The Minister for Armed Forces (James Heappey) I beg to move, That
this House has considered global military operations. It is
fantastic to be able to have this debate on global military
operations in Government time. Looking back in Hansard—as I have
done on many occasions—I noted that there was once a time when the
House had an annual debate on each of the three services. Those
debates were well subscribed and Members enjoyed them. While of
late we have had a...Request free trial
The Minister for Armed Forces ()
I beg to move,
That this House has considered global military operations.
It is fantastic to be able to have this debate on global military
operations in Government time. Looking back in Hansard—as I have
done on many occasions—I noted that there was once a time when
the House had an annual debate on each of the three services.
Those debates were well subscribed and Members enjoyed them.
While of late we have had a number of opportunities to discuss
Ukraine specifically, I think it is some time since we have had
the chance to discuss the totality of military operations around
the world. I look forward to hearing speeches which, I suspect,
will range across geographies and issues. It will be great to
hear defence matters considered so widely and prominently—
(Bournemouth East) (Con)
rose—
—not least by my right hon. Friend the Chair of the Select
Committee.
Mr Ellwood
I am sorry to intervene so early, but my right hon. Friend has
raised an important aspect of the debate: namely, the mechanics
of what we are discussing. I was pleased to hear him refer to the
debates that we have had in the past, when there was more of a
steady drumbeat. I hope that his words—which, I am sure, will be
repeated by other Members, and I look to the Chair as well—will
be heard, and I hope that the message that we need more debates
and a greater understanding of what is going on in the world and
our role in it can be sent to the usual channels, so that that
can actually happen.
My right hon. Friend is entirely right, but he need not worry:
the Ministry of Defence is a favourite of the Whips Office.
Whenever the Whips come calling for us to take the opportunity to
debate defence matters in the House, we are only too keen to do
so, and I am delighted to have been provided with that time
today.
The “Integrated Review Refresh 2023”, published in March, was
clear about what we needed to do to respond to the deteriorating
global security situation. It was about shaping the global
strategic environment, increasing our focus on deterrence and
defence, addressing the vulnerabilities that leave our nation
exposed, and investing in the UK’s unique strengths. Defence is
obviously at the centre of that ambition.
Ukraine has dominated defence matters over the past couple of
years, so I thought I should make some mention of that, given the
work that the UK has been doing in supporting the Ukrainians in
their fight back against the Russian illegal invasion. Really,
the update that it falls on me to provide to the House is that
there is no update to give. Instead, I offer a word of caution.
These are the very early stages of a necessarily complex plan,
given the scale of the challenge that Ukraine faces. It will take
a number of weeks until anyone can make a credible assessment of
the success of the offensive. But it is under way; that much is
clear. It is clear that there have been some early gains for the
Ukrainians. In some parts of the Russian line, the regiments are
performing credibly and holding their ground, but in many other
parts of the line there is evidence of abandonment and
mutiny.
But that should in no way encourage us to believe this is some
war movie that ends with a wonderful, glorious, decisive victory.
That might happen; it is perfectly possible, as the Ukrainians
have shown time and again that they are brilliant at exceeding
what normal military laws should expect. But it is also possible
that a successful counter-offensive will still bring with it the
requirement to go again next year. It matters enormously to our
Ukrainian friends—just as it is important that Putin hears—that
the international donor community is ready to rearm, retrain and
go again next year, and the year after and the year after. If
Putin thinks he can wait out the west, he is wrong. This
counter-offensive will be successful—of that I am sure—but
whether it will be decisively successful does not matter, in so
much as the international community is ready to stand by Ukraine
for as long as it takes.
(Glasgow Central)
(SNP)
The Minister is setting out the situation facing Ukraine very
accurately. The most worrying recent intervention has been the
destruction of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant, which has
caused massive disruption not only to the infrastructure but to
the wider area. Is he able to say anything about the UK response
to that and whether there is anything further the UK can do,
given its logistics experience, to support the Ukrainians to get
the plant working again and help those affected by the
disaster?
The dam was in Russia’s control when it was damaged, so the
opportunities to get in and assist with rebuilding in the
immediate term are quite limited. It is probably too early to say
for absolute certain who did it, but I think everybody in this
House will probably have the same view on who did it and why.
There is only one side that had any direct advantage in doing it
at that point, and it is a war crime. The destruction of a dam
like that with the impacts on the civilian population beneath it
is a war crime. I cannot offer the hon. Lady the reassurance she
seeks on the UK’s intent to rebuild—that would be premature—but
we have been clear with the Russian Government that it is those
sorts of actions that cause us to consider whether we should
increase our support to the Ukrainian armed forces. What we saw
was disgraceful, and her comments have been noted.
(North Wiltshire) (Con)
I am grateful to my right hon. Friend for the cautious note that
he has sounded. Maybe later in his remarks he will agree with
what I am about to propose. If we were to have a victory—if, for
example, this offensive were to remove the Russians from Donetsk
or even Crimea; who knows—that would not be the end of it. They
are not going to turn around and say, “Okay, fine, never mind.
Sorry about that, chaps. You’ve won.” Equally, we cannot possibly
let them do anything other than remain where they are, so by far
the best thing we can hope for is a very long, stretched-out
stasis where neither side wins. Is that not a reasonable
assessment?
No, I actually disagree with my hon. Friend on that. If the
conflict were to freeze with some sort of Russian territorial
gain accepted, implicitly—
indicated dissent.
Okay, I might have misunderstood my hon. Friend’s point, in that
case.
To clarify the record, I am a great friend of Ukraine and it
would be quite wrong to be misunderstood. No, absolutely not; we
must of course remove Russia from Ukraine if we possibly can. It
must not in any circumstances be allowed to hold the territory
that it has. None the less, the hope that we can remove the
Russian troops swiftly or easily, and that they will somehow just
go away, is a fallacious vision and we must not slip down that
track.
I completely agree, which is why I sound caution on what success
looks like this summer. It must not be assumed that there must be
a decisive victory in this counter-offensive. Putin must know
that the west has the patience to continue to provide Ukraine
with the strategic depth it needs to win eventually; and the
Ukrainians must know that they retain our support and, although
they must give everything in this counter-offensive, we are also
ready to support them for subsequent counter-offensives. In that
knowledge, Putin will see the futility of continuing to hold the
ground, because the west will not blink in its support of
Ukraine.
(Caerphilly) (Lab)
The Minister is surely correct in saying that we must be prepared
for a long struggle, but it is vital, of course, that the
Ukrainians have a continuing supply of arms to support their war
effort. Is he absolutely confident that we have the manufacturing
capability and the necessary supply chains to produce the weapons
required by the Ukrainians?
Not solely in the UK, no, which I do not think will surprise
anyone. Collectively, around the donor community, yes. Bear in
mind that the majority of the arms that have been provided to
Ukraine by the donor community thus far have not been
manufactured in or for the donor countries but are munitions and
weapon systems that we have procured from the world beyond and
then donated to the Ukrainians.
It is also true that, after 18 months of my colleagues and I
travelling around the world to buy up all this stuff, global
stockpiles are diminished and global manufacturing capacity is
torn between the market for the donor community to support
Ukraine and the many countries—the UK included—that want to spend
more on restoring stockpiles, because we have seen the importance
of stockpiles to the credibility of our conventional deterrence.
There is a challenge, and it is a good time to get into the
defence industry. UK-based defence companies are clearly
responding to that demand signal, as would be expected.
Ukraine has been able to hold off the Russian advance and then
push it back, primarily because of the courage and resolve of the
Ukrainian armed forces, but also because the international
economic response has constrained Russia’s capacity to rearm and
resupply, while the donor community, galvanised by the UK, has
mobilised to do that for the Ukrainians.
As I said, President Putin thinks he can wait out the west, which
is the biggest mistake he can make. He believes we lack strategic
patience, but he is wrong. The United Kingdom and our allies
around the world will stand by Ukraine for as long as it takes.
It is that strategic patience that gives Ukraine its strategic
depth. That depth, in support of a nation motivated against an
existential threat, will surely be successful, whether that is
this autumn, next autumn or the autumn after. It will eventually
bring the Russians to the negotiating table on Ukrainian
terms.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the Minister for his resolute address to the Chamber
today, and we totally support his message. There is no doubt
about the determination of this United Kingdom and the west to
move forward. I do not know whether it is real, made up or
cosmetic, but is there a difference of opinion between the leader
of the Wagner Group and Putin? Does that undermine the Russians
in Ukraine? If it does, perhaps other people could make it
change, too.
From the perspective of Putin, Shoigu and Gerasimov, who needs
enemies when there are friends like Prigozhin? There appears to
be an extraordinary internal struggle, but the House should be
clear that the position of the UK Government, and certainly the
focus of the Ministry of Defence, has never been and must never
be about Russian domestic politics; it must be about ensuring
that Russia fails in Ukraine and is seen to fail in Ukraine, and
ensuring that our actions in support of Ukraine not only restore
its sovereignty but draw a line that says might cannot be used
anywhere in the world to achieve foreign policy aims and to
violate the rules-based international order.
The main threat to our national security, as identified in the
previous integrated review and defence Command Paper, has been
significantly degraded without the UK armed forces firing a shot.
We have built Ukrainian capacity, both through gifting and
training. We have supported the Ukrainians in their planning and
guarded against wider escalation through strengthening our
commitment to NATO and increasing our defence spending
accordingly. In that, the underpinning principle of the last
Command Paper has been proven right. However, geopolitically,
geo-economically and technologically, there is much more we have
seen change and that we have learned from in the past few years.
The Government have refreshed the integrated review accordingly,
drawing out the necessity of hard power to deter adversaries,
protect our interests and project our influence around the
globe.
(Cardiff South and Penarth)
(Lab/Co-op)
I draw the House’s attention to my interest. The Minister knows
of the resolute support on the Labour side of the House for
Ukraine and for much of what he has set out. Russia is also
seeking to sow division and destabilise elsewhere, including in
the western Balkans, where we have an important and significant
presence with the KFOR mission in Kosovo. My hon. Friend the
Member for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport () and I visited Kosovo
recently, along with the shadow Foreign Secretary. Is the
Minister aware of reports in the past 24 hours of serious
tensions and attacks on police officers, with the detention today
of three Kosovan police officers and their removal to Serbia?
What conversations will he be having with KFOR and our allies in
the region to ensure that that situation is dealt with?
I was in Pristina just 10 days or so ago, and in Sarajevo the day
before that, and I am acutely aware of the tensions building in
Kosovo. I met the KFOR commander during my visit and understand
the difficult line he has to walk. However, the President of
Kosovo also made clear to me her belief that Kosovo has a right
to govern itself as it wishes, free from interference from its
neighbour. Tensions are clearly high. The UK has been and remains
a strong supporter of Kosovo as an independent country. Of
course, I would not want to second-guess from the Dispatch Box
the work of the KFOR commander, who has an extraordinarily
difficult balance to strike. We also have to be clear that Kosovo
is one of the UK’s great foreign policy success stories in the
past 25 years. We have been patient and steadfast in our support
and we must remain so.
Mr Deputy Speaker, you asked me to take about 15 minutes, and I
have done that on Ukraine alone. I wish now to gallop around the
world to tee up the wider debate. Within the euro-Atlantic, the
joint expeditionary force, predominantly focused around a Baltic
sea geography, continues to grow in prominence and is
increasingly complementary to what NATO does. The UK currently
has two aviation taskforces working with the JEF, alongside
exercise Joint Protector. We support our Nordic allies, and over
the past couple of years we have had a number of Army exercises
and joint operations with Finland and Sweden, supporting their
NATO accession. We look forward to continuing to work with them
on that. The UK maritime, air and commando forces participated
alongside JEF and NATO allies in the Swedish-led exercise Aurora.
The Royal Navy ships continue to work with allies and partners in
the seas north of Norway and Finland, in an important
demonstration to Russia of our insistence on freedom of
navigation and adherence of international law. Rivet Joint planes
based at RAF Waddington continue to make regular flights into the
Baltic sea area in support of NATO operations there. Typhoon jets
operating from RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus continue to participate in
NATO air policing over southern Europe.
I will not expand any further on Ukraine and skip instead to our
persistent presence in the Baltic, which continues to be with the
enhanced forward presence battlegroup. That was doubled in size
to respond to the immediate moment of crisis last February when
the war in Ukraine began. We have subsequently increased the size
of the original battlegroup but removed the second, so the total
number of troops has gone up but we have gone back to having a
single battlegroup. We continue to see that as the foundation on
which our contribution to the NATO regional plans will be based
when the supreme allied commander launches those in the next few
months.
Ships and commando forces continue to contribute to NATO
exercises in the Baltic. Indeed, there is a taskforce there right
now, with a landing platform dock ship as well as a number of
P2000s, the smaller ships in the Royal Navy fleet, which are
doing a great job alongside navies that similarly operate patrol
boats. From the very largest capital ships in the Royal Navy all
the way down to the very smallest, it has been good to see them
finding a role in underlying the interoperability of NATO.
In Poland, we continue to contribute to the US forward presence
battlegroup as well as deploying air defence to Poland to support
the logistics nodes from which support to Ukraine is launched.
Although this is not an exclusively Euro-Atlantic capability, it
will not surprise the House that the principal threat against
which we maintain a nuclear deterrent continues to be Russia. As
these crews tend to be the forgotten few in these debates, it is
probably appropriate to mention that their work is the
underpinning of UK sovereignty. They do not speak of what they
do. In fact, most people on those boats do not even know where
exactly it is that they have been. We do not say for exactly how
long they are deployed, because those are matters of national
security. None the less, day in, day out, 52 weeks a year, year
after year for more than 50 years, our submariners crewing our
nuclear deterrent have kept this nation safe and underpinned our
sovereignty. They are an extraordinary group of people and the
humility with which they conduct their business is probably the
most amazing thing about them.
(Bracknell) (Con)
I do not want to put the Minister on the spot in the Chamber, but
can he update the House on any efforts to reward that service
with a continuous at sea deterrent medal?
I will defer to my right hon. Friend the Minister for Defence
People, Veterans and Service Families for his insight on that in
his summing up. What I would reflect is that the Submarine
Service takes an incredible pride in its work. Whereas Army, Air
Force and surface sailors have rows upon rows of medals, all that
matters to these crews is the colour of their dolphins, and they
take enormous pride in that. I risk not being welcome in Faslane
in case they want a medal as well, so all I will say is that what
my hon. Friend has said is noted, and I will leave it to my right
hon. Friend to come back to him on that specific point at the
very end.
The challenge extends beyond the Euro-Atlantic. In the Caribbean,
we continue to have a permanent presence both in terms of Army
training teams and a Royal Navy ship. The work of that ship
extends from counter-narcotics all the way through to
humanitarian relief during the hurricane season.
In the South Atlantic, we continue to have both a garrison and a
guard ship on the Falklands, as well as regular service from the
Royal Air Force. Indeed, that Royal Air Force presence services
the wider overseas territory network. In Ascension, for example,
the refurbishment of the runway has been completed. Last week, I
think, we saw a C-17 that had been to or from the Falklands,
landing in St Helena, which was the first visit from a military
plane for some time.
In West Africa, the UK has a growing role in answering the
security challenges of the Sahel. I stress that that is not
through the participation in a UN peacekeeping force and
certainly not through any direct action on our part. That, as we
have seen in Iraq and Afghanistan and through the French
experience in Mali, is not the way to be doing business. Instead,
it is through supporting regional solutions such as the Accra
initiative where we can develop the capacity of the Ghanaians,
the Côte d’Ivoireans, the Togolese, the Beninois and the
Nigerians, and work with the Burkinabès that we can get after the
security challenges that exist in that region.
Similarly, in the Lake Chad Basin, we continue to support the
Economic Community of African States multinational standby force
to deal with the security challenges that exist both from Boko
Haram and Islamic State, and that remains a major line of effort
particularly through our partnerships with Nigeria and
Cameroon.
In East Africa, the British Army has a permanent presence in
Kenya, which is a training base that is very well subscribed year
round, and from which we train in partnership with the Kenyans.
We are grateful to the Kenyan Parliament for its recent
ratification of the defence co-operation agreement between our
two countries. However, in east Africa our principal concern is
of course the ongoing instability and insecurity in Somalia and
the challenge of al-Shabaab. We remain committed to that
situation, not only as penholder at the UN, but through
recognising that, as ATMIS, the African Union Transition Mission
in Somalia, comes to an end, a new east African solution to
Somalia may well be the right answer, and the UK will have a
strong role to play in supporting that regional solution.
Even further afield, we have a growing presence in the
Indo-Pacific, with two Royal Navy ships, HMS Spey and HMS Tamar,
permanently present in the region, one tending to operate on a
loop around the south Pacific—tough work if you can get it—and
one working further north in and around the Korean peninsula.
They are proving incredibly successful at flying the white ensign
in parts of the world where the Royal Navy had not been seen for
some time.
There is a chronic challenge in that part of the world from
growing Chinese influence; not all of it is malign, it is
important to say, but if we want to maintain our friendships and
partnerships in the south Pacific, we need to be there and be
sharing the burden alongside the Australians and New Zealanders,
and that is exactly what we are doing. Similarly, for our
partners in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and
further north in Korea and Japan, it is important that the UK is
seen in that part of the world. An enormous amount of UK trade
flows through the Indo-Pacific, and if we want and expect to
trade freely with those countries, it is right that a country
with the global reach of the UK contributes to their regional
security.
Indeed, I will go further, because I think that, if we want the
United States of America to remain engaged in Euro-Atlantic
security, it is entirely right that the UK and other European
countries with global reach contribute to Indo-Pacific security,
so that we are burden sharing across both theatres and
recognising that both the United States and European countries
have an interest in both.
(Harwich and North Essex)
(Con)
I believe the Minister is going to come back to the issue of the
Balkans, and the United States is somewhat disengaged from what
is developing there. Apparently—maybe he can confirm this—the USA
has vetoed a reinforcement of the NATO headquarters in Kosovo.
That is just encouraging the Russians to carry on fomenting
instability. I would not be against the UK’s reinforcing EUFOR,
or European Union Force Bosnia and Herzegovina, there. We are not
against European co-operation in defence, and just because it is
an EU force, we should not have some religious doctrine that
prevents us from co-operating with it just as we would with a
NATO force—albeit we might need to make very clear that it is a
bilateral arrangement.
It is heartening to hear that from my hon. Friend, and I agree
with him. The most obvious route through which we achieve
Euro-Atlantic security is NATO, but where the EU has a successful
mission running, we should be perfectly willing to work with and
within that mission to achieve mutual foreign policy aims.
Similarly, there are plenty of parts of the world where the EU is
already the framework, where the UK has no wish to be a framework
in its own right but does have an interest, and again, I can see
opportunity for the UK to work with and within the EU
mission—take, for example, Mozambique, although I offer that as a
for instance rather than any promise.
Mr Ellwood
I am grateful for the opportunity to pursue that important point.
The trade and co-operation agreement, the Brexit deal, did not
primarily include security. While recognising that NATO is the
cornerstone of European security, the European Union plays a role
in other aspects of non-state security across Europe, so would my
right hon. Friend be minded to look at an opportunity for us to
endeavour to strengthen our relationship and co-operation with
the EU on that front?
Undoubtedly so; my right hon. Friend is correct. For all those
countries who are on a Euro-Atlantic pathway, their aspiration
tends to be NATO first, because they consider the security risks
to be greatest, but for all of them that Euro-Atlantic pathway
invariably means both NATO and EU membership. Whatever our views
on Brexit, it is churlish to ignore that, and for countries in
the western Balkans or the Caucasus who want to move away from
their traditional sphere and towards the Euro-Atlantic one, we
should be supportive of both their NATO and their EU
aspirations.
The danger, with nearly half an hour gone, is that an awful lot
of ambassadors will read Hansard tomorrow with concern about the
absence of their country and region from my speech. I will sit
down quickly so that the Opposition have the opportunity to
respond and Members have the opportunity to contribute, but if
time allowed, I would have gone on at length about the continued
importance of the middle east and all our partners in that
region—we value their friendship and partnership enormously. We
recognise the role that we have to play in continuing to
contribute to security there. We are concerned about the security
challenge in the high north and continue to work with partners to
address that. We recognise our responsibility to maintain a
presence in the Antarctic. Quite frankly, I could probably have
spoken for an hour and a half and still not covered the totality
of global military operations, but 28 minutes is more than
enough, so I will sit down.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Maybe that reinforces Tobias Ellwood’s point, but there we
go.
5.00pm
(Wentworth and Dearne)
(Lab)
The Minister has indeed made a powerful case for another defence
policy debate in short order, as the Chair of the Select
Committee, the right hon. Member for Bournemouth East (Mr
Ellwood), said at the start. This House always welcomes a debate
on defence policy, and I look forward to the contributions that
we are set to hear from all parts of the House.
As the Minister recognised, this is also an important opportunity
for us to reaffirm UK unity in support of Ukraine, which he did.
As the Ukrainians mount their counter-offensive, they arguably
need UK solidarity, NATO unity and international support more now
than at any time in the 473 days since Putin first launched his
brutal illegal invasion of their country. Remarkably, they have
already taken back more than half the territory that Putin seized
in the early days of his war, but as the Minister quite rightly
said, these are early days in the counter-offensive, and although
there are early signs of Ukrainian gains, they now face Russian
forces that have dug in defences and have superior air power and
drone technology.
There is also no sign of Putin’s strategic aims having changed,
and the Russian military is, despite the damage done by the
Ukrainian resistance in their courageous fighting, far from a
spent force. Putin is expanding his war effort and massing his
troops and firepower, and his Russian industry is on 24/7 wartime
production. Again, as the Minister noted, this is long term:
Ukraine has now been fighting Russia for over nine years, not one
year.
There may be a change in Government next year, but there will be
no change in Britain’s resolve to stand with Ukraine, confront
Russian aggression and pursue Putin for his war crimes. Let me
pay personal tribute to the Minister for his efforts on this. I
am proud of Britain’s leadership on Ukraine, and I want to feel
the same in six months’ time, so what new support is the UK
sending to Ukraine now that the offensive has begun? What are the
Government’s aims for next week’s Ukraine recovery conference in
London? How have Ministers stepped up production in the UK
defence industry, and what use has been made of urgent
operational requirements to speed that up?
This debate is also an opportunity, four days from the start of
Armed Forces Week, to celebrate the service of our forces
personnel. At home or on global military operations, our forces
personnel are essential to our national defence, our national
resilience and our national obligations to allies. Theirs is the
ultimate public service. On behalf of the Labour party, I thank
the serving men and women in our armed forces for all they do to
keep us safe. I also want to recognise the unsung work and
essential expertise of the non-uniformed staff in defence.
However, after the Minister’s speech, we have to ask: what is the
Government’s purpose in this debate? Why is this happening now,
before and not after the defence Command Paper is published?
Where is the Defence Secretary? Where is his vision for UK
leadership and contribution to NATO? Where is his apology for the
failure to honour this nation’s pledge under the ARAP—Afghan
relocations and assistance policy—scheme to those brave Afghans
who put their lives at risk to work alongside our forces? Where
is the action that he is taking to fix MOD procurement, which the
Public Accounts Committee say is “broken” and “repeatedly wasting
taxpayers’ money”? Where is the 2023 action plan for Ukraine that
he first promised back in August last year? What has he been
doing for the last six months? Part of the answer, of course, is
leaning very heavily on his No. 2, the Minister for Armed Forces,
as he is today.
Given that the Minister commands such respect across both sides
of the House, we look to him to provide us with the reassurance
that the new Command Paper, due this month, will be reported
first to the House and not briefed beforehand to the media or to
policy institutes. If he wants to intervene to give the House
that reassurance, he would be very welcome to do so.
The right hon. Gentleman knows that the Secretary of State and I
have the highest regard for Mr Speaker, who has been very clear
on these matters. We will ensure that both Mr Speaker’s
instructions and the right hon. Gentleman’s exhortations are
noted.
That is welcome indeed and noted on our side, not least because
the new defence Command Paper will be a really important
publication. No country comes out of a war in the same way as it
went in. Ukraine will, and must, have a serious impact on how our
future global military operations and our homeland defence is
conducted.
Since Putin’s invasion of Ukraine began last year, 26 NATO
nations have rebooted defence plans and budgets. Chancellor
Scholz discarded decades-long German policy and boosted defence
by €100 billion. President Macron has promised the same budget
increase in France. Poland will spend 4% of GDP this year.
Finland and Sweden have set aside decades of non-alignment to
apply for NATO membership. However, there has still been
strategic inertia from British Ministers over any deep rethink of
international and domestic planning.
I am interested to hear the right hon. Gentleman’s vision of the
future. He believes that there will be a Labour Government in a
year’s time—although I personally do not agree with him—so when
there is, what commitment will he make to defence spending under
a Labour Government?
I take nothing for granted—I have been around too long for
that—and we will fight hard every day to make sure that we do get
a Labour Government. The hon. Gentleman will also appreciate that
it is right to judge Ministers by their actions, not their words.
I say to him that in the last year of the last Labour Government,
in 2010, Britain was spending 2.5% of GDP on defence. That level
has never been matched in any of the 13 years since under
Conservative Ministers.
I am most grateful to the right hon. Gentleman for giving way,
and I am so sorry to intervene twice. The figure was indeed
slightly more than 2%, if not quite 2.5%, but of course, GDP was
very much smaller. The amount that the Labour Government were
spending when they lost power in 2010 was significantly
less—billions of pounds less—than we are spending today.
The point about the measure—counts in terms of GDP—is that it
demonstrates the priority that the Government of the day give to
a particular area of necessary spend. It was 2.5% of GDP in 2010.
We have got nowhere near that in any of the 13 years after 2010
under the hon. Gentleman’s Governments.
On the question of a necessary rethink in domestic and
international strategy, I say to the hon. Gentleman that there
were indeed some welcome changes in the 2023 integrated review: a
new commitment to reinvigorating important bilateral ties across
Europe; a declaration that the UK’s Indo-Pacific tilt has been
delivered; and a recommitment to NATO as our overriding priority.
However, that was a rebalancing of defence plans, not a reboot.
While NATO is increasing the strength of its high readiness force
to 300,000, the Government are cutting the Army still further, to
its smallest size since Napoleon. While Germany boosts its
defence budget by over €100 billion, the Government continue with
real cuts in day-to-day defence spending. While Poland is buying
an extra 1,000 tanks, the Government are cutting back our UK
Challengers from 227 to 148—all this in direct breach of the
promise the then Prime Minister made to the British people at the
2019 election, when he said that
“We will not be cutting our armed services in any form. We will
be maintaining the size of our armed services.”
All this is part of the pattern of the 13 years since 2010. There
are now 45,000 fewer full-time forces personnel, one in five Navy
ships has been axed, and over 200 RAF planes have been taken out
of service. Satisfaction with forces life has hit a new low, and
our ammunition supply has been run down to just eight days. The
Defence Secretary summed it up in January when he told the House
that
“I am happy to say that we have hollowed out and
underfunded”—[Official Report, 30 January 2023; Vol. 727, c.
18.]
our armed forces. While threats increase, our hollowed-out forces
are working with fewer numbers and less training, and without the
long-promised new kit that they need to fight and to fulfil our
NATO obligations, such as Ajax.
(Reading East) (Lab)
My right hon. Friend is making an excellent point about the lack
of investment over many years. Does he agree that today, it is
particularly worth mentioning the potential capability gap with
the retirement of the Hercules fleet? Given that we have quite
rightly paid tribute to our armed forces, including the RAF,
perhaps my right hon. Friend wants to say something about the
looming capability gap—for up to two years, as I understand
it—with those wonderful aircraft having been retired
recently.
My hon. Friend is right to pick up that point, and he is not the
first on either side of the House to raise those questions. They
have still not been satisfactorily answered by Ministers,
particularly if the Government’s strategy is to have our forces
persistently forwardly deployed. When the Minister responds to
the debate, he might like to try again to reassure those who are
still not satisfied that the A400 provides the capabilities in
very specialist areas that the Hercules had been able to provide
for so long.
I am conscious of the time and the number of people who want to
speak, but I want to pick up where the hon. Member for North
Wiltshire (), who so ably chairs the armed
forces parliamentary scheme—a scheme that is so highly valued on
both sides of the House—set out, with the budget that defence
requires. We left government in 2010 spending 2.5% of GDP. In
November, the Defence Secretary told this House that
“the inflationary pressure on my budget for the next two years is
about £8 billion”,
but the Chancellor announced just £5 billion in the spring
Budget, earmarked only for stockpiles and nuclear. That means no
new money for pressures on the core defence budget or capability
gaps, or indeed to deal with inflation.
It is not just how much we spend on defence: it is how well we
spend it. Since 2010, we have seen Ministers waste at least £15
billion of taxpayers’ money through MOD mismanagement in
procurement, with £5 billion wasted since 2019 when the Defence
Secretary took up his post. Those failures have implications for
the defence Command Paper: it risks being a defence plan driven
by costs, not threats, framed by the Defence Secretary’s failure
to win the funding that he has said is needed.
In the face of threats that the Government confirm are growing
and intensifying, I ask the Minister these questions: will the
defence Command Paper put an end to the Defence Secretary’s
hollowing out of our armed forces? Will it halt deeper Army cuts?
Will it pick up Labour’s plans to conduct a NATO test of major
defence programmes to ensure that we meet our NATO obligations?
Will it pick up our plans to establish a stockpile strategy to
replenish UK supplies and sustain our support for Ukraine? Will
it pick up our plan to renew the nation’s moral contract with
those who serve in our forces?
In the end, the country is best served when defence can be
bipartisan. We want this defence Command Paper to be a sound
defence plan for the country, not just the plan of current
Conservative Ministers. If the Government are willing to take
these steps, Ministers will have Labour support. If not, the big
decisions will have to be taken after the next election, I hope
by a Labour Government.
5.15pm
(Bournemouth East) (Con)
I pay tribute to the Minister for his opening remarks and join
him in paying tribute to the valiant work that our armed forces
do. He gave us a tour de force of where we are represented around
Europe and around the world, doing more than our fair share of
making sure that we can sleep well at night, that our backs are
covered and that we can stand up to the growing threats we face.
I do not want to diminish his speech, but he could have just
stood up and said, “We are busy, and we are getting busier,”
because by any measure our world is getting more dangerous and
more complex.
Globalisation, by which I mean international co-operation and the
interdependence of the world’s economies, cultures and
populations, is slowly dying. After the end of the cold war,
Britain arguably embraced that concept of globalisation more than
any other nation. As nations actively retreat, pushed forward by
covid, becoming more siloed and protectionist and introducing
more isolationist policies to reduce exposure and increase
economic resilience, Britain’s economy and security are
increasingly exposed.
When global security deteriorates, our economy suffers, as has
been so blatantly illustrated by Ukraine and the price of oil and
gas and food. It is baffling to hear the Treasury continue to
say, “Yes, we will spend 2.5% on defence when economic conditions
improve,” not realising the obvious connection that our economy
and international security are directly related. Half our GDP is
affected by international headwinds. We need to invest now to
protect our economy and to allow our economy to grow.
Such is the deteriorating threat picture that the Government had
to commission an update of the defence and security policy—the
“Integrated Review Refresh”, as it was called. The Prime
Minister’s opening paragraph said it is
“recognised that the intensification of competition between
states was sowing seeds of instability.”
Paragraph 8 of the refresh stated:
“There is a growing prospect that the international security
environment will further deteriorate in the coming years, with
state threats increasing and diversifying in Europe and beyond.
The risk of escalation is greater than at any time in
decades”.
I have never seen such strong language in a Government paper
before. It gives a clear warning that we are in for a bumpy
decade. I therefore pose the question: why are we still stuck
with a peacetime defence budget of just 2%? That is having a
consequential impact on all three services.
At the time of the Gulf war in 1990, the Royal Navy had 51
frigates and destroyers and today it has just 18; the RAF had 36
fast jet squadrons and today it has just seven; and the British
Army could muster three armoured divisions in Germany alone and
one here in the UK. Today, we would struggle to put together one.
It is not just the size of the armed forces that has diminished;
the last defence review introduced ruthless cuts to equipment.
The main battle tank is now reduced to just 156 and is three
decades old, and upgrades will not be completed until the next
decade. The armoured fighting vehicle, the Warrior, is also
decades old, and it was replaced by a wheeled vehicle without a
turret. The 8-tonne recce vehicle that was brought into service
in 1971 was replaced by the massive 43-tonne Ajax, which should
have entered service in 2017, but a dire procurement process
means it is still struggling to get sign-off.
It is a grim state of affairs when our armed forces are not
shaped to meet the threats, but trimmed to meet the budget. I
appreciate that I am not speaking to the right Ministers here,
because they understand this. It is the Treasury that needs to
appreciate this, and I think we should pay tribute to the work
that I know Defence Ministers are doing behind the scenes to make
the case that we need to upgrade our defence posture, because the
consequence of not doing so is the cuts we have seen.
The Type 32 frigate programme has been dropped completely, the
E-7 ISTAR—intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and
reconnaissance—plane has been reduced from five to three
platforms, the Hawk training aircraft has been cut completely,
the Typhoon fleet has been reduced, and even the plans to
introduce the promised 138 F-35s have stalled at just 78. The
Hercules transport aircraft, which is absolutely imperative for
special forces operations, has been cut in its entirety. However,
the real kick in the teeth is the armed forces’ manpower, which
has been reduced from 82,000 to 72,000, while our land warfare
capabilities have been severely reduced by the reductions in
tanks, armoured fighting vehicles and artillery systems.
Sadly, we are neither ready for war, nor any longer able to
project a viable conventional deterrent to maintain the peace.
The Navy and the RAF have to some extent regrouped with
investment and upgrades in response to the changing character of
conflict, but the British Army has been left behind, without a
clear narrative as to what it should be training for, how it
should fight and, indeed, the force structure it should
adopt.
(Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
(Lab)
I am very grateful to the right hon. and gallant Member for
giving way. Today is the 41st anniversary of the liberation of
the Falkland Islands, and it is an appropriate moment to
celebrate the sacrifice of everybody who gave their lives in that
campaign. It is a good moment, however, to reflect on how our
country would go about embarking on such a military operation
today. What is his assessment of our capability to launch a
campaign like the campaign that liberated the Falklands?
Mr Ellwood
I certainly pay tribute, as I think we all would, to our armed
forces for their courage and what they did to liberate the
islands, but I am actually articulating that very point in saying
that we are behind the curve. This goes against the spirit of
what Ministers are trying to do to step forward, as I have
outlined, and the recognition in the defence review refresh that
the world is getting more dangerous.
The NATO summit in Vilnius is approaching, and there will be four
main themes. The first is maintaining NATO deterrence, which will
mean moving from out-of-area operations such as Afghanistan
towards a NATO territorial force. Secondly, there will be plans
to transform the alliance into a more modernising rapid response
force, rising from 40,000 to 300,000. Thirdly, there will be
support for Ukraine. Finally, there will be a look at global
challenges, including China. In every one of those cases, there
will be a call for greater investment in our defence posture, and
that will add to our overseas commitments.
We need to recognise what we have done in Ukraine, and I again
pay tribute to Ministers for that. We have stepped forward, and
more so than any other nation in Europe. We can be very proud of
that—not just militarily, but with the political commitment. We
have been an exemplar, with the training we have done with the
Ukrainians, the next-generation light anti-tank weapons, the
battle tanks and the Storm Shadows, and even in encouraging the
F-16s to get there as well. We have become ever less risk averse,
and ever more willing to look Putin in the eye and not be
spooked. I also pay tribute to the Government for planning and
putting together the Ukraine recovery conference, because it is
critical to look at the next steps we will actually take.
I took a look at my last speech from when we debated Ukraine, and
some of the recommendations I made then remain valid today. We
still need to agree what the mission is. For me, it is actually
the removal of Russian forces from mainland Ukraine. That should
be clarified, but I believe it is what the Ukrainians want.
Crimea is a separate and more complicated challenge. We must
secure UN safe haven status for the port of Odesa to go back to
getting grain out so that we can reduce food inflation, which is
running at about 19% in this country. We must assist Ukraine to
construct its own major armaments programme—for example, in
Poland—so that it can manufacture, assemble and replenish its own
weapon systems, rather than relying on western stocks. We must
ensure that the Wagner militia is listed as a terrorist
organisation, along with sanctioning Putin directly. I also
emphasise the need to welcome Ukraine into the joint
expeditionary force—I still have not had an answer as to why that
is not a possibility and a stepping stone into NATO. We wish the
Ukrainians the very best as they move forward. There is an
emphasis on saying that they can do this, but they need that
continued commitment, which I hope we will see from NATO, despite
what happens in the United States over the next couple of
years.
As I said at the beginning of my remarks, our world is changing
fast. Russia’s behaviour in Ukraine will not be limited to that
part of eastern Europe. Iran could soon join North Korea in
posing a nuclear and ballistic missile threat, and there is
increasing instability in the western Balkans. China is also
challenging the norms of international behaviour. Great power
rivalry is back, global tensions are increasing, and when we add
the challenges of climate change, increasing competition over
resources, population growth and the proliferation of the
weaponisation of artificial intelligence, there is a strong
argument to increase defence spending. There are many questions
for the defence Command Paper, which I hope will be produced
soon.
Finally, Armed Forces Day is rapidly approaching, which is a
chance for a grateful nation to show its support to the men and
women who make up our armed forces community. They are on duty
around the world, at sea, on land and in the air, promoting
peace, delivering aid, providing security, fighting terrorism,
working with our allies and supporting our comrades in arms, such
as in Ukraine. Armed Forces Day is the day when barrack spaces
and garrisons are opened up across the country for local
communities to visit on a family day out, and to learn more about
what our military does, the equipment it uses and the vital role
in plays in watching our backs. Those events are held up and down
the country and are both informative and entertaining, involving
celebrities and local businesses. They are a simple but much
appreciated way to say thank you to our valiant armed forces
community for all its hard work, dedication and efforts to keep
us safe in the UK and across the globe. As the armed forces
covenant reminds us, we have a duty of care to all our service
personnel, not just in the training they receive and the
equipment that is procured, but in ensuring good provision of
accommodation as well as mental health support.
Our armed forces who step in harm’s way for us deserve the best
support we can provide. When we speak of the armed forces
community, that is not just the regulars in uniform; it is the
reservists, the cadets, the surrounding families, husbands and
wives—it is all those directly supporting anyone who wears the
uniform. I give a special mention to our veterans who may no
longer be serving, but who remain very much part of the armed
forces family. If hon. Members see anyone in uniform on Armed
Forces Day, or a veteran proudly wearing their medals, please
thank them for their service—it will make their day. Let us all
support our brave military on Armed Forces Day.
5.28pm
(Angus) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to speak on behalf of the Scottish National
party in this important debate on defence, and the role that the
people and professionals in defence play in keeping us safe. I
listened intently to the Minister as he set out the
interventions, support and donations that the United Kingdom has
played a key role in delivering to the Ukrainian defence forces.
Today, as they always have had, the UK Government have the full
support of the SNP. I pay tribute to some of the key decisions
that have been made by the United Kingdom Government, not least
of which was the decision on main battle tanks. That support
continues and endures.
Yesterday I was pleased to have the opportunity, together with my
hon. Friend the Member for Aberdeen South (), to meet the Ukrainian
ambassador to underline that support, at both a political level
and on behalf of the Scottish Government and the people of
Scotland. The unanimity that exists in this place over Ukraine is
a welcome respite. Similarly, the United Kingdom does a lot of
outstanding defence work in support of the overseas territories,
which is a benign activity and welcome for those territories that
benefit from it. There is not much to argue with in any of
that.
However, when we go a little bit further afield, the Indo-Pacific
tilt has played a key role in the Government’s defence ambitions
in my four years in this place, and it is one with which I take
some issue. It is easy to caricature it as slipping back into an
imperial mindset of power mirroring trade, and how without power
there can be no trade, but trade has been inexorably globalising
for the last 50 years—even back as far as the second world
war—and nothing will stop that. If we look at the evidence from
other European manufacturing and large economies such as Germany,
we see that there are many more Mercedes than Jaguars in China,
south-east Asia and Australia, but I do not see the Kriegsmarine
getting deployed in an Indo-Pacific tilt as the Royal Navy
is.
It seems to me—I would be happy to be corrected—that this is a
rebound from Brexit. It is about getting as far away from the
European continent as possible. Obviously, I do not judge senior
officers for that—they are reacting to their political masters’
ambitions. Indeed, to echo the Chair of the Defence Committee,
the right hon. Member for Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood), as Armed
Forces Day approaches, it is important that we all acknowledge
the sacrifice and service that people in uniform make to protect
us.
In terms of protection and the Indo-Pacific tilt, I am not
certain what or whom will be protected in that theatre, and I do
not understand what incumbency there is on the United Kingdom to
play that role, other than an ambition towards arresting a
decrease in relevance. I do not see India or Australia patrolling
off the coast of Scotland—that said, neither do I see the Royal
Navy patrolling off the coast of Scotland very often. Of course,
Canada and the United States have a Pacific coast, so they have a
relevance and a role
How is this going to be done? Let us take a look at the assets.
As we would expect, the United Kingdom is a very senior member of
the F-35 club—it would be a scandal if it was not playing a role
within that—and a significant part of every one of those aircraft
is manufactured in the United Kingdom. The people working in that
facility should be tremendously proud of that. The problem is, it
is not the 138 F-35s that were originally vaunted but an order of
48 as yet not fully fulfilled, with a further 26 to come. Mr
Deputy Speaker, if you wanted to see a strained defence
procurement budget, that would be it. The F-35s are the
B-variant, so they will happily operate off a carrier—unlike
Typhoon, which cannot. France figured out that conundrum much
more successfully. So those F-35s will not have the mass they
require as an APEX theatre weapons instrument to direct fire
elsewhere.
We have nuclear-powered attack submarines and ballistic missile
submarines—SSN and SSBN—which are of course part of what the UK
is very keen on; I will get to that later. The Queen Elizabeth
carriers are both excellent Scottish-built ships, and I look
forward to HMS Prince of Wales being back on active service just
as soon as possible. On support ships to support carrier strike,
the Type 23s are way past their sell-by date, for want of
investment. If the Type 45s have not been through the power
improvement project, they will not be going to the Indo-Pacific
any time soon, because they cannot make it past the
Mediterranean. On fleet solid support, my goodness: we have Royal
Navy warships designed by the Spanish and largely built in Spain.
What on earth would Sir Francis Drake make of that?
On SSN-AUKUS, I wonder whether the Royal Navy has explained to
the Australians about the 14 rotting submarines in Devonport and
the seven in Rosyth, and the inability to either fund or
prosecute their recycling. There is the cost of that and the
scandalous cost of the refit of HMS Vanguard. Government Members
are very excited about the nuclear enterprise and the SSN and
SSBN, but I think they are less enthusiastic about the steel for
those submarines coming from France. It is literally beyond
comprehension. In terms of further defence of carrier strike,
they will not have Crowsnest any time soon. Mr Deputy Speaker,
you will be surprised to hear that fully 10 years after it was
supposed to be available, it is still not available, costs are
out of control and there is no idea when it will be in a position
to protect the carrier strike. So, in essence, it is a pretty
patchy picture.
On the cost of nuclear, there are eye-watering costs for: the
long overhaul period and refuel, as we have touched on; keeping
Vanguard boats in service for want of replacing them in time; and
the delays and cost overruns to Astute. Given the through-life
costs of hundreds of billions of pounds, nuclear waste disposal,
rising sea levels potentially affecting all seven nuclear sites
in the United Kingdom, and Scotland forced to host nuclear
submarines, it is quite clear that of all the peoples of the
world, Scotland’s have the most to fear from the UK’s nuclear
deterrent.
The cost of nuclear is an opportunity cost, as well as in cash
terms. What many will not know is how stretched the United
Kingdom defence enterprise is. If you want evidence of that, it
is manifest in the fabric of the defence estate. I encourage
anybody to go to a local defence establishment in their
constituency, if they have one, and see that some of them look
like they were abandoned at the end of the cold war. That is
because, in terms of maintenance and repair, they were abandoned
at the end of the cold war. Our accommodation offer for our
service personnel is risible. We have talked about ageing
platforms of Type 23 and Vanguard. Vanguard’s unplanned
maintenance means it has gone beyond its 2024 retirement date,
beyond 2028 and is now into the early 2030s at extraordinary
extra cost. There are four Dreadnought boats at a cost of £31
billion, plus £100 billion for through-life support. That £131
billion is 6% of the defence budget for 30 years of service. It
is simply eye-watering. And of course, of the paltry £5 billion
extra for defence this year squeezed out of the Chancellor, £3
billion has to go on nuclear.
UK defence policy is in crisis. We can see that from the dropping
of orders for F-35s and E-7 Wedgetails. We can see it in the
recruitment crisis, with poor pay, poor retention and
unacceptable conditions. We can see it in the damning results of
the armed forces personnel attitudes surveys; the unaffordable
obsession with nuclear; conventional capabilities pared to the
bone; no armoured fighting vehicles; geriatric main battle tanks,
combat air pilots who only do air policing; cutting corners;
fitting for but not with; 10 years to train fast jet pilots;
binning perfectly good C-130Js; losing fast jet pilots after two
tours, at extraordinary cost to the taxpayer; and in the budget
of 2.5% of GDP
“as fiscal and economic circumstances allow”,—[Official Report,
15 March 2023; Vol. 729, c. 837.]
That is fooling nobody.
Then there is the big one: Germany. Germany’s 2% commitment,
notwithstanding its extra €100 billion, means that its defence
budget will outstrip the United Kingdom’s defence budget. The UK
will be reduced to playing second fiddle on the defence stage
within the European arena. If it is not careful, without serious
investment in defence, France will overtake the United Kingdom
too.
The title of the debate is “Global Military Operations.” My
contention is that it is difficult to be taken seriously as a
global military power when you can no longer command primacy in
your own region of the world.
Several hon. Members rose—
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
In addition to the Front Benchers, there are 10 Members seeking
to take part in the debate. I am putting on an immediate time
limit of six minutes on speeches. If Members take too many
interventions and attract injury time, that may have to come down
still further.
5.38pm
(Harwich and North Essex)
(Con)
I very much welcome this debate on defence, in Government time.
That is an exceptional thing these days. Ever since the
implementation of the Backbench Business Committee, that has not
been the case, so the Government are taking their
responsibilities very seriously. I appreciate that it is about
global military operations. The debate I asked for was one
devoted solely to Ukraine. I hope we will still have a debate
about Ukraine.
Much of the discussion has actually been about defence policy,
which ironically was the original title of the debate. Defence
policy tends to be a term that either covers everything in
defence, or is treated as theory which the rest of the Government
confine to policy wonks and the Ministry of Defence. In today’s
world, however, defence policy needs to be about delivery and
delivery across the whole of Government, and that is lacking at
this time. The war in Ukraine has been a wake-up call to the
democratic countries of the world. We can no longer take for
granted the peace and freedoms we have enjoyed since the end of
the cold war. All is threatened by belligerent states, of which
Russia is just one.
The UK Government’s leadership—admirably supported by the
Opposition parties—in providing state-of-the-art military
assistance to Ukraine has been exemplary. But this has also
exposed the inability of the Government and the MOD to rebuild
relevant military and industrial capability. I very much welcome
a great deal that was said by the shadow Secretary of State, the
right hon. Member for Wentworth and Dearne (), but I think it has a price
tag on it, and if he ever becomes Defence Secretary, I suspect he
would have as much difficulty as have my right hon. Friends on
the Government Front Bench in getting money out of the Treasury.
Perhaps there should be an honest bipartisan discussion about
that problem.
There is a very real possibility that war could spread to our
NATO allies. The UK cannot wait for that to happen before
implementing a different and far more dynamic defence policy. The
ability to ensure our own national security and that of our
allies demands a transformation of effective cross-Government
collaboration. There should be a new national body for
co-ordinating the use of all forms of power, underpinned by a
strategic mindset, as well as a process of implementation and of
constant reviewing and learning. Government and Opposition should
agree to lead a national conversation about the nature and danger
of war in today’s rapidly changing world. This must be supported
by a robust intellectual effort to assess how to restructure our
forces so that they remain the very best and most effective.
This is not about being able to put an overwhelming number of
boots on the ground. War is no longer confined to military
conflict. Instead, we need to strengthen our intelligence system
to give us better warning of impending threats, whether armed,
cyber or informational, and there must be a much greater
political appetite for challenge and for hearing unwelcome truths
from our intelligence services. We also need a civil service that
has established defence expertise from the bottom to the very
top. The idea that generalists in the civil service can run
anything was tackled in the 1960s by the Fulton report, but that
culture has become even more prevalent in today’s Whitehall.
We need a military that has the ability to adapt to rapid and
drastic changes in warfare, and the flexibility to expand and
contract rapidly, dependent on our need. Importantly, we need an
acquisition system—everybody talks about defence acquisition
these days—that can effectively support the military system in
all its aspects, under direct state control to ensure fluid
supply chains and protecting itself from espionage.
The MOD must develop armed forces that are capable of dealing
with threats both immediate and in future. The MOD’s intention is
to focus on the need to prepare for wartime effectiveness, but it
has become imbued by a peacetime mentality and a lack of urgency,
and it is preoccupied with a misplaced notion of cost control,
which tends to add to project risk and to cost. The MOD ties up
too much of its resource in trying to build and maintain a fixed
arsenal of weaponry. It should spend perhaps substantially more
on the ability to expand any capability rapidly, so that we can
neutralise new threats quickly, when they arise. The MOD is too
reliant on a few defence prime contractors. More of that
capability should be brought back in-house, where acquisition
risk can be better understood and managed. Nor should we be so
dependent on offshore supply chains for crucial capability, which
can be choked off at times of crisis.
This new defence policy, which I look forward to the Government
bringing forward, should be co-ordinated with an effort to bring
to our population a greater understanding of defence, security
and international affairs. Working with our higher education
institutions, we must support defence and security-related
courses and educate more graduates in the disciplines essential
to our collective defence.
I will reiterate the point I made in an intervention. We should
be prepared to co-operate bilaterally with EU forces in order to
carry on the work that we need to do in the Balkans at this
particular time.
If I could add one further point, we must look after our
veterans. I am joining the campaign to get certain documents
released from the Ministry of Defence and the National Archives
at Kew, concerning the Sir Galahad and Sir Tristram disaster
during the Falklands war. It is now 40 years since that conflict.
The veterans, the survivors and their families desperately need
closure. Why is the issue still being hidden? What is the purpose
of hiding the truth? Maybe there are truths that people will not
want to hear, but—
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. I am sorry but I have given the hon. Gentleman as much
time as I can.
5.45pm
(Caerphilly) (Lab)
I believe the United Kingdom needs to have a military presence
across the globe. I am particularly thinking about the South
China sea and the threat presented by China, which has been
alluded to already. I am conscious of the situation in that area,
which is called the East sea by the Vietnamese, and I am acutely
aware of the threat to Taiwan, which is apparently escalating. I
welcome the fact that the Navy has two ships permanently in the
region and that the aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth has
recently visited the area. I recognise that things have moved on
since the integrated review, which heralded the Indo-Pacific
tilt, but still there needs to be concern about that important
part of the world, well into the future, given the increasing
influence of China and the importance of the area for Britain’s
trade.
Equally, it is important to say that today Europe has to be our
main focus. NATO is, and will remain, the cornerstone of our
defence, and we must be resolute in our support of Ukraine. It
may well be a long struggle, but it will be necessary. However
long it takes, we must stand four-square behind the people of
Ukraine and its Government, and take note of the increasing
threat. For example, we note that Russian nuclear weapons have
now been moved into Belarus. It is incumbent upon us all to watch
the situation very carefully.
We must also be mindful of two things. When we look across the
globe, we look to the United States of America. There is the
possible re-election of former President Trump. We all know what
happened when he was President last time: concern was caused by
his comments about NATO, and about Montenegro in particular. Who
knows—dare I say, God forbid—President Trump might be in the
White House again.
We also have to bear in mind the long-term desire of the United
States to have a greater focus on the Pacific, and its wish for
Europe to be collectively more proactive in its own defence.
Therefore, the debate about how much money we and our European
allies spend on defence is extremely important, and something we
cannot and should not avoid.
A few weeks ago, I visited Estonia, along with my hon. Friend the
Member for Newcastle upon Tyne North () and two other senior
figures from the Labour movement. We had a series of wide-ranging
meetings with fellow social democrats, trade unionists, the
national defence committee of the Estonian Parliament and many
others. The visit was extremely worth while. I was struck by the
absolute unanimity among everyone we met and spoke to about the
concerns they had about Russia’s activities, the war in Ukraine,
and the potential and actual threat it could pose to Estonia.
In 2016, the United Kingdom’s enhanced forward presence was
agreed for Estonia and since 2017 the UK has deployed an armoured
infantry battalion to Estonia, with 800 to 900 personnel, which
was doubled in size in 2022. Our presence in Estonia, in
conjunction with that of our NATO allies, is extremely valued.
That was another clear message that was given to us by a whole
range of people whom we met in Estonia during our visit.
Looking to the future, we are in no doubt of the UK’s resolute
support for NATO, but we should recognise that we need to be much
stronger in developing foreign policy and military co-operation
with our close allies in the European Union. Intergovernmental
co-operation must be increased, and also at the very least there
needs to be a dialogue with the European Commission so that there
is coherence between our approach and that of our allies.
Again looking to the future, we ought to focus our minds on the
nature of our future military equipment and how it is
manufactured. Of course the US is our closest ally and will
remain so, but we need to be prepared to develop our own specific
sovereign capability and from time to time, if necessary, also
co-operate more closely with our European allies. In this country
we are developing the sixth-generation aircraft that will
eventually succeed the F35, and we have, for instance, the
Tempest programme, but the European Union has the Future Combat
Air System initiative. There needs to be the possibility of
consideration. Nothing is certain about the future—
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. The hon. Gentleman’s time is up.
5.51pm
(Bracknell) (Con)
Clausewitz famously wrote that war was a continuation of policy
by other means, so it is entirely appropriate that we are
debating global military operations in this place.
Over the past 30 years, the UK has had a pretty proud record of
military performance overseas on a large, medium and small scale.
From 1991 we had Gulf war I, Rwanda, Angola, Bosnia, Kosovo and
Northern Ireland. Blair’s Chicago speech in 1999 set the case for
international intervention beyond that: we had Gulf war II, East
Timor, Afghanistan, Sierra Leone, and other expeditionary
operations. There is, of course, no truth in the supposition that
the UK forces deploy only in wars that they can win, but past
performance is not necessarily indicative of future success, and
in this era of global instability and competition, it is
essential that we maintain sufficient forces to do the job in all
five domains.
The integrated review gives the framework doctrinally while the
defence tasks provide the direction, and I think that three of
those are relevant to this debate: the first,
“defence, security and resilience of the UK”,
the fifth, “overseas defence activity”, and the seventh, “direct
defence”. Back in my day, at Northwood Permanent Joint
Headquarters, defence held the joint operational estimate of
capability and readiness, otherwise known as JOECR. I think that
today it is called the capability readiness assessment framework,
or CRAF. It is classified secret, but I suspect that I know
broadly what it says.
Intuitively, RAF and Navy capabilities are probably equipped to
do the job with which they are tasked. Yes, we need more of
everything—quantity has a quality of its own—but our ships,
submarines and aircraft are good, supportable and modern. The
elephant in the room is the land domain. My instinct, therefore,
is that the CRAF is probably flashing red for land capability.
Indeed, when we discuss defence in the House, operational
capability is ultimately what truly matters. Yes, the Army has
been bent out of shape for the support and gifting of capability
to Ukraine—is this “a” war or “the” war?—but we must still hold
at readiness the full suite of land capability for contingent
purposes, and we must be ready for what comes next. If the MOD is
required, under the defence tasks, to hold an armoured division
at readiness, that is what this country must still be required to
do. If it has not already been done, the MOD must first carry out
a detailed estimate of exactly what is required now to get the
3rd (United Kingdom) Division out of the door. If it is necessary
to increase the defence budget to 2.5% or 3% of GDP, then so be
it.
The strategic defence and security review and the Army 2020
programme structurally altered the Army, moving it away from
large-scale divisional deployments, so if we cannot deploy a
division under the current construct, we need to put it back in
place. We also need to get back the strategic enablers lost
during the Army 2020 programme, not to mention the need for the
full suite of strategic air and sea lift to be fully deployable
worldwide.
Beyond increasing available manpower, equipment and capability
within the field Army, we also need to enhance the logistic tail.
We therefore need contingent stocks to be at readiness, including
weapons, ammunition, spares and all supply natures, and not just
training stocks. Supply lines need to be kept open with our
suppliers and commercial partners, even when legacy equipment
stops being made. As for equipment procurement—yes, let us
purchase the best available, preferably made or integrated in the
UK, but it needs to be affordable and scalable to meet the
requirements. Exquisite exclusivity is fine but as an operator I
would much rather have enough to satisfy all structures. Modular
platforms that we can build for export must also be factored
in.
Lastly, a fully equipped, manned, supported and sustainable Army
costs money. If Defence tasks are serious about having a
deployable division at readiness, the path to get there is
non-discretionary. It is also clear that both NATO and the US
allies expect that of us in this place. The world remains a
dangerous, unpredictable place and the primary role of any
Government, as we know, is to defend their people and their
allies. It would be unwise to forget that.
5.55pm
(City of Chester) (Lab)
It is a great pleasure to speak in today’s debate. Keeping the
nation safe and protecting our citizens are the main priorities
of any Government. From deployments abroad to deployments at
home, our armed forces are essential to our national defence.
Next week will mark Armed Forces Week, a time when we reflect on
the commitment and sacrifices of the brave service personnel in
our armed forces, and I would like to express my sincere
appreciation to them for their unwavering commitment and
dedication to protecting our nation. It is their effort that
ensures our safety and upholds the values we hold dear. They
deserve our utmost respect and gratitude.
Chester, the constituency I represent, has long historic links
with our armed forces. The Dale barracks are currently home to
the 2nd Battalion the Yorkshire Regiment, and the reserve unit C
Squadron, the Queen’s Own Yeomanry, is based in the Fox barracks,
next to the Dale. Long may the barracks remain as homes to our
forces. HMS Albion, which has a long affiliation with the city of
Chester, is currently busy in the Baltic on a three-month
deployment as part of a series of joint exercises with NATO
allies and international partners across northern Europe. I am
honoured to represent a city with such strong military
connections.
The Labour party has always understood, and always will
understand, the importance of our armed forces and defence.
However, despite increasing threats, the Government are still
cutting day-to-day MOD spending in real terms, which means less
money for troops, housing and forces families. Our armed forces
deserve support and proper funding, especially in the current
climate, but I worry that the threat of hollowing out our armed
forces remains present. As global uncertainty continues to rise,
the fundamentals of supplying our Army, Navy and Royal Air Force
with the correct equipment are paramount to our defence. We have
witnessed Type 45 frigates being unable to cope with warm water
and Ajax light tanks harming our service personnel more than
enemy action. That is despite a lack of active deployment, six
years behind schedule.
Sadly, Putin’s war in Ukraine continues and there is no question
but that UK military support for Ukraine has had and will
continue to have Labour’s fullest backing. As this awful war
continues, we must continue to stand with Ukraine and its people
and support them in defending their freedom and their home. The
threat posed by Russia and other hostile powers is not limited to
the battlefields in Ukraine. On this I agree with the hon. Member
for Harwich and North Essex ( ). Future military operations
in Europe and across the world will also be fought on the digital
battlefield. A vital part of the UK defence infrastructure is
that of cyber-security. When we speak of cyber-security, we think
of the events of 2017, with the NotPetya cyber-attack on
Ukrainian infrastructure and the Wannacry ransomware attack that
highlighted the vulnerabilities of crucial organisations such as
our NHS.
In 2012, former CIA director and US Secretary of Defence Leon
Panetta warned of a “cyber Pearl Harbor”. While the threat of
that can never be underestimated, it seems that the more
effective methods being deployed by hostile powers involve
microscale disinformation campaigns. With the emergence of deep
fakes and the threat of quantum computing seemingly round the
corner, it is vital that our armed forces receive the support
they need for the 21st-century battleground. The fog of war now
extends to the digital realm, with conflicting reports and
misinformation weakening western support for this conflict. If we
are to have a truly resilient Ministry of Defence, we need to
ensure that victories on the battlefield are not portrayed as
losses by those who wish to undermine our solidarity with our
allies.
5.59pm
(Witney) (Con)
It is a great pleasure and honour to speak in this timely debate.
We probably all agree that we face perhaps the most dangerous and
concerning time for global security since the end of the cold
war. There is a period of extreme danger coming up, with the
ongoing conflict in Ukraine and the possibility of Chinese action
in Taiwan, and the west’s attention is split between those two
theatres.
This means that we in Europe have to take a very close look at
our capabilities. The fundamental point, looking at what has
changed over the last year or so, is that the big assumption
under which we operated for 20 or 30 years has now gone.
Peer-on-peer conflict and great power rivalry are back, and the
assumption that our forces will be able to operate under an
umbrella of air supremacy, without fear of substantial attack
from the air, is now over.
This means we have to take a close look at how our Air Force and
the air forces of our NATO allies are set up. For years we have
engaged in operations in low-intensity conflicts, doing air
policing or close air support operations without an air-to-air or
significant surface-to-air threat. That will now change, of
course, which means the Air Force will have to do a number of
things, such as building up the number of spares.
Secondly, training will have to change. The training necessary
for high intensity peer-on-peer conflict is much different from
that required for air policing operations, and personnel can get
only a limited amount from sims. Sims are useful because they can
engage in scenarios they cannot do for real, but nothing can
recreate the psychological and physical stresses of operating
multiple aircraft in complex air scenarios.
Much as the Air Force will be thinking about these things and
adjusting its training accordingly, it is relevant for us in
terms of policy because, if we are looking at the need to build
up spares and to fulfil a much more intense training requirement,
space is needed to do that. We need to have enough aircraft and
enough pilots to make sure the Air Force is not constantly
stretched. If the Air Force is stretched all the time, we will
not be able to build up either of those things.
That is before I even start talking about the simple factor of
mass. As can be seen with the conflict in Ukraine, we can expect
that any peer-on-peer conflict will need mass because of the
inevitable attrition. For years we have operated in a world in
which we could do more with less. Each fast jet we have now is
incomparably more capable than what existed during the cold war,
and they are light years ahead of anything that existed during
the second world war, but we still need the number of platforms
to be able to cope with attrition and the training
requirement.
Fundamentally, this means either we will have to start doing less
discretionary conflict and more high-end training to face the
threat, or we will have to scale up the number of people and
aircraft to be able to do both. I suspect that the House, the
Government and the country will want to do the latter, because we
will probably want to take part in the discretionary operations
that are so important to the rules-based order and how we see
ourselves as a country, but that has a cost.
I have mainly spoken about fast jets, and much of it also applies
to air mobility, which is based at RAF Brize Norton in my
constituency, so I have a particular interest, but some of the
points are common. For example, the concept of main operating
bases, in which all our assets are concentrated in two or three
large bases, has cost savings. In peacetime, that is of course
helpful, but it is a danger when we face a peer adversary.
Perhaps the Minister will elaborate in due course as to what
consideration is being given to the dispersal of forces, to
ensure there is resilience in the event of a peer-on-peer
conflict.
We have touched on the C-130 today, so I will not go into that in
great detail. I know the Minister will say that the A400M Atlas
can fly twice as much, twice as far and twice as fast, which is
true, as it is generationally significant; it is a step change as
an aircraft. However, concerns remain, first, about its
reliability and whether it is where we need to be. Secondly, not
all of the capabilities from the Hercules have yet been
transferred and they need to be. Thirdly, and above all else,
however capable an aircraft, it cannot be in two places at once.
We cannot expect the limited number of crews and platforms to be
able to do everything if the number of airframes available is
decreasing. The important thing that the House must consider is
the availability of task lines. Perhaps the Minister will address
that in due course, but there is a capability gap there and we
are going to have to address it. On air mobility, the other
lesson from Ukraine is that no matter how important our
capability, we have to get it there. So the logistics are
essential and important as never before.
In the last few seconds I have, I shall talk about housing. Our
armed forces do crucial work, but it is no good telling them that
their work is crucial and that we will rely on them if their
showers are cold and there is mould on their walls. We have to
make sure that we have the homes we need if we want to be able to
undertake global military operations. The sun is outside but the
skies are darkening, and we need to remember that.
6.06pm
(Newcastle upon Tyne
North) (Lab)
First and foremost, in the name of keeping our nation safe and
protecting our citizens, which is a duty we all share, I want to
pay tribute to those who serve in our armed forces, whether here
in the UK or around the globe, and to the vital work they do to
that end. I also want to say clearly how important it is that we
stand with our allies in support of Ukraine. Unfortunately, we
have in the past been too slow to see the dangers to our security
and that of our allies. Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine has
brought a destabilisation of peace in Europe, it has deepened the
famine in east Africa and it has fuelled energy and food price
rises that we are now all feeling. It is a wake-up call to us
all.
I recently joined an Anglo-German fact-finding delegation to
Estonia, with my hon. Friend the Member for Caerphilly (), who also mentioned it. It was
a telling visit, because, as many Members will know, Estonia is a
country painfully aware of the threat Russia poses. Estonia is a
proudly independent nation, but because it has not always been
independent it has suffered much in the last century. It had a
narrow escape from the Russian Bolsheviks, when it was supported
by the Royal Navy, but it then faced occupation under the Soviet
Union and the Nazis, and decades of suppression under the Soviets
after the war. The occupation stretched for 50 years, from 1940
to 1991, and the daily atrocities that the Estonians faced are
well documented in Tallinn’s museum of occupations and freedom—my
visit there will stay with me always. That is why Estonia’s
support for Ukraine is so steadfast, but it is also why it must
think about its own defence; the costs of losing freedom are
understood all too well. Indeed, the Estonian Prime Minister’s
grandmother was sent to Siberia as a baby during that brutal
occupation.
Estonia lies between Scandinavia and Russia. It is a vital
strategic position on the gulf of Finland, at NATO’s eastern
edge. As my hon. Friend said, during that visit we spoke to
politicians from all parties, as well as meeting the country’s
defence select committee. Their analysis of today’s Russia was
bleak but unanimous: they see a ruler lumbered with a lethal
mindset of brutality and conquest, and an outlook that is deeply
embedded in the wider leadership of the country and unlikely to
change soon. We also visited the NATO centre of excellence on
cyber-defence, an interdisciplinary hub set up shortly after
Russia launched its damaging digital attacks against Estonia in
2007. But Estonians do not fear Russia. They stand supported by
NATO allies and they have a powerful will to resist. Ukrainian
flags fly everywhere in Tallinn. The two countries are intimately
linked, and both need our unequivocal support.
As the NATO Secretary-General has repeated, Labour wants to see
Ukraine on a path to join the alliance, but, to achieve that end,
we need to support Ukraine’s fight for sovereignty now. I am
proud that Labour has been unshakeable in supporting NATO members
in their contributions to Ukraine.
Estonia may be small, but its determination to defend its
hard-won independence is compelling, and it highlights the best
of what we can achieve when we work with our partners and our
allies. Today, Members have pointed out many of the shortcomings
in our defence capabilities, which means, I think, that some of
that partnership working is the way forward to ensure that we can
meet the growing challenges that we know the world poses.
The Government must answer the growing clamour of questions
surrounding the UK’s ability to meet our NATO obligations. The
delays to the new defence Command Paper are frustrating, because
many want to see how things will look going forward. The stakes
are simply too high for any wavering in our commitment and any
weakening of our capabilities.
Estonia is on NATO’s frontline, working alongside allies on
training operations as part of NATO’s UK-led multinational battle
group work—operations that are part of our crucial bilateral
commitments with Estonia. While I was in Estonia, Exercise Spring
Storm was under way, with more than 1,500 UK troops joining
military personnel from 11 NATO countries in an important
demonstration of our joint defensive strength. This readiness is
vital both in Estonia, on NATO’s frontline, and here in the UK. I
am proud of Labour’s ongoing commitment to NATO and to our
obligations to our partners. The Government have my full support
in standing up with our allies for the values that we all hold
dear. We know that this is a long-haul struggle for freedom,
peace and security in Europe and around the globe, and we must
stay the course.
6.11pm
(South Dorset) (Con)
It is a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Newcastle upon
Tyne North (). I wish to thank our
armed forces for what they do both here at home and in many
countries across the world. They are a credit to our nation.
Bearing in mind that the defence of our island must be any
Government’s top priority, these debates are important, not least
when we face a world that is as unstable as it has ever been in
my lifetime.
I note that the heading of this debate is “Global Military
Operations”. Those operations are set: first, by the Government’s
priorities; secondly, by what we can afford; and, thirdly, by our
obligations, not least to NATO. Having served in the armed forces
for nine years, and been in this place for 13 years, four of
which have been with the Defence Committee, I have seen Prime
Ministers and some Ministers struggle to clarify the scope and
structure of our armed forces and to fund them properly. I
exclude the current set of Ministers who are doing an outstanding
job. My criticism goes straight to the Treasury in the main. To
be fair to the Government, world events have a nasty habit of
changing, as yet another defence review—a “refresh” of the
previous one—highlights, and this while the world stands on the
edge of an abyss with another murderous war taking place in
Europe and, worryingly, on NATO’s borders.
Since the end of world war two, we have not faced a top-tier
opponent, but that threat is very real today with both China and
Russia raising the threshold. I quite accept that conflict on
this scale would be fought with allies, not least the US. But as
the right hon. Member for Birmingham, Hodge Hill () mentioned the Falklands war—let
us hope we never have to go back there again. Many of my friends
served when I was in in 1982—let me say that, as the Falklands is
one of our main dependants, the question for this or any
Government is: can we retake the islands in the event that they
are invaded? If we cannot, clearly, we are failing in our
duty.
While the US gears up for major conflict, I do not detect the
same sense of urgency here. To deter war, one needs to prepare
and train for it, with sufficient mass to sustain a lengthy
conflict. On that point alone, we must reverse the decision to
cut the Army by 10,000. Everywhere the Defence Committee has
gone—although I can speak on my own behalf—I have heard that our
armed forces are stretched to breaking point.
I said at the start of my speech that a Government’s top priority
must be the defence of our island nation. That is essential, of
course, but this debate is about our global reach, which requires
more funding for more planes, more ships and more soldiers. It is
clear from the Committee’s evidence sessions that the pitiful 2%—
or just over—of GDP that is spent on defence is not enough. It
clearly is not. It was more than 5% in my day, and since then the
kit has become more expensive and our requirements and
obligations even greater.
If we are to play our part globally, along with our allies in
most cases, we must fund our armed forces to allow them to do the
job that we in this place send them to do. It is our
responsibility. We cannot ask them to do things without the kit,
the manpower or whatever they need to do the job. If we do, we
are failing in our duties.
Global reach and influence are of huge significance, as China is
showing. Too few politicians, regrettably, have understood the
significance of a military presence around the world and the
diplomatic and economic benefits that flow from it. An effective
presence costs money—money that politicians all too often divert
to other priorities. I mentioned China, whose economic and
military reach around the world are expanding at an alarming
rate. China appreciates that the world’s resources are not
limitless and that, to ensure its security, those resources need
to be identified, secured and protected.
The war in Ukraine is a wake-up call, if ever there was one. I
pay tribute to the Prime Minister, to his predecessor and to
Members on both sides of the House who have stood together on
this issue; long may that be the case. Many European countries,
not least Poland, Germany and France, are increasing their
defence budgets. Political leadership is what we badly need if we
are to fund our armed forces sufficiently to meet the inevitable
rise in our global responsibilities. To be fair, our brave men
and women are already operating in many countries, as we have
heard, and very effectively. That is to their great credit, but
greater mass is needed for the reasons I have stated.
Looking back in history, we have a rather poor record on being
prepared for major conflict. The peace dividend that followed the
end of the cold war saw a major disarmament, to the extent that
we now struggle to find one fighting division where it is needed,
as my right hon. Friend the Chairman of the Defence Committee
stated.
Will the hon. Gentleman give way on that point?
May I not? I have little time left and I know others on the right
hon. Gentleman’s side of the House particularly want to
speak.
At the start of world war two—
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. Perversely, the debate is under-running slightly at the
moment. Having admonished hon. Members earlier, if the hon.
Gentleman does wish to give way, I think the House would
understand.
In that case, may I reverse my decision? I would be delighted to
hear from the right hon. Gentleman.
I am very grateful. I wanted to underline the point the hon.
Gentleman is making so eloquently to the House. The risk is even
greater than he has set out, because global defence spending is
now rising by between $200 billion and $700 billion a year. If we
want to keep pace with that, defence spending is going to have to
rise.
I hear the right hon. Gentleman, and of course it is true. To be
fair to our Government, it is down to the economy, how much money
we have and everything else, but at the end of the day, where we
spend our money is about political priorities.
History shows, as I have said already, that for many years we
have underfunded the armed forces, to our detriment. At the start
of the second world war, thank heavens, we had a Royal Navy with
more than 1,000 warships, which played a huge part, with the RAF,
in preventing the Germans from invading our country. To
under-invest in our armed forces at times when we think we do not
need them is short-termism of the worst kind. As history again
shows, on many occasions when a war breaks out, it comes from
nowhere and many countries are taken by surprise. Alternatively,
MPs and others warn of conflict and nothing is done. In either
case, surely we have to learn from history.
At the start of world war two, we had over 1,000 warships; I
think the figure now is 17 or 18, and the RAF has been similarly
emasculated. Talk of the global reach of military operations is
one thing, but funding them is quite another. Will I be refreshed
after the refresh? I am sure the narrative and ambition will be
along the right lines, but those are easy. It is the political
will, the funding and the sense of urgency that are the
challenge, if we are to take our global responsibilities
seriously.
6.19pm
(Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
(Lab)
I will make three very quick points about focus versus spread,
the need to prepare for economic warfare and the importance of
expanding our soft power.
The beginning of the debate was pretty illuminating. The Minister
eloquently set out the stark reduction in our capabilities since
2010. The reason why we need the defence Command Paper was well
illustrated. On the one hand, the spread is getting bigger, but
on the other, the capability that we have on hand is much
reduced. We desperately need to bring a sense of focus to our
priorities.
For me, that must start with the re-containment of Russia, which
has a nasty habit of invading and invading and invading its
neighbours. Down the course of history, Russia invades its
neighbours over and over again. That is why we have to complete
the rebuilding of NATO. Nobody has said anything today about
President Erdoğan’s commentary on keeping Sweden out. That is
something that this House should deprecate.
We have to strengthen our capabilities in the Arctic. China and
Russia’s “no limits” partnership creates the risk of a new polar
silk road through the Arctic that will halve China’s journey time
for transiting goods around the world. Russia is re-equipping
bases in the Kola peninsula, where, of course, it stables its
second strike capability. We will need to strengthen our
deployment and our weaponry in the Arctic if we are to keep the
Arctic safe.
We have to bring greater attention to central Asia. We have to
ensure that we do everything we can to support the multi-vector
foreign policy ambitions of countries such as Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan and others along Russia’s southern boundary.
We have to do more in Africa, not least because the Wagner Group
is now raping Africa, exploiting 14 countries there. We already
know that something like $250 million has been extracted from
Africa to help fund Prigozhin and his dogs of war. We must bring
a sense of focus and priority, and that is why we need a Command
Paper.
There are also new opportunities to consider, of course. Defence
spending is rising: NATO partners are committed to raise defence
spending by something like $55 billion, and our allies in Japan
are committed to raising theirs by something like $60
billion—that is $100 billion extra in defence spending among our
allies. We should have an intelligent conversation about who
should be spending what and where. I suspect that one of the
conclusions would be that we should focus much more aggressively
closer to home.
Secondly, we have to ensure that we are prepared for economic
warfare. The alliance structure has been transformed over the
last two to three years. We now have not just a rules-based order
but the hardcore of a rights-based order—AUKUS, NATO, the North
American free trade agreement, the EU, the Quad, us, Korea,
Switzerland and Israel. Together, those countries make up two
thirds of global GDP—$61 trillion—but we do not co-ordinate
critical supply chains across that great arc of the globe, and we
do not co-ordinate strategies for critical minerals. In fact, we
co-ordinate very little.
Part of the problem is that we have still to define precisely
what a critical supply chain is. I put that question to the
Foreign Secretary on Monday. Frankly, he struggled to answer it.
He could not tell the Committee whether our dependence on China
was going up or down, despite the fact that imports from China
have doubled to £73.4 billion in the last decade. We have to get
a grip on that; we have to think through, strategically and
forensically, where we are economically vulnerable and how we can
deepen our alliances, particularly with the United States and the
EU, to ensure that our critical supply chains are safe from
foreign interference. Our allies in Europe and America are
spending $1.5 trillion on supply chains, the transition to
domestic energy and their respective Chips Acts. We are currently
shut out of those dialogues. We simply cannot afford to have that
vulnerability in the future.
Finally, I underline the importance of a whole-of-Government
approach—as was mentioned by the Chair of the Liaison Committee,
the hon. Member for Harwich and North Essex ( )—and that includes
transforming our soft power around the world. On the Foreign
Affairs Committee, when we talk to ambassadors we tend to hear
four or five common themes. First, we should see English as a
strategic enabler, stop the cuts to the British Council and
expand the provision of English teaching around the world.
Secondly, we should think radically about how we expand the BBC
World Service. The truth is the best stratcom we have available,
so we should stop underfunding it. Thirdly, we should think about
how we expand education links, whether that is through Chevening
scholarships, university-to-university links or technical
assistance programmes. Fourthly, we should expand the incredible
work of our military attachés. Fifthly, we should get a
well-functioning visa service and a Foreign Secretary who is
travelling an awful lot more.
This has been a welcome debate, but it underlines the point that
there is an awful lot more to do if we are to step up to the
responsibilities that, across the House, we believe that we
share.
6.25pm
(Tiverton and Honiton)
(LD)
The Liberal Democrats fully support the apparent consensus in the
House in relation to Ukraine and the restoration of Ukraine’s
sovereignty, but that is not what I would like to focus my
remarks on today. I will focus on deterrence in two domains: the
maritime domain and the land domain. In relation to the land
domain, I want to talk about munitions stockpiles and the size of
the Army, and to suggest that the Government are mistaken in
boosting the number of warheads that we have in our nuclear
stockpile while simultaneously permitting our conventional
munitions stockpiles to run low.
The Liberal Democrats recognise that the full-scale invasion of
Ukraine has changed the security environment, so we support
continuous at-sea deterrence. That is a dividing line between the
Scottish National party and my party. While the strategic
environment is as it is today, we need to see the maintenance of
continuous at-sea deterrence, as we have for more than 50 years.
However, we cannot support the increase in the stockpile of
nuclear weapons that was first announced in the integrated review
of 2021.
When the Liberal Democrats were in government, we achieved a
commitment to reduce the nuclear stockpile by 65%, yet the 2021
integrated review announced that the cap on that stockpile would
be raised and that information on the operational availability of
warheads, deployed warheads and deployed missiles would no longer
be made available. That is contributing to the atmosphere of
secrecy, rather than transparency, in a very sensitive area. I
have nothing but disdain for what Russia and Putin have done in
relation to START—the strategic arms reduction treaty—but we need
to set an example in this space through our transparency around
nuclear.
On conventional munitions, £3 billion of the additional £5
billion of funding that was announced in March was for the
nuclear enterprise, whereas less than £2 billion of the funding
will go towards replenishing conventional stockpiles. That is the
wrong priority, and it sends the wrong signal to industry.
Industry wants a signal that there will be sustained production
into the future, and it will ramp up production on that basis.
The EU has already called for a million artillery rounds a year
to be made available to Ukraine, and the UK could contribute to
that effort.
I also want to talk about the size of the Army. This reiterates
what other Members have said, but it is common in such debates
for us all to pay tribute to the bravery of our armed forces
personnel. Of course, that is entirely appropriate, but while the
Government are cutting the size of the Army, we can be sure that
British soldiers are not reciprocating those warm words. They
will not be talking about the wisdom of their political
representatives; they will be talking in terms that are far less
complimentary.
We need only look at the online Army Rumour Service —essentially,
the soldier’s answer to Hansard—to see that service personnel are
not impressed by this Government’s plans to reduce the size of
the Army. The Army was 103,000 strong in 2004, when I was
training recruits as a platoon commander at Bassingbourn, which
is now the Mission Ready training centre near Bedford. It
currently stands at 76,000 full-time trained strength regulars,
and we can anticipate a further cut of 3,000, making 73,000 by
the end of 2024. The former Chief of the Defence Staff, General
Sir Nick Carter, argued that the size of the Army should be in
the order of 80,000, to ensure that the UK can deploy a full
division of troops as part of a combined NATO force. We have to
think about not only the physical component of fighting power,
but the moral component—that is, the ability to get people to
fight.
To summarise, I would like to know whether the Minister or,
indeed, the Government plan to take the UK’s deployable nuclear
weapons stockpile back to levels that we have seen previously, or
that we saw announced before the integrated review in 2021, when
the strategic environment allows. I would like to see how the
UK’s conventional ammunition stocks can be knitted into wider
European responses to the invasion of Ukraine in the way that
NATO and EU members have responded, by upping production and
giving a clear signal to industry that we plan to do that over
the long term, and I would like to know when the Government will
stop hiding behind the false choice between a sufficiently large
Army and a properly equipped one.
6.31pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
May I say how pleased I am to be involved in this debate, and
thank all right hon. and hon. Members who have made such
pertinent and worthwhile comments and speeches?
First, I commend the Prime Minister and the Secretary of State
for Defence on taking a lead among allies in supporting Ukraine.
I believe we must do all we can to assist Ukraine, now and in the
future, and that commitment is clearly there. In the inevitable
peacebuilding and reconciliation efforts that must surely follow
Ukraine succeeding in its efforts to oust Russia from the
illegally held occupied territories, Northern Ireland has
invaluable experience in conflict resolution and peacebuilding
that should be shared with Ukraine, to help it with the
challenging task of rebuilding communities deeply fractured by
the conflict.
While I recognise that the use of advanced defence technology is
prevalent in the conflict in Ukraine, such as new missile
systems, drones and social media warfare, that conflict is still
fought in a manner that we should recognise from the first and
second world wars. Tanks and troops are fighting the war: taking
and holding ground, digging in, digging trenches and defending. I
gently remind the Minister that those are precisely the
capabilities that our British Army has had over the years, and—as
other Members have referred to—those capabilities have been
shredded in many ways. We have an Army crippled by cuts to
battle-winning manpower and battlefield warfighting kit. The old
Russian military maxim that quantity has a quality of its own
still holds true, so I call on the Minister and the whole of the
Ministry of Defence to reverse the decline in combat arms, regrow
the infantry and the armoured corps, and give Britain back the
capability to deploy two warfighting divisions, a capacity that
more accurately reflects the current threats we face.
Northern Ireland remains the best place in the UK to recruit men
and women to join the military and fight for King and country—the
data emphasises that. Northern Ireland’s contribution to the
defence industry is immense. I pay tribute to the work done by
the likes of Thales, whose NLAW missile system is making such a
positive difference to Ukraine’s ability to defeat the Russians
on the battlefield. I visited that factory last year and was very
impressed, and I understand that many of the people who work
there are from my constituency of Strangford. I am very pleased
to see good, constructive and positive work coming from Northern
Ireland. Defence shipbuilding contracts have recently been
awarded to Harland and Wolff—how good it will be to see ships
once again going out from Belfast to defend the nation’s
interests, at home and abroad.
I cannot speak highly enough of the work being done by many other
Northern Ireland-based companies and of their contribution to
defence, so ably supported by Northern Ireland’s Aerospace,
Defence and Security Group. We had a meeting last night where we
met some of those businesses and some of the small SMEs that feed
into that. It is impressive to see such capability, such skill
and the workforce there to fill the gap.
The recent report from the Royal United Services Institute, “The
Defence Industry in Northern Ireland: Leveraging Untapped
Potential”, highlights how much more of a contribution Northern
Ireland companies can make to defence. When the Secretary of
State was a Minister in the Northern Ireland Office, he would
have been exposed to this issue, so he should know what an asset
we are. He must take note of the RUSI report’s conclusion, which
stated:
“In all, NI exhibits considerable defence potential, with three
prominent businesses at the top of the supply chain that can,
together with the extensive range of SMEs in the region, create
an opportunity to promote NI, not as part of the problem set of
UK defence and security, but as a valued contributor to its
management and solution. The MoD should be monitoring the
situation and looking for further opportunities to support local
stakeholders, as the current UK government ambition that the
whole of the UK”—
that is Northern Ireland as well—
“should benefit from defence activity is clearly not being
met.”
We want to do more, we can do more, and we need the opportunity.
This issue should be of particular concern to those in the MOD
focused on prosperity and in the consciousness of all involved
with defence spending in the private sector.
I will say a quick word about nuclear power, to which the hon.
Member for Tiverton and Honiton () referred. I agree with
those who say that we must never use nuclear armaments, but the
fact is that we must have it and it must be a working deterrent.
That may not be the feeling of everyone in this House, but it is
certainly that of us in the DUP and I think of the majority of
the House. Can the Minister send me details on capability and the
future role of the nuclear programme and how that will impact on
our current budgetary plans? I also invite the Minister to visit
Northern Ireland and see at first hand the good work being done.
Will he give Northern Ireland companies the chance to be at the
Defence and Security Equipment International expo in London in
September? That would be to everyone’s benefit.
I wish to conclude by thanking members of the armed forces for
their service to our constituents across this great nation of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Every night
away from home and every missed graduation ceremony or birthday
is not forgotten by us in this House. Although we cannot give the
armed forces all that they deserve, we in this House give them
our loyalty and sincere thanks from a grateful nation.
6.37pm
(Plymouth, Sutton and
Devonport) (Lab/Co-op)
This has been a serious debate, reflecting darkening times,
uncertain times and the growing confidence of our adversaries.
The warnings from the most senior Conservative Back Benchers were
carefully worded, but behind that precision is deep worry. The
right hon. Member for Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood) rightly said
that the cuts to our defence have been “ruthless” and the Ajax
procurement process “dire”, and he was right to say that we are
in “a grim state of affairs”.
The hon. Member for Harwich and North Essex ( ) set out a mandate for
transformation. It was a lot of home truths and hard thinking
from him, and it is worth reflecting on his words. My friend the
hon. Member for Witney () spoke about the era of
peer-to-peer conflict being back, and he is right. The hon.
Member for South Dorset () yet again made the case for
halting the 10,000 cuts to the Army, which we on this side of the
House agree with and share his view on.
I also thank my hon. Friends who contributed to this debate. My
hon. Friend the Member for City of Chester () set out clearly Chester’s
keen defence links, including with HMS Albion, a proud
Devonport-based ship in my constituency. It serves Chester and
Plymouth well. My hon. Friends the Members for Newcastle upon
Tyne North () and for Caerphilly
() spoke about their trips to
Estonia. Having visited last year, I know just how seriously the
people of Estonia take their commitment to NATO and how much they
value the United Kingdom’s support. The Minister sketched over
the departure of the second battle group from Estonia, and I hope
that any discomfort that may have been created with our Estonian
friends has now been patched up, because we need to make sure
that we have a clear presence there with no chance of Putin
putting an inch between us and our allies.
The delay to the defence Command Paper, as set out by my hon.
Friend the Member for Newcastle upon Tyne North, is frustrating,
and I hope that will be rectified shortly. I am grateful for the
contribution from my right hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham,
Hodge Hill (), who spoke passionately about
the importance of soft power, which is something I hope we can
all reflect on further.
The continuous at-sea deterrent was mentioned a number of times
by Members on both sides of the House. It is really important
that we thank the people who serve on the submarines, but also
the people who support the submarines, including those who refit
and service the Vanguard class submarines, again in Devonport in
my constituency. As a proud Plymouth MP, I am proud to represent
a military city and proud to represent those people who serve
supporting our armed forces. I would like to agree with the hon.
Member for Angus () about the need to recycle the
old nuclear submarines. There are very few Members on their
phones at this point—it warms my heart that they are listening to
what I am saying—but for those who want to have a look, please do
zoom in on the western side of Plymouth and see the submarines
lined up against each other. It is a sure sign that as a nation
we are not dealing with our legacy in the way we ought to, and we
must do so.
A bonus point goes to the hon. Member for Bracknell () for mentioning the five
domains. In a debate about global military operations, the
inclusion of space and cyber is absolutely vital. All-domain
warfare is there, and having been to and spoken at the Space-Comm
expo in Farnborough last week, it is very clear to me that the UK
needs to take further steps to ensure that we are fully
integrating space and cyber into all our work.
This debate takes place on the eve of Armed Forces Week, and as
the son of a Royal Navy submariner and as an MP who represents a
proud military community, I want to say thank you to and
recognise the sacrifices of our armed forces and their families
in the defence of our nation. They are the best of British, and I
echo the thanks that have been mentioned on both sides of the
Chamber for their work and sacrifices. As many other Members have
stated, I look forward to celebrating Armed Forces Day and Armed
Forces Week in my own community, and I look forward to seeing the
Secretary of State—or whichever Defence Minister it may be—in
Falmouth for the national celebrations.
This debate is taking place under the long shadow of Ukraine, and
the support that has been offered by the United Kingdom should
make all of us proud. We need to ensure that we continue that
support, because this is a long-term fight. On UK military
support, the Government have had, and will continue to have,
Labour’s continued backing. The UK should be stepping up to
support Ukraine now, as the long-awaited counter-offensive has
begun. That means setting out a clear plan, as was promised by
the Secretary of State in August last year, as to what a 2023
action plan for Ukraine will mean, what the implications and
consequences for the industry are, and how we can best prepare.
The continued absence of that plan is telling.
The war in Ukraine has had a profound effect on how future global
military operations will be conducted. Our allies in NATO and
Europe—the likes of Germany, France, Poland, Estonia and
Lithuania—have all rebooted their defence plans and their
budgets. We also need to have a strategic rethink of the UK’s
defence plans, but so far this seems to be lacking from the
Government. Labour has argued for defence plans to be rebooted
since March 2022. Why are we still waiting? Ministers must reboot
defence plans, looking again at and halting their cuts to the
Army, ensuring that our NATO obligations are met in full and
renewing Britain’s contract with our forces.
As the shadow Defence Secretary, my right hon. Friend the Member
for Wentworth and Dearne (), rightly highlighted at the
beginning of this debate, we are meant to be debating the new
defence Command Paper about now. The delay in that paper coming
forward is disappointing. I would be grateful if the Minister,
when he gets to his feet, could set out when that paper will be
published, and whether it will contain more Tory cuts to our
armed forces. In the words of the Defence Secretary earlier this
year, the Government had “hollowed out and underfunded” our armed
forces. That degree of honesty was welcome at the time, but
honesty should come with consequences in the adjustment of the
strategy, and we all look forward to seeing whether that has
taken hold in the defence Command Paper.
When we talk about global military operations, we must also talk
about the morale of our forces. It is the duty of any Government
to make sure that those on the frontline do not have to worry
about the home front, but the reality right now for many of our
service personnel is very different. Many members of our armed
forces are living in, frankly, appalling service accommodation,
putting up with damp and mould, broken boilers and endless waits
for repair. The hon. Member for Witney was right to raise that in
his remarks. Poor military accommodation has a direct impact on
forces morale, and on recruitment and retention. Satisfaction
with service life in the UK armed forces has fallen from 60% in
2010 to 42% this year. Four in 10 UK military personnel have
stated that poor morale is increasing the likelihood of their
leaving the armed forces. That is why in March this year Labour
launched Homes Fit for Heroes, a campaign to highlight the poor
state of our armed forces accommodation, and make it clear that
when in government it will be a priority to sort that out. The
truth is that Ministers could have made that a priority; this
could have been sorted out over the past 13 years if they had
wanted to do that, and it is important that it is fixed.
Under successive Governments since 2010 the Conservatives have
wasted at least £15 billion of taxpayers’ money through MOD
mismanagement and defence procurement mistakes, with £5 billion
wasted since 2019 alone, while the current Defence Secretary has
been in place. How much money is in the budget is as important as
what we spend it on, and the certainty of what we spend that
money on is important. As someone who grew into defence policy
from a passion for the Royal Navy, I would be grateful if the
Minister confirmed the future for Royal Fleet Auxiliary ships
Wave Ruler and Wave Knight. At the weekend it looked as if they
would be decommissioned by the Government because of a lack of
service personnel. Will the Minister set out whether an accurate
assessment has been in the media, and say what will happen to the
RFA’s tanker capability without those ships being held at
readiness?
In conclusion, this debate has set out clearly that the world is
more uncertain than it has been for some time. It has also set
out why a reboot of the UK’s military plans is necessary and
required. Let us not look back on these debates in future years
and see a Parliament squandering precious time. Let us back our
armed forces, rearm by filling our stockpiles, and ensure that
the Government look again at their plans to cut 10,000 soldiers
from the Army, and look again at the year in, year out defence
cuts. I hope we have more debates such as this, in which there
are more difficult challenges, and hard thinking and constructive
criticism. Our defence and security depends on getting this
right, and on a cross-party basis it is essential that we do
that.
6.46pm
The Minister for Defence People, Veterans and Service Families
( )
I thank the hon. Member for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport
() for his remarks and for the
support he has given to our current operations and the men and
women of our armed forces. I am pleased he cited Albion. I have
visited Albion twice in the recent past, once in Plymouth and
once overseas. He was also right to support the men and women of
our Submarine Service; I would expect nothing else from a
Devonport MP. They are unsung heroes and do an extraordinary
thing. He hinted at the NATO defence model, which is important at
the moment as we consider Vilnius and what follows from that.
It is reasonable to say that the UK will remain a trenchant
supporter of NATO and what it does, and its ask. It is the
cornerstone of our defence, notwithstanding the remarks that were
made, quite reasonably, by right hon. and hon. Members about
forming alliances wherever it is expedient to do so. Indeed, I
was particularly heartened in that respect by the comments made
by my hon. Friend the Member for Harwich and North Essex ( ) about the European Union.
We have to be pragmatic about our alliances and where we form
them, in order to promote our shared and common interests. The
men and women of our armed forces are extraordinary. They do
things that the vast majority of our fellow citizens are not
called on to do. Particularly as we approach 24 June, Armed
Forces Day, it is right that so many Members took the opportunity
to pay tribute to them.
This has been a good debate—discursive on occasion, off the point
from time to time, but in general a thoughtful contribution to
Britain’s place in the world, and specifically to what part
defence plays in that. A year after I was born, US Secretary of
State Dean Acheson, who was no fan of the United Kingdom, quipped
that Great Britain had
“lost an empire but has not yet found a role.”
If that was true then, I do not think it true now, and recent
events have confirmed that.
Put simply, our role today is to safeguard and improve the lives
of those whom we represent. Most hon. Members in the Chamber
would agree that defence is central to that—we are among
friends—but it is right that we are challenged on whether the £50
billion we now spend on it might be better deployed elsewhere.
After all, the Almighty provided us with a quite adequate natural
defensive position in the form of the channel, which is a bit
like the Alps in respect of Switzerland. Why not shelter and
cower behind that? Why not announce that the UK will henceforth
simply be patrolling its Euro-Atlantic backyard and take a
dividend that could be used to give public services a welcome
shot in the arm? We are all facing re-election next year, and
that would surely be quite appealing, would it not?
Well, first there is Ukraine. Some nations in the global south
may try to convince themselves that Russia’s neo-imperialistic
war of conquest is no more than a little local difficulty. Less
enlightened jurisdictions may even revel in a challenge to a
stable democratic and liberal world order. They are wrong.
Putin’s behaviour has had global consequentials with the pain
falling on ordinary people everywhere through food shortages, the
energy crisis, the cost of living and opportunities forgone:
their hopes, their dreams and their future. In a thoughtful
contribution, the hon. Member for Newcastle upon Tyne North
() made that point
well.
What has happened has real-life consequences, not just for those
individuals caught up in the immediacy of that terrible conflict
but for people right across the world, and those who are affected
the most are the poorest. Meanwhile, China watches and waits,
inscrutably. How we respond to Putin today will determine what
happens in the Indo-Pacific tomorrow. Get it right in our
Euro-Atlantic backyard today and we may yet avoid conflict in the
South China sea.
Britain’s global contribution buys us influence that benefits all
our constituents. I have seen it myself, serving in the Navy and
at the MOD and the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Whether it is a carrier visiting the Indo-Pacific, our Air Force
evacuating citizens from earthquake-hit Turkey or our Army
working with Kenya to strengthen regional security, the signal
that we send to a transactional world is that Britain is a
serious player; one to be reckoned with and one that can be
relied on. Tangible examples of that reliance are AUKUS and the
Global Combat Air Programme. The US, Australia, Japan and Italy
chose to work with us because they knew that we could deliver.
Look at what those partnerships mean for our country: thousands
of jobs and the creation of a long-term skills base that will
give a generation of young people cutting-edge skills to succeed
in the decades ahead.
There is a further reason why the UK should retain its global
presence. It is about values and the sense that the UK is a force
for good in the world. We have seen in recent times that whenever
adversaries detect liberal democracies weakening, they move to
fill the gap. The UK, as the world’s oldest democracy, a member
of the UN Security Council and a nation with global reach, has a
responsibility to show leadership, stand up for values that make
chaos and conflict less likely and promote peace and
prosperity.
In the time available, I will attempt to do some justice to the
points raised. First, I turn to the hon. Member for Strangford
(), because the first shall be last, and the last shall
be first—that is Luke 13:30. I agree with him that continuous at
sea-deterrence is a necessary evil. I wish that we did not need
it, but we do, and we will. In the spring statement, £3 billion
was announced for the nuclear enterprise. That is a big
commitment and a vote of confidence in those who undertake this
vital task. I thank him for his invite to Northern Ireland and
will very much take him up on that in the near future.
My hon. Friend the Member for Harwich and North Essex is always
thoughtful and, as always, I agreed with much of what he had to
say. He is right to point out that, in this country, our military
workforce has always expanded and contracted. That has been in
the nature of how we have done defence for all time. That is
perhaps by virtue of the fact that we are blessed with quite a
lot of water between ourselves and those who have historically
been our adversaries, but the crucial thing is that we need to be
able to scale up quickly when the time demands it. He was also
right to point out that we need agility—particularly in relation
to equipment—and sovereign capability. That is one of the lessons
of the recent past.
Of course, none of this defence is cost-free. If I may be ever so
generically critical of the debate, very few of us have really
bent our minds to what it costs, although I have hinted at it in
suggesting somewhat rhetorically that there is an opportunity
cost to it all: we could spend more on defence, but we would have
to find that from somewhere else. I can assure the hon. Member
for Caerphilly () that there is an active
dialogue with all those supporting Ukraine right now. I am very
pleased to say that at all levels—politicians, officials and
members of the military—the United Kingdom is taking a lead. I
think the facts bear that out. He should be proud of the
leadership role we are taking, and I say that to him in all
sincerity.
I cannot do justice to the detailed points made by my hon. and
gallant Friend the Member for Bracknell (). As a logistician, I
expect him to make a number of forensic points, but he is quite
right to say that we should not be matching the good against the
exquisite. Never let the excellent be the enemy of the good. I
think he mentioned a medal for CASD. Of course, all medallic
recognition is kept under continual review. I cannot give him a
commitment. I would just point out, although I know it is second
best, that the deterrent patrol pin was produced in 2009, the
50th anniversary of CASD, which I know a lot of submariners wear
with pride.
I thank the hon. Member for City of Chester () for her support in backing
the UK’s efforts to support Ukraine. That is much appreciated.
She spoke about digital and cyber. However, she did seem to be
committing her party to more defence spending. I will come on to
that in a minute.
My hon. Friend the Member for Witney () understandably focused on
the Royal Air Force. I look forward to being in his constituency
very soon indeed. He made a point about dispersal, which took me
back to world war two. From my memory of a number of films from
that time, dispersal is very much an RAF thing. I agree with him,
but there is, again, a cost in terms of money and, probably,
efficiency and delivering effect, but the point is extremely well
made. He also made a point about the importance of logistics,
which is not glamorous.
The hon. Member for Newcastle upon Tyne North spoke about
Estonia, which was music to my ears. I have been there on a
number of occasions, including very recently. I agree with her
that our enhanced forward presence there is impressive. I visited
Tapa Camp and the headquarters in Tallinn, and saw our RAF in
action at Amari. I am particularly pleased that it is an amalgam
of all three of our armed forces working together. She was also
right to cite Exercise Spring Storm, which I witnessed while I
was there.
My hon. Friend the Member for South Dorset (), a trenchant advocate of all
things to do with the armed forces, argued for an uplift. There’s
a funny old thing; I have never heard him do that before. He
called the 2% pitiful. Well, okay, but—I am sure he would agree
with me—as we aspire to do better than that, we must take others
with us, too. That is vital. Our efforts on their own will not be
sufficient in facing down some of the threats we face. I was
interested in the 5% figure he cited. I think we joined up more
or less at the same time. I have to say, though, that the effect
we are able to project these days is way greater than what he and
I would have been used to at that time. Our kit today is in a
completely different league. To compare the two is like comparing
chalk and cheese.
The right hon. Member for Birmingham, Hodge Hill () mentioned, in a thoughtful
speech, the central Asian republics—the Stans—where,
interestingly, Russia’s influence is on the wane. It is axiomatic
to say that Russia is extending its influence pretty much
everywhere, but we have to understand that in some parts of the
world, particularly in Russia’s backyard, that is not necessarily
the case. The current war and Putin’s behaviour has turned off
almost as many as it has enlisted to his particularly unpleasant
cause. The right hon. Gentleman also mentioned defence
engagement. I am very pleased he mentioned that, because when I
was in Defence previously I had some hand in increasing the
defence engagement activities we undertake. We have recently
recruited six new Defence attachés.
The hon. Member for Tiverton and Honiton () made spending commitments
on behalf of his party. I have noted those.
I really must come back at the hon. Member for Angus (). I mean, to say that the
Royal Australian Navy does not patrol off Scotland is clearly not
right. I am afraid he was not listening to the previous exchange
on the Navy’s most lethal platforms and I know the Submarine
Service will be upset with his comments.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood)
worried about headcount and equipment. He is right, but I gently
point out to all contributors today that we spend at 2%
consistently. We have done for many years and we will continue to
do so, hopefully with an uplift to 2.5%.
I am sorry that I have not left sufficient time to deal with the
remarks made by the right hon. Member for Wentworth and Dearne
(). May I, however, address his
point about a plan? Plans are great, but President Zelensky is
not too troubled, apparently, because he said:
“If everyone in the world—or at least the vast majority—were
steadfast and courageous leaders…as Britain, I am sure we would
have already ended this war and restored peace throughout our
liberated territory for all our people.”
That, I have to say, is the best endorsement for our armed forces
that I can possibly find.
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