not the Government. As with other NATO allies, the
UK updates its approach to ensure that it categorises defence
spending fully in accordance with NATO guidelines by
capturing all spending contributing to the defence of the
United Kingdom.
I take the point of the noble Lord, , on the necessity of
comparing like with like. All NATO members are assessed using
the same guidelines so it is right that we should complete
our return along NATO’s metrics or we could not be compared
accurately with our allies. Incidentally, only one NATO ally
does not include pensions: Bulgaria.
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Do the other NATO countries include things such as pensions
to civilians as well as to military persons, and UN
peacekeeping operations? Is that the Minister’s
understanding?
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That is indeed my understanding. We are clear that NATO
wishes to quality-assure the figures that it receives so that
it can compare like with like. We believe that the figures
are broadly comparable as between the member states of NATO.
On another level, comparing like with like is a bit of a
flawed approach. As I pointed out in the recent debate of the
noble Lord, Lord Robertson, the nature of defence spending
inevitably changes over time. In the past, for example, we
reported significantly more operational spend, such as when
we were involved heavily in operations in Afghanistan.
Clearly, that type of spending has diminished considerably.
At the same time, the noble Lord, Lord Murphy, questioned—he
will forgive me if I got this wrong—the legitimacy of
including new categories of spend in the analysis. Of course,
he will recognise that new threats require new spending. We
have not, historically, included any spend on cyber but we do
now and it is right that we should. From time to time, like
all NATO allies, we must ensure that we are capturing all
appropriate spend.
The noble Lord, , questioned whether
the Army had the ability to wage war. It is important to say
that the Army, in line with the strategic defence and
security review of 2015, is ready and capable of deploying a
potent, large scale, war-fighting force at divisional level
providing there is sufficient notice.
The SDSR of 2015 took us a step forward because, along with a
commitment to spend £178 billion on equipment and to increase
the budget year by year, as I mentioned, it mandated a
modernised war-fighting Army division that will be larger and
able to use cutting- edge technology to harness all elements
of Joint Force 2025. Altogether, it will be a significantly
more potent force and I hope that the noble Lord, , would not disagree
with that vision.
In a darker, more dangerous world, NATO is more important
than ever. Let me reassure the House that the UK has no
intention of easing up in our drive to adapt the alliance. In
our strategic defence and security review of 2015, this
Government spelled out our plan to strengthen our
involvement, and since the referendum vote we have seen our
commitment to the alliance intensify. The noble Lord,
, said that we should
not allow ourselves to lapse into complacency. I entirely
agree with that, but if the progress we have made in recent
years is no excuse for complacency, it is considerable cause
for encouragement. It shows that the will is there.
Even those sceptical of the new US Administration’s plans
should have been reassured, I hope, by our Prime Minister
who, during her recent press conference with President Trump
in Washington, reiterated that the US was “100% behind NATO”.
The Government have no doubt about that commitment. While we
can reflect on what the President said during his
campaign—remarks such as “NATO is obsolete”—surely what
matters is what is being said and done now, which is a lot of
joint work. We are working with all NATO allies, including
the United States, to make sure that NATO is capable of
dealing with the risks posed to us. We are encouraging all
allies to meet those investment targets. In fact, we believe
that President Trump’s election presents a unique opportunity
to forge ahead with NATO reform. The allies now have a chance
to invest in this vital organisation to make it more
interoperable and expand its international role, showing that
it makes a difference not simply to European but to global
security.
For almost seven decades, NATO has been the bastion and the
bulwark of our defence. By continuing to press our partners
to modernise and adapt the alliance, in the face of the 21st
century’s mounting demands, we will ensure that it continues
to be the cornerstone of our defence for many years to come.
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