Shadow Defence Secretary will argue that the government
must reboot defence plans and boost military production to
sustain support to Ukraine and rearm Britain.
In a major speech today (Tuesday 7 February) hosted by defence
and security think-tank RUSI, Mr Healey will set out three key
steps the government must take to protect Britain in its update
of the Integrated Review, due to be published in March.
Mr Healey will argue that Conservative Ministers must:
-
Boost military production
Set out a stockpiles strategy to maintain military help to
Ukraine and replenish our Armed Forces, reform defence
procurement, and publish a 2023 Action Plan for Ukraine.
-
Secure Britain as NATO’s leading European
nation
Give the highest priority to security in Europe, the Atlantic and
the Arctic – our NATO area, ensure our UK commitments to the
alliance are fulfilled in full and halt further cuts to the
British Army.
-
Rebuild relationships with our European allies
Fix their post-Brexit blind spot over Europe to seek a security
pact with the EU and new defence agreements with leading European
allies like Germany to make Brexit work and keep Europe safe.
Mr Healey will argue for a “stockpiles
strategy” to overhaul a “wasteful peacetime
procurement system” and gear up domestic industry to
maintain UK military help to Ukraine and restock weapons and
ammunition for our own armed forces.
He will say “We need to shift parts of our defence
industry and MoD procurement on to an urgent operational footing,
both to support Ukraine for the long-term and to replenish UK
stocks for any future conflict”.
The Labour Defence chief said that this effort must be part of a
long-term plan of military, economic and humanitarian support for
Ukraine, which should be published before the first anniversary
of Russia’s invasion on 24 February “to signal to Putin
that things will get worse, not better for
Russia.”
“The next government will inherit the Ukraine conflict and
Russia’s wider aggression. With a General Election, there may be
a change to Labour but there will be no change to Britain’s
resolve in confronting Russia’s threats, pursuing Putin’s crimes
and standing with Ukraine,” he will say.
Healey will challenge the government to “secure Britain
as NATO’s leading European nation” and ensure the UK’s
obligations to the alliance are “fulfilled in
full.” Labour in government would conduct a “NATO test”
on major projects during its first 100 days to ensure Britain is
on track to meet its NATO commitments. This commitment, he will
say, should include confirmation that further cuts to
British army numbers will be “halted.”
Defence Secretary has conceded that the armed forces had
been “hollowed out and underfunded” on his
watch. Mr Healey will say this is an “admission of failure
over 13 years of Conservative government."
Mr Healey confirmed Labour would conduct and publish a Strategic
Defence and Security Review within its first year in
government.
Ends
Notes
-
will deliver the speech on
Tuesday, 7 February at 6pm at the Institute of Directors,
hosted by RUSI. It will be followed by a Q&A hosted by RUSI
Associate Fellow and TimesRadio Chief Political Commentator
Lucy Fisher.