Extract from PMQs: Falklands - Mar 24
Thursday, 25 March 2021 08:05
Keir Starmer: I have every respect for our reservists, but the
Prime Minister is just playing with the numbers. He knows very well
that the numbers have been cut. The trouble is that we just cannot
trust the Conservatives to protect our armed forces.
[Interruption.] Let us look—[Interruption.] Mr Speaker, let us look
at their most recent manifestos. These are the manifestos that
Conservative Members stood on. The 2015 manifesto—[Interruption.]
Mr Speaker Order. I am struggling to hear...Request free trial
: I have every respect for our reservists,
but the Prime Minister is just playing with the numbers. He knows
very well that the numbers have been cut. The trouble is that we
just cannot trust the Conservatives to protect our armed forces.
[Interruption.] Let us look—[Interruption.] Mr Speaker, let us look
at their most recent manifestos. These are the manifestos that
Conservative Members stood on. The 2015
manifesto—[Interruption.]
Mr Speaker
Order. I am struggling to hear the Leader of the Opposition,
and I will hear the Leader of the Opposition. Please, I want
respect for the Prime Minister and I expect the same for the Leader
of the Opposition.
The 2015 manifesto said:
“We will maintain the size of the regular armed
services”.
The 2017 manifesto:
“We will maintain the overall size of the armed
forces”.
In 2019, the Prime Minister said that
“we will not be cutting our armed services in any
form.”
The truth is that since 2010 our armed forces have been cut
by 45,000 and our Army will now be cut to its lowest level in 300
years. Let me remind the Prime Minister and Conservative Members
why this matters. Lord Richards, former Chief of the Defence Staff,
has warned that with an armed force of this size now
“we almost certainly…would not be able to retake the
Falklands…and stop genocides”.
[Interruption.] He says it is rubbish. That is Lord Richards,
Prime Minister. After 10 years of Conservative government, is the
Prime Minister not ashamed of that?
The Prime Minister: This Conservative Government
are massively proud of the investment that we made in our armed
forces which, as I have said, is the biggest uplift since the cold
war. The right hon. and learned Gentleman should look at what the
NATO Secretary General had to say about our investment, which is
absolutely vital for the future success of the alliance and,
indeed, for the security of many other countries around the world.
It is a £24 billion investment—investment in the future combat air
system, the new Army special operations Ranger Regiment, £1.3
billion to upgrade the Challenger main battle tanks, a massive
investment in the Typhoon squadrons and so on.
We are investing in the future. Yes, of course, we have had
to take some tough decisions, but that is because we believe in our
defences and we believe that they should be more than merely
symbolic. It is the Labour party that is consistently,
historically—it is hilarious to be lectured about the
Falklands Mr Speaker—weak on
protecting this country. It was most visible last week during the
debate on the integrated review, when it was plain that those on
the shadow Front Bench could not even agree to maintain Britain’s
nuclear deterrent. That is absolutely true, Mr Speaker.
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