Sir Jeremy Quin (Horsham) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered the First Report of the Defence Committee, Ready for
War?, HC 26, the Eighth Report of the Committee of Public Accounts,
Improving Defence Inventory Management, HC 66, and the Nineteenth
Report of the Committee of Public Accounts, MoD Equipment Plan
2023-33, HC 451. It is a pleasure to open this debate. There is
only one way to start it, and it is how we should start every
single debate on...Request free trial
Sir (Horsham) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the First Report of the Defence
Committee, Ready for War?, HC 26, the Eighth Report of the
Committee of Public Accounts, Improving Defence Inventory
Management, HC 66, and the Nineteenth Report of the Committee of
Public Accounts, MoD Equipment Plan 2023-33, HC 451.
It is a pleasure to open this debate. There is only one way to
start it, and it is how we should start every single debate on
defence: with a clear-eyed appreciation of the threat to our
country, our allies and our interests. Russia, which the
integrated review identified and its refresh reaffirmed as our
greatest adversary, has mobilised a war economy, spending nearly
40% of its budget on defence and security. Such is Russia’s rush
to rearm that, notwithstanding all international sanctions, the
International Monetary Fund has upgraded its economic forecast
for the country from 1.1% to 2.6%, which makes it the
fastest-growing economy in Europe.
Not only has Russia, through its renewed and devastating attack
on Ukraine, shown its willingness to disregard every aspect of
decency and international law, but its war machine is feeding an
imbalance in munitions in Ukraine which we in the west are
shamefully not doing enough to counter. The reality of war is
that, ultimately, production lines tell. Notwithstanding the £2.5
billion that the UK is spending on military support this year, we
need collectively to be doing more, not just in supporting
Ukraine but in transforming our own supply lines. We need to
enhance our own readiness to help deter Russia from a wider
conflagration.
While the threat from Russia is grave, it is not the only threat
we face. In east Asia, from which the Defence Committee has just
returned, China has doubled its official spending on defence to
$232 billion a year, although the real figure is much, much
higher. North Korea is nuclear-armed, dangerous, unpredictable,
and in closer alignment than for many years with Moscow. Iran and
its proxies are destabilising the middle east, and, via the
Houthis, pose a constant threat to shipping through the Red sea.
In that regard, the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force are
actively engaged as we speak.
Following our withdrawal from Afghanistan, the willingness of the
west to face up to these challenges is being studied by the
global south—countries that are vulnerable to destabilisation and
worse on the part of our adversaries. Any sense of the west’s
being distracted, or unwilling or unable to rise to the
challenge, risks encouraging the increasing number of autocratic
states to act in contravention of international law. The
sabre-rattling in Venezuela over resource-rich provinces of
Guyana, a Commonwealth country, is just one recent example.
Has the risk picture changed for the worse in the last few years?
Clearly it has. Have we fully risen to that challenge? We have
not. Those of us who are old enough to recall the joy of the
Berlin wall coming down will also recall that we had, in that
decade, been investing more than 5% of GDP in defence—well over
twice our current commitment. In 1989, there was a justifiable
rationale for reductions in defence spending, but what goes down
to match a decreasing threat must assuredly go back up to meet an
increasing threat, and that is where we stand today.
In the Defence Committee report, we are robust not only about the
professionalism of the armed forces, but about their ability to
rise to any challenge. However, they are being run hot
continuously, and that has a direct impact on their ability to
train for, recruit and retain for, and be equipped to face the
toughest challenge imaginable: a full-scale prolonged conflict,
alongside our allies, with a peer adversary. That is just one of
many challenges that our armed forces are designed to meet, but
it is the most significant—the challenge above all others that we
seek to deter.
I welcome the extensive engagement of our armed forces in this
year’s NATO exercise, Steadfast Defender, but the days when that
could be a routine exercise conducted by forces dedicated solely
to the preparedness to face the Russian threat are long gone. Our
forces’ sheer range of commitments, from global engagements to
domestic MACAs—military aid to civil authorities—maintain
constant pressure. The impacts are simple: recruitment and
retention that is not up to the task; a hollowing out of munition
stockpiles and our means to replenish them; and an inability to
prepare and train for the worst-case scenario at the intensity
required to bolster our allies, and with the confidence to deter
adversaries. Our report highlights the urgent need for
change.
To enable us to be fully prepared for peer-on- peer warfighting,
something must give, be it the scale of operations and
engagements or the size of national investment in defence. There
is no doubt in my mind about the course that needs to be taken.
The global operations conducted by our armed forces have a
critical supporting role in our efforts to deter and prevent
expansionism by our adversaries. What the UK needs is not a
diminution of our ambition, but an increase in our
investment.
In saying that, I am acutely aware of the regular charge that
additional UK investment in defence is wasteful if the Ministry
of Defence does not get its house in order on procurement. The
Public Accounts Committee has set out in its report the
difficulties faced by the MOD in meeting its equipment plan
objectives. Reports over the years, not least from the Defence
Sub-Committee under my right hon. Friend the Member for Rayleigh
and Wickford (Mr Francois), have highlighted where the MOD needs
to do better on procurement. I have no doubt that we will hear
from my right hon. Friend and others about some of the core
weaknesses that these reports have revealed.
(Rayleigh and Wickford)
(Con)
The answer to my right hon. Friend’s question is yes. Could he
explain to the House that one of the things that the Committee
thought about very carefully was how candid we should be about
the weaknesses in our armed forces? After much careful
deliberation, we did not include anything in our “Ready for War?”
report that we had reason to believe our potential adversaries
did not already know.
Sir
I said we would hear from my right hon. Friend, and indeed we
shall. He is absolutely right. We are incredibly careful as a
Committee to keep to the right the side of the line. There are a
lot of facts in our report that make for very, very unpleasant
reading. I do not have time to list them all today, with the
clock whirring as it is, but I commend the report. It goes
through some of the problems we face in great detail. As my right
hon. Friend says, they will be well known to our adversaries. If
we do not front up to those problems, we will be fooling no one
but ourselves.
Obviously, I have a personal interest in this matter, but I
believe that over the past five years we have seen a real
determination from the MOD to get better, and there are
structural changes that will embed improvement. The defence and
security industrial strategy moved the MOD away from competition
by default and towards viewing our defence sector as a critical
strategic asset. That has proved a timely intervention, placing
more emphasis on building sovereign capacity and greater
reassurance of our supply chains. DSIS has marked an improvement
in the relationship with industry. Companies large and small are
more engaged than they have ever been in the early thought
processes around capability requirements and specifications.
There is better investment in senior responsible owners to
exercise control and authority over projects.
When the Department and industry work together—for example, on
Poland’s defence expansion or on novel technologies for
Ukraine—it is a formidable combination. Baking exports and
industrial co-operation into procurement at the earliest stage
works for industry and for the UK. Above all, achieving minimum
deployable platforms early and allowing for spiral development,
if properly invested against, will generate not only routinely
upgraded state-of-the-art platforms, but industrial partners that
are able to retain and invest in their workforce and their
research and development. It means going beyond feast and famine,
and towards long-term co-development.
I believe that the Minister’s recently announced reforms are
excellent. They institutionalise reforms that really will improve
our procurement, but for them to work as they deserve, there
needs to be cultural change. Uniformed SROs need to recognise the
profoundly different skillset that applies to procurement. They
need to be encouraged to seek commercial and legal advice early
in order to escalate problems. Above all, they need to be willing
to recognise that when a project will not work, they should take
the learning and call it a day. If we are focused, as we must be,
on cutting-edge solutions, we must recognise that some will not
work. For any commercial entity, that is not a sign of failure;
it is a recognition that, in a portfolio, some risks will be
taken that do not succeed.
In Defence Equipment & Support there are many good people
doing a difficult and demanding job, but I believe it is
absolutely possible, as part of the current reforms, to instil
and reward greater entrepreneurialism and productivity. DE&S
has the pay freedoms to do so. With cultural change and proper
investment, the reforms will move us from peacetime lethargy,
influenced by staccato funding, closer to the urgency and realism
that the threats demand.
It is clear that no one on either side of the House should think
that we can get to where we need to be against the current threat
simply by being a bit better at procurement. As our report makes
clear, significant improvements are required in everything from
stockpiles to housing simply to retain and maintain the size of
our current force structure, let alone increase it, as we
should.
Sir (Elmet and Rothwell)
(Con)
I am glad that my right hon. Friend has mentioned accommodation,
on which I focused after succeeding him as Minister for Defence
Procurement. Does he agree that accommodation is as much a part
of operational capability as hardware in the battlefield?
Sir
I support my right hon. Friend’s point. We had “fix on failure”
for too long, although it has changed in recent years. More
investment is being put into our housing, but it is needed
because we have a crisis in retention and recruitment. As the
report sets out in vivid and very scary detail, we are losing far
more experienced personnel than we are able to recruit. Housing
is part of the offer to our brilliant defence personnel that we
need to get right.
While addressing all the issues I have mentioned, we must also
increase our fundamental defence production capability. We
underwrote commercial military expansion in the 1930s, and we
should be prepared to do the same. It is absolutely clear that,
although better buying will of course help, it should be
alongside, not instead of, sustained, effective and increased
investment.
Investment horizons on priority projects must stretch well beyond
annual commitments to allow proper planning. We will make savings
if the services do not gamble all their chips on the delivery of
a perfect platform when it is “their turn,” and they will not do
that if they know funding will be there for upgrades. Industry
will invest alongside that, will work with small and medium-sized
enterprises and will train the workforce we need if it knows that
we are marching together for the long term rather than being
marched over the edge of a cliff at the end of every order.
The need for increased defence investment would be true in any
circumstances when faced by the threats we face. It is all the
more vital when the United States’ commitment to Europe is being
questioned. Since 2015, this Government have shown themselves to
be ready to make difficult decisions, have shown leadership in
the early days on Ukraine and have increased investment. In my
personal opinion, the Government must now set out their timetable
for reaching and sustaining 2.5%.
Although decisions should be taken “capability up” rather than
“numbers down”, it is also my view that we are unlikely to be
able to meet and deter expanding threats in the longer term for
less than 3%, which remains a low level of annual insurance
compared with the relatively recent past. However, the sooner the
Government commit and invest, the lower the ultimate price likely
to fall on this country. By doing so, we might be able to help
save all of Europe by our example. Failure to invest could result
in a very high price indeed.
12.09pm
Dame (Hackney South and Shoreditch) (Lab/Co-op)
I really welcome this debate, in which five former Defence
Ministers are speaking. That is probably a record—certainly in
recent years. I very much thank the Chair of the Defence
Committee for laying out the global challenges this country faces
and some of the capability concerns. Given the expertise in the
Chamber, I know that we will hear more about that.
I stand here as Chair of the Public Accounts Committee, which
sometimes feels a bit like the second Defence Committee because
of the amount of time we spend examining the vast expenditure
that this country makes on defence. Taxpayers give this money to
the Government trusting that it will be spent well, but sadly all
too often we see that it is not spent as well as it should be. We
see money going in but we do not see the capability coming out
that we require. The PAC examines that defence spending and the
delivery; our job is to look at the economy, efficiency and
effectiveness of how taxpayers’ money is spent by Government. As
I say, the Ministry of Defence too often falls short on that.
The Committee has huge concerns about the MOD’s ability to
deliver projects on time and to budget. This report is only one
of our latest on the subject. Just because we have war paint on
ships or something is very important, interesting and exciting
technology to support our men and women on the frontline does not
mean that it should not be treated like any other major project
in Government and be managed well and properly. There is no point
in having something perfect but late if our frontline personnel
need it. As our report highlights, recent global events, which I
will not go into, as the Chair of the Defence Committee has
outlined them, throw into sharp focus why it is so vital that we
deliver on time and that we have the capability, including
industrial capability, to ramp up when something, such as
munitions, for example, are used apace.
The PAC has examined the annual equipment plan from the MOD for
more than 12 years. We have done that throughout the time I have
been a member of the Committee, for the past nine years of which
I have had the privilege of being its Chair. The defence
equipment plan is the 10-year programme for the capability that
the MOD says it requires and it lays out how that will be funded,
and where the challenges and gaps in funding are. All bar last
year’s plan were deemed unaffordable, but the PAC took the view
that even in the year when the plan from the MOD came out as
affordable, it was based on assumptions that were not realistic,
and we did not believe it was fully affordable.
In simple terms, affordability is about the gap between the
capability the plan lays out and the money available. As the plan
covers 10 years, there have been times when Ministers, including
some of the former Ministers present and perhaps even the current
Minister, might have come up with reasons for that. They say,
“Over 10 years, it is fine. We’ll juggle it a bit. We will
balance a bit. We’ll get efficiency savings here and there.” We
have seen those arguments and excuses far too often, and the
efficiencies do not arrive or issues arise and defence programmes
are put off and delayed. By delaying them we see a reprofiling of
the costs, but no real reduction in them, and we see those
chickens coming home to roost.
This year, the gap between the capability required and what is
affordable is £16.9 billion—so it is nearly £17 billion over the
10-year period. We can then add in what the Army would deliver.
It is perhaps worth my explaining that for some odd reason—the
PAC has taken a strong view on this and even the permanent
secretary at the MOD has acknowledged that there was an
anomaly—when the Commands and the MOD put in their costs for the
programmes, most of them put in the full costs of all the
capability required, but the Army puts in only the costs of what
it could afford. If we add in the capability that the Army
actually requires, we are adding a further £12 billion to that
nearly £17 billion, thus making the gap even bigger. There has
been a clear deterioration in affordability. It is fair to say
that £10 billion of that is because of inflationary costs—we
partly know the reasons for that, but I am not going to go into
them now—and about £2 billion is to do with foreign exchange
costs. Again, the PAC examines those regularly with the MOD and
the Treasury, but however we hedge it there will be some
challenge on foreign exchange because of the nature of some of
our defence procurement.
(North Durham) (Lab)
Does my hon. Friend agree that that has been made worse by the
MOD’s tendency to purchase off-the-shelf solutions from the
United States in dollars, which is now accounting for a huge
amount of the defence budget? As she says, even with hedging,
this is a deadweight around the defence budget.
Dame
My right hon. Friend raises an important point, and we could
almost have a whole debate about that. We do not have time to go
into the full detail today, but I will touch on our defence
industrial strategy. That is what a lot of this comes down to; if
we are buying things off the shelf, it can sometimes be more
cost-effective, but we need to be careful and cautious, because
the longer those projects are for, the greater the risk of
foreign exchange challenges. There is also sometimes a risk to
our own sovereign capability and the longevity of some of our
defence industries.
We recognise that, with our allies, we work in an international
world on this. So there is no straightforward answer, but defence
industrial strategy is an area that not only the MOD but the
whole of Government should be looking at, as it is vital. Both
the Chancellor and shadow Chancellor talk about growing the
economy, and our defence industries are based in areas where, if
we could up the skills and jobs available, it could provide a
major boost to the economy. So there are a lot of opportunities
there.
The MOD has not credibly demonstrated how it will manage its
funding to deliver the military capabilities the Government want.
Our latest report says that they need to get “firmer control of
defence procurement” because of this very large deficit in
respect of the capability requirements needed. The budget has
increased, and I am sure the Minister will stand up to tell us
how much extra money is going into defence, but this is about not
just the money, but how it is managed. The budget has increased
by £46.3 billion over the next 10-year period compared with what
was set out in last year’s equipment plan. As I said, the PAC has
warned that the deficit is even bigger than expected, so that
extra budget will be taken up by the deficit if it is not managed
down. Part of the reason for that deficit is inflation, but
another major impact on it is the costs of the Defence Nuclear
Organisation, which is responsible for the vital nuclear
deterrent. Those costs have increased by £38.2 billion since last
year’s plan.
One of our Committee’s other concerns is that the MOD has been
putting off making decisions about cancelling or reprofiling
programmes. Reprofiling is not always a good thing, but sometimes
we have to trim according to what is necessary. If the MOD cannot
afford the plan, it should take a hard decision, but it has
optimistically assumed that the plan would be affordable if the
Government fulfilled their long-term aspiration to spend 2.5% of
GDP on defence each year, despite there being no guarantee that
that will happen. Of course, in an election year there is not
even a guarantee as to which party will be in government to
consider that. We know, and the Defence Committee will know even
more than the PAC, how much the MOD is increasingly reliant on
the UK’s allies to protect our national interests. That means
that we also have to play our part by making sure that we are
delivering that.
For all the time that I have served on the PAC— 13 years this
year—the MOD has been led by optimism bias, and it is now
pressing on based on not optimism but the sniff of optimism, as
there is so little left in that approach that will deliver. We
must call that out and call a spade a spade, by saying that the
MOD can deliver only what is affordable. So either the money goes
in or the MOD trims what it is trying to do, because the approach
of trying to do everything all at once and not being able to
afford it is just not going to work.
Sir
I am listening carefully to what the hon. Lady is saying. I have
not cast my eye over the report she is speaking about. She talks
about the Government or the MOD trimming projects. The lessons of
slashing the number of Type
45s in half have had a huge impact on naval capability, and of
course we have more than 530 Ajax tanks to come. When we say that
we must make savings, are we talking about a false economy? In
the long run, it is far better to increase the GDP spend than to
slash projects and totally undermine how the defence programme
was originally laid out.
Dame
I am tempted by the right hon. Gentleman to go into all sorts of
long discussion about how the PAC looks at these issues.
Resetting projects and programmes can certainly be problematic,
and sometimes stopping something part way through can be
expensive. Equally, however, altering the requirements part way
through can add on costs. When I talk to the commands or the
centre, one problem I find is that people sometimes want to
gold-plate what they are procuring, and we sometimes need to look
at doing those things in a different way. Brutally, let me say
that the current situation is not affordable, which means we must
make hard decisions about whether something is stopped or no
longer procured, or more money is made available. As I have said,
and as the PAC repeats ad infinitum, if more money is made
available, we need better project management.
The MOD is also saying very clearly that it will not make any
decisions until the next spending review. As everybody in the
Chamber knows, that is supposed to be in November, but a general
election is looming. A spending review is usually six months
after the first Budget of a new Government, so we could be
floating on the fumes of the current spending settlement until
the summer of next year. In certain cases, we will still be
pouring good money after bad; the Ministry of Defence needs to
tighten up on that, because it cannot live on hope alone.
I touched on industry in answer to my right hon. Friend the
Member for North Durham (Mr Jones). Industry needs a consistent
and certain supply of business to keep the supply chain going,
both for resilience and to ensure there is proper investment in
the necessary infrastructure. We have seen some of our private
sector industries leave equipment and buildings to crumble
because they have not had continuity of supply. Some blame lies
with them, not just with the Ministry of Defence, but consistency
of supply is vital and getting that right provides a potential
boon to the economy.
The Committee looks at procurement a lot. For the last decade or
more, we have been saying that senior responsible owners need to
be in place for far longer. They need to be where their expertise
is needed for the right period of time, and then be moved on for
the next phase of the project. We need to reward people who stay
in those jobs, rather than expecting civil servants or military
attachés to roll over on a three-year basis, thinking they just
need to keep things ticking over. They need proper ownership and
proper reward when they get things right. The MOD is beginning to
move in the right direction on senior responsible owners’ skills
and longevity, but it still has a lot of work to do to catch up
to where it needs to be.
I touched on funding timeframes. The Treasury needs to seriously
consider properly controlled longer-term budgets, as it is
beginning to do in certain areas with the defence equipment plan.
That does not mean giving carte blanche to the MOD; those budgets
need to be tightly controlled, as the Public Accounts Committee
has made clear. However, controlled longer-term budgets are
vital.
Finally, the Public Accounts Committee has access to many areas
of Government and all areas of spending, if we choose to look at
them. I pay tribute to my fellow Committee members who have never
leaked a single piece of information, of whatever sensitivity, in
the last nine years. However, the Committee looks at certain
issues through opaque glass and it is now time to have full
transparency. I want as much information as possible to be in the
public domain, but the mechanisms of open, public committees are
not always appropriate for certain sensitive areas, including
defence.
In our latest report, the Committee recommended that there needs
to be a new mechanism and approach that allows Parliament to
properly examine such issues in the right, secure context. That
might be along the lines of the Intelligence and Security
Committee, although we would certainly not be looking at
information in that area and not in exactly the same way, because
the Public Accounts Committee needs to be more fleet of foot on
certain day-to-day spending issues. It is time we had
transparency so the British taxpayer knows that every tax pound
that is spent, whether on defence or on sensitive matters in
other Departments, is being seen and scrutinised by senior
parliamentarians who know what they are doing. It is an early
thought of the Committee, but important to raise. We need full
transparency so that officials and Ministers who are spending
taxpayer money in this area of vast expense are properly
scrutinised on their work.
Several hon. Members rose—
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. Although there are not that many hon. Members present in
the Chamber, it is immediately clear that there is a considerable
amount of defence expertise present. That means we are likely to
have a well-informed debate, which is not always the case. That
being so, I will impose a 13-minute limit on speeches. That
should enable all Members to have their say, and allow time for a
full and proper response from the Front Benches. I hope that will
satisfy all Members. It will be a formal time limit, which means
the usual injury rules will apply. If Members take interventions,
time will be added.
12.23pm
(Rayleigh and Wickford)
(Con)
May I begin by saying to the Minister for Defence Procurement,
for whom I have great regard and who is trying to reform our
broken procurement system, that everything I say in the next few
minutes is not personally aimed at him? To quote “The
Godfather”:
“It’s not personal…It’s strictly business.”
At his speech at Lancaster House on 15 January, the new Defence
Secretary now famously said that we are moving
“from a post-war to a pre-war world”.
His words clearly resonated, both nationally and internationally.
For example, when I was on a visit to Washington recently, those
words were played back to us by Pentagon officials. Shortly
after, in an unclassified letter to all Conservative MPs, the
Defence Secretary stressed the need for industrial improvements
and to rearm, in terms reminiscent of the 1930s.
However, let us consider what that actually means. The head of
the MOD, a senior Cabinet Minister, has said, in effect, that we
are now likely to go to war. Although he did not specifically
state who with—be it Russia, China, Iran or someone else—that one
statement, which I fear may turn out to be true if we do not
rapidly improve our conventional deterrence, has incredibly
serious implications for our entire defence and security posture.
The much-vaunted integrated review has now been completely
overtaken by events. In a world with increasing Iranian-inspired
violence in the middle east, sulphurous threats over Taiwan
emanating from Beijing and now the state-sponsored murder of
Alexei Navalny, even the most naive liberals surely have to
concede that the Defence Secretary might just be right. The
integrated review, and its 2023 refresh, are completely lacking
in any great sense of urgency in response.
Similarly, the MOD defence Command Paper, which was meant to
dovetail into the integrated review, also lacked a sense of
urgency, even to the point of retiring a number of key frontline
systems, such as radar planes and tactical transport aircraft, in
favour of new equipment, arriving much later in this decade. Many
analysts expected that to change post Ukraine, but no major
equipment decisions were altered, despite Putin’s barbaric
invasion in February 2023—something that some members of the
Defence Committee effectively predicted in a debate in this House
some six weeks before the invasion began.
Dame
The right hon. Gentleman is in the unique position of being a
member of both the Public Accounts Committee and the Defence
Committee. Does he share my view that it is a bit like groundhog
day when hear the words “defence” and “review” in whichever
order? I do not know how many such reviews we have had in the
last few years, yet we never see the step change necessary to
ensure we will deliver the capability our country needs.
Mr Francois
The Chair of the PAC is entirely right, although in the MOD
context, if it is groundhog day, “groundhog” sounds like a
vehicle that has slipped to the right.
More recently, after a detailed inquiry, the Defence Committee,
on which I serve, published a damning report on 4 February 2024,
entitled simply “Ready for War?”. I have served on the Committee
since 2017 and this is one of the punchiest reports we have ever
produced. In answer to the question in the title, the all-party
Committee, which includes six former MOD Ministers,
concluded:
“Despite the United Kingdom spending approximately £50 billion a
year on defence (plus more for Ukraine) the UK’s Armed Forces
require sustained ongoing investment to be able to fight a
sustained, high-intensity war, alongside our allies, against a
peer adversary. ”
In plainer English, and as the subsequent detail in the report
starkly points out, despite a considerable outlay of taxpayer’s
cash, we could not fight a sustained war with Putin’s Russia for
more than a couple of months before we ran out of ammunition and
fighting equipment, not least as we have very few tanks, ships or
combat aircraft in reserve. The full report can be found
online.
Given that it takes years to build a modern warship—a totally
ridiculous 11 years in the case of the new Type 26 frigate—and
four years to build a Typhoon fighter, if we had to fight what
the strategists sometimes describe as a “come as you are war”,
one with little further warning, we would have to rely on
whatever equipment we had to hand or could rapidly remobilise. We
simply do not have enough war-winning kit to win as it is. As the
Public Accounts Committee’s report on the 10-year equipment plan
illustrates starkly, the difference between what the MOD aspires
to buy and the funding it is likely to have available is £17
billion. However, it is worse because the three services account
for the plan on a different basis. Without going into all the
technicalities, an apples and apples comparison across the three
services shows that the gap is £29 billion. Even beyond gaps in
capability of our kit, our greatest weakness is now the lack of
skilled personnel to operate and maintain the equipment that we
do have. Without them—and far too many of them are leaving, as
the Chair of the Defence Committee said—even multi-billion dollar
aircraft systems simply remain in the hangar.
One perfect example of how dysfunctional the MOD has now become
in relation to people is the saga of Capita—or, forgive me,
“Crapita”, as it is now affectionally known to the Defence
Committee. It has totally messed up the recruitment system for
the British Army. A few years ago, its share price topped £4;
today, it is barely 13 pence. Everyone in Defence knows that the
outsourced contract has been a disaster, yet absolutely no one in
the upper echelons of the Department has the moral courage to
sack the company. The Defence Secretary recently described the
situation in The Times as “ludicrous”. He is absolutely right.
Indeed, no doubt he has made a note of his own comments on his
own famous spreadsheet, but still nothing actually happens.
Capita limps on as the Army bleeds out—with, in some parts of the
Army, three soldiers now leaving for every one that Capita
somehow, painfully, manages to recruit. If we think we are going
to deter the likes of Vladimir Putin in this manner, we are
living on a different planet, in a parallel universe, in a
fantasy dimension.
Given that we now spend the thick end of £50 billion a year on
defence, the British taxpaying public are quite entitled to ask
why so little of our defence capability works properly. Why are
some of the Army’s fighting vehicles 60 years old? Why do we have
hardly any battle tanks that actually work? Why do we have hardly
any submarines that are now regularly put to sea? Why do we have
aircraft carriers that perennially break down whenever they try
to leave port? Bluntly, it is because we now have a Ministry of
Defence that has become in recent years a gigantic, sclerotic
bureaucracy; constantly hidebound by needless, self-generated red
tape; obsessed with process rather than outcomes; in which some
senior civil servants are now more interested in wokery than
weaponry, endlessly ripped off by some of their own major
contractors, such as Boeing, to name but one; and in which key
elements of our fighting equipment are so old—and the procurement
system for replacing them so broken—that we now cannot fight a
major war with Russia for more than a few weeks, as it well
knows.
Moreover, as the Red Book clearly shows in tables 2.1 and 2.2, we
are cutting the core UK defence budget next year by £2.5 billion
and playing “smoke and mirrors” with the donations to Ukraine and
with addressing an overspend on the nuclear enterprise from the
Treasury reserve in order to pretend otherwise. This act of what
the Russians call “maskirovka”, or strategic deception, is wholly
unworthy of a Conservative Government. If Members happen to
believe, as I do, that the role of our armed forces is
determinedly to save lives by convincing any potential aggressor
that, were they to attack us, we would defeat them, then we are
palpably failing.
This is not an intellectual parlour game. Ultimately, this is
about whether our grandchildren are going to grow up in someone
else’s re-education camp, but we might not know that if we walked
into the current MOD. We can try to blame the military, for
instance, for so frequently over-specifying new military
equipment, such as Ajax, that it enters service many years late,
but in the end the responsibility lies with the politicians who,
theoretically at least, are supposed to be in charge.
The Romans had a famous saying about military matters: “Si vis
pacem, para bellum”—he who desires peace save-line3should prepare
for war. Given that the Secretary of State, the man who runs the
Department, has told us that we are in a pre-war world, surely we
had better start preparing for it, if we are to have any chance
whatsoever of preventing it, and we should now do that in
earnest, before it is too late.
Sir (New Forest East) (Con)
I am grateful to my right hon. Friend for giving way. I know that
he is coming towards the end of his speech. Would he care to
remark on a couple of slightly more optimistic features of
deterrence, because deterrence of conventional forces depends on
far more than an equal balance of equipment, even though, as he
says, we are nowhere near achieving that? It also depends on our
allies and others who will fight in the same cause. Does he not
accept that it is not just enough to take our defence spending up
to 3% or more, such as the 5% we regularly spent through the cold
war, but essential to ensure that our American allies remain
totally involved in the deterrence process and that the
Ukrainians succeed in fending off Russia, because if they succeed
we can contain Russia in the future, as we successfully did in
the past?
Mr Francois
I agree with every word my right hon. Friend, the former eminent
Chairman of the Defence Committee, just said. My one caveat is
that the MOD’s excuse for these capability gaps is that we can
rely on allies to fight with us. But they will be relying on us,
and if we are unable to support them or they are on wartime tasks
elsewhere, things might go horribly wrong.
I say all of this not just as someone who served proudly as a
Territorial Army infantry officer in my local Royal Anglian
Regiment during the cold war; not just as someone who is still
very proud to carry the late Queen’s commission; not just as a
former veterans and then Armed Forces Minister in the Ministry of
Defence, albeit almost a decade ago; but most of all, as I said
at Prime Minister’s questions last week, as the devoted son of a
D-day veteran. Stoker 1st Class Reginal Francois died when I was
40 years of age. He told me one night of the carnage—his
word—that he witnessed that day, albeit from offshore, on a
minesweeper named HMS Bressay. In the afternoon, they were
opposite Omaha beach.
Let me quote Shakespeare’s famous phrase:
“This story shall the good man teach his son.”
My father was a good man. The story that he told me was of a
country that eventually, reluctantly, had to go to war against
the evil of Nazi tyranny because for years its politicians had
been so parsimonious—he actually said “tight”—and so naive that
when Nazism emerged, we completely failed to deter it. That is
the lesson of the 1930s, but it was also his lesson to me.
My father made me take a solemn vow that, as his son, I would
never take living in a free country for granted, because, as he
said, too many good men had died to achieve it. Two years after
we had that conversation, he was dead. That is why I am here this
afternoon. That is why I came into politics in the first place.
As a wartime serviceman, my father was a great admirer of Winston
Churchill, our greatest ever Prime Minister, who led this country
through a war of national survival and then lost a general
election for his trouble. When I walked into the Chamber earlier
this afternoon, I could still see the damage caused when the
Chamber was bombed in 1941. Churchill insisted that it not be
repaired, lest we forget, and he was right.
In summary, I may not be my father’s contemporary, that famously
courageous MP, Leo Amery, so I cannot claim to “speak for
England” on this matter, but I was elected to speak for the
people of Rayleigh and Wickford, and so, on their behalf, I issue
this stark warning today. The skies are darkening. Brutal
dictators with powerful weapons at their disposal are on the
rise. The democracies are on the backfoot rather than the front.
History tells us time and again, and indeed ad nauseam, that the
appeasement of dictators—be they called Adolf Hitler or Vladimir
Putin—does not work. We should be increasing the defence budget
to at least 3% of GDP—what my right hon. Friend the Member for
New Forest East (Sir ) used to call “at least three
to keep us free”—not cutting it, as we now are, and pretending
that we are not. The first duty of Government, above all others,
is the defence of the realm, and we forget that at our peril. Si
vis pacem, para bellum.12.40pm
(Warley) (Lab)
The debate encompasses a wide range of issues. My colleague on
the Defence Committee, the right hon. Member for Rayleigh and
Wickford (Mr Francois), outlined some of them. I will focus on
one aspect: industrial capacity, by which I mean not only the
big, well-known manufacturing plants, or the well-known prime
companies that we often rightly hear from in the national media,
but their extended supply chains and material suppliers, and
equally their often under-remarked-on workforce—not just the
engineers and craftsmen but the crucial production workers, who
are vital for ramping up production and our ability to surge in a
crisis. We have experienced difficulties with that in response to
the war in Ukraine.
Many in that supply chain also sell to the civilian market,
including the public sector. Many of the specialist engineering
companies in the midlands supply Formula 1, civil aviation and
premium vehicles, as well as defence. They need orders from
defence and from public sector bodies to maintain their workload
and employment, and to train the workforce of the future. That is
why—this will be a theme throughout my contribution—a
whole-of-Government approach is necessary. Underlying that is the
question of whether we are in a new environment or just an
oscillation. Basically, is there a war going on? The people of
Ukraine certainly know that. The Baltic nations, Poland, Finland
and Sweden know that. It does not mean that war is inevitable,
but it certainly means that it is now possible, and failure to
respond will actually make it more likely.
One has to question whether the commentariat and the British
establishment understand that. The Government need to make clear
their view on the state of international relations. Do they
regard the invasion of Ukraine by Russia as an interlude—a very
bloody one—after which the situation will return to something
approximating normal, albeit not the status quo ante, or has
there in fact been a tectonic shift, and are we at best back in
the cold war, although with a hot war going on in Ukraine and the
danger of extension elsewhere along the new iron curtain that is
descending over Europe? That is clearly understood not just by
the politicians and the defence establishment, but by the publics
in Sweden and Finland, with a dramatic shift in opinion, after
centuries of neutrality, and their historic decision to join NATO
and become very active participants.
Even so, across NATO, there is not that sense of urgency, or a
clear realisation of the crisis. Only this week, the boss of the
Scandinavian ammunition company Nammo was in the press pointing
out that societies were still in peacetime mode. He gave the
example of its factory in Norway, which needs additional
electricity supply capacity in order to expand. A new site for
TikTok has been created nearby, but the factory cannot get enough
electricity. He rightly pointed out that the defence of western
Europe is slightly more important than cat videos on TikTok. He
contrasted that with the Defence Production Act in the United
States, which was the Truman-era response to the Korean war,
based on the Franklin D. Roosevelt War Powers Act. It gives
extensive powers to the US Government, and they are using them.
That is why they are responding to the weaknesses in procurement
and ramping up production capacity, including through several
Government-owned and Government-constructed, company-operated
plants. Will the Minister indicate whether our Government are
looking at that as a possible mechanism?
Do the Government recognise the fragility of the supply
situation? Recent crises such as covid, and the situation in the
Red sea and Ukraine, have already shown how vulnerable our supply
chains are, and many firms and customers are finding that the
so-called cheapest option can end up being very expensive. To be
fair, that applies not just to the United Kingdom; all around the
world, companies are finding that extended supply lines and
single points of failure at home or abroad can have very damaging
consequences. The discussion has shifted, and now there is much
talk about reshoring, near-shoring and friend-shoring. I am not
sure how much of that has penetrated the calcified mindset of our
Treasury and the senior civil service, but I hope that the
Minister will be able to shed some light on that.
This is not a Eurocentric issue; we must also be aware of the
increasing tension in the Gulf, particularly arising from the
destabilising impact of Iran and its proxies across the middle
east and north Africa, as well as the increasingly aggressive
attitude of China, which is why deepening relations through AUKUS
and with Japan is so necessary and welcome. I hope that the
Minister can report on the success this week at the
AUKMIN—Australia-UK ministerial consultations—and AUKUS
conferences taking place in Australia. We fully understand why
the Secretary of State is there today, rather than responding to
this debate.
We have to be clear that these problems did not come out of a
clear blue sky. They were shown to us some years ago. The right
hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford identified the evidence
that we had from an American general. When the Americans
conducted an exercise with the British Army about an outbreak of
conflict in Europe, we basically ran out of munitions in about 10
days, but nothing was done about it. Even once the conflict
started in Ukraine in February 2022, and it soon became clear
that artillery would play a major role in it, the Ministry of
Defence did not place an order for new shells until July 2023.
The Minister cannot complain that I have not given him notice of
this issue; I have raised it several times in previous debates,
and have never had a satisfactory answer about that delay. We
cannot afford that degree of indecision going forward. It is not
as though we have not had shell crises before; we had one in
1915, which brought down the Government. I am afraid that there
does not seem to be much collective institutional memory in the
civil service today.
Mr Francois
We are giving £2.5 billion in the next financial year to Ukraine,
and it is money well spent, but we cannot spend the same pound
twice, so does the right hon. Gentleman agree that if we rightly
give that money to Ukraine, we cannot then spend it on Army
salaries, British shells or submarine maintenance? In other
words, it is for the Ukrainians; it is not part of the UK defence
budget, is it?
Well, it is unfortunately scored as being in the UK defence
budget, and in the claim that we are keeping up defence
expenditure; that masks an actual cut in British domestic defence
spending. It is absolutely right that we supply the Ukrainians—I
think we should be supplying more—as they are on the frontline
and are carrying the fight. We—not just us, but the rest of
Europe, the United States and the free world—should be backing
them up with matériel. I agree with the right hon. Gentleman that
trying to slip that into the defence budget, rather than it being
part of our national commitment, is the wrong way of handling
it.
Even with new production, I am still not clear—perhaps the
Minister will clarify this—on what is happening with the
increasing capacity for propellants and explosives. Across the
western world, very few points—just two or three factories—are
capable of making them, and they are stretched to capacity. I
understand that difficulty, but I want to know what is being done
to create new capacity. I know that the United States is doing
it, but what are we doing here and in Europe? In that context, I
commend the article from Iain Martin in The Daily Telegraph, in
which he says that, whatever our differences with other European
countries over the EU and Brexit, we should certainly be working
much more closely on maintaining and creating new defence
capacity—not just military but industrial as well.
Although I accept that the Government and this House must take
the lead, others must follow. If we are, as I have been arguing,
in a new defence environment, the City of London and the finance
houses must accept their responsibilities. They must make it
clear that not only is investment in defence a good investment as
it leads part of British manufacturing, but it is their patriotic
duty and part of the defence of the free world. However, getting
that message across and changing the mindset needs a
whole-of-Government approach, not just the involvement of the
Ministry of Defence and those of us in the House who are
interested in the subject.
As I said to union representatives in the evidence session, the
unions have tens of thousands of members in the defence and
aerospace sector. They should not stand idly by while mobs try to
shut down their workplaces. Only this week, we had demonstrations
outside GE Aerospace in Cheltenham, which was, for over a
century, the Smiths factory. There have also been protests
outside the Leonardo site in Edinburgh, which I presume is the
old Ferranti site. I hope that unions are backing not just their
members’ employment but the national interest, and will look at
whether any funding is going to bodies that are organising to
shut those places.
I fully acknowledge the issues facing our uniformed forces, as
well as their expertise and commitment. I am pleased that others
will highlight their contribution. I regret that the Government
have taken their commitment for granted. In any conflict, supply
and resupply are crucial. Conflicts are won not just on the
battlefield, but—sometimes even more so—in our factories and
those of our allies. That is why we need a rethink, a reset and a
recovery of lost ground. Will the Government take up that
challenge?
12.53pm
(Hereford and South
Herefordshire) (Con)
We face a world of complexity and threat unparalleled in our
recent modern experience. Scanning across Europe, south-east Asia
and the middle east, we see that this is a world where there are
threats emerging, or already in place, to which we as a nation,
with our allies, must attend and deal with. We do so in an
environment where the most powerful—or almost most
powerful—mechanisms affecting our lives are working every day:
the effect of technology and changes in price. Their effect is to
bring forward new ways of making war that might have been
unimaginable two years ago. They have the effect of bringing new
actors—private actors, not merely states—into the picture; that
might have been unimaginable just a few years ago. We see
evolution rapidly occurring in the nature of the threat that we
must deal with.
The report produced by the Select Committee, which I was proud to
join earlier this year, is in my view not just an exemplary piece
of work, but testimony to the Committee’s quality. I speak as
someone who sat for five years on the Treasury Committee —no
slouch when it comes to quality and expertise—and then chaired a
Select Committee myself. I have been deeply impressed by the
quality of thought, the experience and the attention that my
colleagues and Clerks have brought to these matters. The report
is a very good example of that.
Crucially, the report brings out some of the foundational
assumptions that have not yet been adequately tested in our
defence thinking. It is above all about our readiness; not just
our operational and warfighting readiness, but our strategic
readiness and our capacity to think ahead to where the
escalating, multiplying and developing threat might be in future,
and how we can, in a full spirit of resilience, prepare for it. I
congratulate the Committee on its work. I have been proud to be
associated with it, and congratulate those who made previous
contributions to this excellent debate.
We know, because there is ample historical evidence, that
democracies can fight wars with an intensity and endurance that
is not available to autocracies. However, it has historically
taken democratic states time to get moving—time to move public
opinion; time to bring the people, the demos, with the
politicians and with Government, in order to bring the full
resources of a nation to bear. In the modern world, we may not
have time to do that; we must start to prepare now—and not just
our warfighting capability. It has rightly been highlighted today
that we are moving from a post-war to a pre-war world. In that
sense, we must give the need for resolution and resilience the
profile that it requires among people across the country.
It is not the first time that these matters have occurred, as the
House will well know. In the 18th century—a time when this
country was more or less continuously at war, with relatively
small intervals of peace—there was a period when there was
tremendous concern about the effects of commercial society and
peace. There was a worry that martial virtue might yield to
“luxury” and “softness”, as it was put. We must be aware of that
problem; we see it everywhere. I myself was in eastern Europe
before 1989. I have experienced what it is like to live under a
communist country and in the shadow of Russia. It is nothing that
anyone in this House should feel the tiniest appetite to even
glimpse, let alone endure or invite our citizens or allies to
contemplate. We must be absolutely resolute in thinking about how
we can ensure a gradual process—without the loss of our
democratic values, and given our constraints—to ready our people
for strategic decisions in due course. Everyone in this House
prays that it will never happen, but we must prepare ourselves
for the possibility that there could be some development for
which we are, as yet, inadequately prepared. We must address that
as a matter of money, organisation and, of course, talent.
We must fill the strategic gap in our thinking—a gap that is only
being accelerated by the rapid growth in artificial intelligence,
which threatens to upend not just many of the resources and
systems that we use in this country, but much of the strategic
thinking that we are bringing to the whole question of what it is
to be at war. If Members doubt that, they should look at the work
that is being done. My right hon. Friend the Member for Rayleigh
and Wickford (Mr Francois) rightly mentioned maskirovka: the use
of AI in mimicry, spoofing and false-flag operations. That is
something that we as a country are just beginning to get our head
around, even at an advanced defence and security level.
We have an escalating series of security challenges. The solution
to them is not more state, as such, but a much more intelligent
deployment of the relationship between states and markets;
between the public and the private; and between the secret, the
grey and the not-so-secret. We have to bring all those resources
with us if we are going to be successful, and we have to be more
emphatic about the desperate need for competence. That means
competence not just in our civil service and our military
capability, and of course in the agencies that work alongside
them, but in this House. Our political parties have a
responsibility to develop, recruit, enable, understand,
enfranchise and promote talent, and I put it to the House that no
political party is doing that adequately at the moment. We should
have chief talent officers in political parties—people actively
thinking about where we can find competence, capability,
knowledge and experience, and how we can deploy those things in
this great Chamber in which we have the honour to sit.
The deep issue here, if I may say so, is not just that we have a
civil service that is—as my right hon. Friend the Member for
Rayleigh and Wickford mentioned—preoccupied with process in a way
that is understandable in peace but, I am afraid, inadequate to
the preparation for war. It is not just that there is a
preoccupation with process over outcome, when outcome is the only
thing that matters when we are trying to deliver a capability; it
is that we as a nation have not yet made the intellectual, moral,
emotional and spiritual shift towards deeply preparing for a
pre-war situation. If I may make a party political point for a
second, the Government have done a splendid job in starting to
take control of a very difficult fiscal situation, which they
inherited and was built up through crisis over the past few
years, but to what end?
As was said famously by a man nearly 250 years ago in Bristol, we
come to this House not as a “congress of ambassadors”, but as
“a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest”.
That interest cannot be sectionalised, including within
Government. I say that as a former Financial Secretary; my
Chairman, my right hon. Friend the Member for Horsham (Sir ), is also a former Financial
Secretary, and we do not say that the budget for defence should
go up because we want to be profligate, nor that there should be
anything less than proper constraint and proper scrutiny of the
long-term spending of this country, but it must go up. That must
be shared across both parties; it must be something that even the
Prime Minister and the Chancellor of the Exchequer should bear in
mind and account for in this Chamber as if they were preparing
for war, so that we can all know that they have come to terms
with the compromises, difficulties and challenges that we all
face today.1.02pm
(North Durham) (Lab)
I begin by joining the Chair of the Defence Committee, the right
hon. Member for Horsham (Sir ), in thanking the men and
women of our armed forces—we should never forget their
dedication. It is often said that the first duty of government is
to keep the nation safe and protect its citizens, but we have a
Conservative party that has admitted that it has “hollowed out”
defence. We have had a return to war in Europe and growing
threats around the world, as has been explained, and we now need
a clear-eyed vision of what we need to do in defence. It is about
deterrence—there has been a lot of talk about warfighting, but
the success of defence is in deterring action from happening.
We need to recognise how we have got to where we are today. I
hear all the calls from Conservative Members for increases in
defence expenditure. I do not question those individuals’
commitment or dedication, because I know that many of them are
very committed individuals who believe in defence, as I do.
However, I find it a little ironic that between 2010 and 2016,
the defence budget in this country was cut by 18%. Even with the
increase, the defence budget is still 7% lower than it was in
2010, and the Budget on 6 March included a cut in the defence
budget. I hear all the stirring cries for increasing the defence
budget, but we did not get into this situation by accident.
In 2010, we had a Conservative-led coalition Government who tried
to scare the public by saying that they inherited a £36 billion
black hole in the defence budget. That was absolute nonsense. The
figure came from a 2009 NAO report on the equipment budget that
said that there was a £6 billion black hole in that budget, and
that if we had flat cash for the next 10 years, the figure would
be £30 billion. The spin doctors added another £6 billion to that
figure, and it became the myth that was reiterated.
That myth masked what the Government were really up to, which was
slashing the defence budget over that period, and we are still
seeing the consequences of those decisions. The right hon. Member
for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr Francois), whom I respect, talked
about a 1930s moment. I agree that we are in a 1930s moment—the
similarities are there. In the 1920s and 1930s, the Conservative
Government cut defence expenditure, including Winston Churchill,
who admitted it in later life.
Mr Francois
He was Chancellor.
Mr Jones
As Chancellor of the Exchequer, he cut defence expenditure, so
there are parallels there, but not the ones that the right hon.
Member for Rayleigh and Wickford is referring to.
Another key feature of that era was the Treasury’s 10-year rule
of basing defence expenditure on the assumption that there would
not be a war in Europe within the next 10 years, which rather
unravelled at the end of the 1930s.
Mr Jones
It did. If we look back, the common theme —it is a matter of
fact, whether people like it or not—is that we have defence cuts
under Conservative Governments, and when Labour is in power we
maintain or increase the defence budget.
Mr Francois
I hope this does not come across as nit-picking—it is important.
The 10-year rule, which was a rolling 10 years, was not just a
Treasury policy: it was the policy of the entire Government, and
it was not rescinded by the incoming Labour Government in the
1920s. It was the policy of the whole Government, and it was only
rescinded in the mid-1930s, a few years after Adolf Hitler became
Chancellor of Germany. It is important to get that right.
Mr Jones
The right hon. Gentleman has got that on the record. I am not
going to get into a history lesson about the 10-year rule—I think
the history books tell the story—but we have seen what happened
from 2010 onwards.
We have had a cut of 40,000 personnel in our armed forces, and it
is not just about numbers; it is about experience. Individuals
were made compulsorily redundant. If I had made people
compulsorily redundant when I was a Defence Minister, The Sun and
the right-wing press in this country would have been shouting
from the rooftops, but they did absolutely nothing, and we lost
experience. One in five of our ships was removed, as were more
than 200 aircraft, and the satisfaction rating among our armed
forces personnel is now below 50%. We have had a system over the
past few years that has wasted money, as we have chronicled in
our report, and we actually now have the £30 billion black hole
in our equipment budget that was predicted in 2009, as the Chair
of the Public Accounts Committee, my hon. Friend the Member for
Hackney South and Shoreditch (Dame ), has referred to.
This is not about whether the defence budget is 2%, 3% or 5%. It
is about looking at how we have got into this situation, and how
we change it—how we face the challenges that confront us today.
Whichever party is in government after the next election will
have to face those challenges, but we have to get away from
British exceptionalism. We have great ambitions to be a global
power, like some kind of imperial power. I am sorry, but we are
not. We can continue that myth ad infinitum, but unless we link
the resource to the ambition, it is not going to work.
For the past few years, we have had the nonsense slogan of
“global Britain”—some pre-imperialist view of what we are doing
around the world. I am sorry, but it is absolute nonsense. We
have to look at what we can do to protect our own defence. The
idea that we are going to be a major player in anything that
happens in the south-east of the South China sea—that having two
offshore patrol vessels based in Singapore is going to deter the
Chinese—is nonsense. If anything happens there, frankly, any
commitment that we could give is like a gnat on the backside of
an elephant compared with what the Americans would be able to do.
We have to be realistic about that.
What do we need to do? We need to look at what we must deliver as
part of our NATO commitments. We also need to get away from the
myth—and it is a myth, in our Army in particular—that we will
deliver a force of divisional strength under any NATO commitment.
We cannot do it now, we have not been able to do it for quite a
few years, and we just need to be realistic about that. We need
to sit down with NATO and look at what we can contribute to
European defence. Clearly, the nuclear deterrent is a key part of
that. However, do we, for example, need a full spectrum Army? No,
we do not. We need to plug into our NATO allies, and ask what we
can deliver well as part of the overall defence against the
threat coming not only from Russia in Europe, but increasingly
from China in the north Atlantic as we get global warming and the
opening of sea lanes.
There is an idea that we will be sending aircraft carriers around
the world. No, we will not. We need to commit them to NATO, and
that means some very tough decisions. It also means that we need
a mindset change. We have to be honest with the public about
this, and say that we will not be able to do everything. There
are then some hard decisions to be taken about the armed forces.
For example, we should say to the Army, “We’re not going to be
doing that, but we are going to do this very well. We will
dovetail that into NATO commitments, and actually make a real
difference.” There are big decisions that will have to be taken
by any Government, whoever gets in after the next election.
Please let us get away from the myth—and it is a myth—that we
will be going around the world and intervening in every single
conflict. For example, look at the air strikes on the Houthis in
the last few weeks. We have contributed four aircraft because we
want to be seen to be alongside the Americans, but I would ask:
what is the strategy for doing that? There is no strategy. Okay,
we have bombed the Houthis, but is that going to resolve the
situation? No, it is not. Does it show that Britain is a global
power? No, it does not. Frankly, we do not have the resources,
unless someone will say that the defence budget is going to be
3%, 4%, 5%, 6% or 7%, but no Government are going to commit to
that.
I say to Conservative Members and the commentariat in our
right-wing press that they should just be honest with the British
people about what we can do. We can and do have a valuable role
to play in NATO and we have willing partners that want to work
with us. I am certainly very excited about Sweden and Finland
joining, although we need to make sure that we actually get those
commitments. As I say, some hard decisions have to be taken and
there are some home truths for our armed forces. As the Chair of
the PAC said, there are capabilities that we will just have to
get out of. We will have to say, “We’re not going to do that, but
we’re going to do this and we’re going to do it well, and we are
going to contribute,” and that will maximise our influence.
On China, people ask: do we just forget about the South China
sea? No, we do not. We use our strong diplomacy, and our great
and fantastic abilities with technology and other things in those
areas, but it is not about deploying people or equipment out
there. Frankly, the sooner we get the reality of such a wake-up
call, the better. I will always call, and I have always called,
for increased defence expenditure, but I will not do so if it is
just to try to plug a vision that will never ever be achieved. We
need to make sure that we spend that money well.
That leads on to the point about skills raised by my right hon.
Friend the Member for Warley (). We need to see any defence
expenditure as potential growth in our economy. However, we are
not doing that if we are giving contracts to the United States,
or to Spain for fleet solid support ships, and not thinking about
growing our defence industries here. I accept that there has to
be international collaboration, but we must have give and take.
The idea that the French would ever give an FSS ship contract to
a Spanish shipyard, frankly, is just—
Laughable.
Mr Jones
It is laughable, as my right hon. Friend says. We need to make
sure that we actually invest, because this is about skills and
about ensuring that we have the workforce.
We have seen the effects when we just pull out of such work. We
cannot look at our skills base as a tap, which we turn on when we
want it and turn off again when we do not. We cannot do so,
because we have seen the costs of that—for example, on the Astute
programme. To be political, it was again the Conservative
Government who stopped building submarines, so we had a gap in
skills, and it has taken all the effort recently to rebuild that
skills base and ensure we get it back. We must have such a skills
base continually, and that has to be done by working with our
European allies. Whether the zealots of Brexit and the
anti-Europeans like it or not, if we are talking about things
such as stockpiles, we do have to work with allies and make sure
that we can deliver them through the supply chain we have.
Sir
Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?
Mr Jones
No. I am sorry, but I do not have the time.
I now come on to what will happen after the next general
election. Is there going to be a massive increase in defence
expenditure whoever wins the election? No, there is not. We know
that, so let us just tell the public that. What we need to ensure
is that we get the maximum effect from what we do spend. My right
hon. Friend the Member for Wentworth and Dearne (), who speaks for the Labour
party on defence, will—if he gets the job—have a big task facing
him if we are successful at the next general election. My heart
sinks a little when he talks about reviews. Yes, we need to have
a review, but we also need action straightaway.
It is now critical that we take some key decisions, and there are
very difficult discussions to be had, not just with the British
people about where Britain is realistically in the world today,
but with some of the members of the armed forces and the chiefs,
in saying, “We’re going to do this, and we’re going to do it
well, and we’re going to make sure we are safe as a nation.” Is
that defeatism or saying that Britain is finished? No, it is not.
I think we have a proud future, and we have some great military
and diplomatic assets, including in the way we do things.
However, we should not delude ourselves that we will be going
back to some pre-Suez or pre-second world war global Britain as
an imperialist power. We are just not going to be able to do
that, and I think we have to be honest with the British
people.
There also now has to be speed. As my right hon. Friend the
Member for Warley () said about munition shelling,
we cannot have a situation in which it takes a year for munition
stocks to be replaced. The tempo has to be increased, so action
will have to be taken very quickly. I am all in favour of a
review and a study of policy—in the last few years in this
country we have lacked any thought-out policy work or strategy,
and we need that—but we also need action.
It is a daunting task that will face any Government after the
next general election, but let us be proud of the members of our
armed forces, who work on our behalf to keep us secure. There is
an impression that defence is somehow a Conservative issue; I am
sorry, but it is not a Conservative issue. A lot of the men and
women in our armed forces come from the poorest and most deprived
communities in our country, but they are proud to serve their
country, and I think we should be proud of them. We should give
them the clear commitment that they have our backing, but be
clear with them that we must be realistic about the tasks we ask
them to do to keep us safe.
1.17pm
(Devizes) (Con)
It is an honour to take part in this debate. I pay tribute to the
Defence Committee and the Public Accounts Committee for what I
agree are exceptionally good reports. I echo my right hon. Friend
the Member for Hereford and South Herefordshire () on that point.
This is possibly the most important speech I will give as an MP,
and I do so on behalf of the military in my constituency of
Devizes. I have the honour to represent the garrison towns of
Tidworth, Bulford, Larkhill and others. I went up on Salisbury
plain recently with Colonel , the commander of the Army in
the south-west, who showed me with the sweep of his arm where
20,000 of our armed forces live and work. As my right hon. Friend
said, we are not here just as ambassadors for our constituencies;
I am going to speak in my role as an MP about the essential
imperative of national security.
I will, however, first make another local point. In the Devizes
constituency is the site of the battle of Roundway Down, which
was the most successful battle in the royalist cause in the
English civil war, in that it gave the south-west to the King for
the next two years. I mention the battle of Roundway Down,
because it was that defeat of the parliamentary forces that
spurred the reform of the parliamentary army. That led to the
creation of the new model army, which of course went on to win
the civil war, and transformed the way in which the military in
this country and across Europe was organised for decades to come.
The lesson of the new model army and the reforms that happened in
short order in the 1640s was not about a major new doctrine of
warfighting, but about the imperative of having a well equipped,
well trained, well led army that is innovative, agile,
professional and with high morale. We need that again.
I mention that because it is on my mind, having yesterday had the
pleasure of attending a session at the Royal United Services
Institute organised by the New Bletchley foundation led by
Brigadier Nigel Hall. It is issuing a report with input from a
galaxy of distinguished former generals and other experts. Sir
Richard Barrons was on the panel, as were Professor Michael Clark
and others. They put forward a short report that Members can find
online on a proposal for a reconfigured Army. The point the panel
made—it has been made repeatedly in this debate—is simple: we
have to be ready to fight the war we wish to deter. That means
really ready, not just ready on paper or ready plausibly in a way
that might convince someone on a doorstep that we are making
sufficient investment in the Army. We need to know that we are
ready, and crucially our enemy needs to know that. I echo the
points made by the Chair of the Defence Committee, my right hon.
Friend the Member for Horsham (Sir ) and by my right hon. Friend
the Member for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr Francois) that our
enemies know what our capabilities are. They will not be deceived
by spin from a press officer in Whitehall. It is essential that
we are ready to fight the war.
The sad fact—there is no point sugar-coating it, given the point
I have just made—is that we are not ready to fight the war we
wish to deter. The reports make that plain. I have great respect
for Ministers on the Front Bench, and I recognise the genuine
investments going into parts of our armed forces, which are
extremely welcome in my constituency, but the fact is, as General
Barrons said yesterday,
“we are back in a moment of existential risk in an era of great
power confrontation”.
Laying aside the fantasies of the post-cold war world of our
being somehow beyond war and in an era of minor peacekeeping
operations, we are back in a sense in the mid-20th century, with
the crucial difference of the high-tech domains with which we are
now coming to terms. Unlike the mid-20th century, we have
hollowed out our Army over the past 30 years, and I echo the
powerful points that my right hon. Friend the Member for Rayleigh
and Wickford made drawing a comparison with the 1930s—that “low
dishonest decade”, as it has famously been called. We now have
three decades where we have suffered disinvestment.
While I acknowledge the major funding commitments being made to
the armed forces, I highlight that they are insufficient at the
moment. I recognise that abstract percentages of GDP are in a
sense secondary to the real question of how we spend money and
where it goes, but those figures are important, and the basic
fact is that we need to be spending more than 2% or 2.5%, and at
least 3%. If we consider the worst coming to the worst, and the
US withdrawing its NATO commitments, as we hear threatened from
time to time, across the NATO alliance we would all be needing to
reach at least 4% just to maintain NATO’s current strength.
Sir
A recent meeting of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly that I
attended assessed that it would need to be an increase of 5% of
GDP on top of current spend, were the Americans to pull out.
I am grateful to my right hon. Friend for that. These figures
seem extraordinarily large to us, but if we consider the worst
coming to the worst, and our being in a hot war in Europe, we
would be back to spending significantly more. It was 50% of GDP
in world war two, so the figures we are talking about are
essentially marginal in light of the potential.
The point has been made—it cannot be made enough—that before
defence gets more money, it needs to spend its own money better.
I echo the points made about the importance of procurement
reform. The Public Accounts Committee report is damning. There is
a £17 billion deficit between the MOD’s budget and its official
capability requirements, which is perhaps an underestimate, as my
right hon. Friend the Member for Rayleigh and Wickford said,
given how these numbers are calculated. I am concerned about
that.
To make a quick point in passing, I would be interested in the
Minister’s thoughts when he winds up about the nuclear budget.
There is real concern about how Trident’s replacement will be
accounted for. There is a danger that if that is just part of
general MOD capital expenditure, it could end up cannibalising
conventional weapons. It is important, given the long-standing
tradition, that we keep nuclear separate from conventional
weapons budgets.
Dame
Given what the hon. Gentleman has just said, does he agree that
it would be good to have tighter scrutiny of that spending, which
might mean a new system set up so that we can look at sensitive
matters?
I defer to those on the Front Bench on what transparency is
appropriate, but I recognise the point made in the hon. Lady’s
Committee’s report and I think in the Defence Committee report
about the difficulty of getting the information that the
Committees need to do their work. I recognise that nuclear is
identified as a separate line in the budget and is protected in
theory, but I am concerned about what might be a marginal
increase in this enormous budget. It is around a quarter of our
total defence spending. If that increases even marginally and the
shortfall has to be made up from our conventional defence budget,
that entails a significant reduction in that conventional
spending, which is so important at the present time.
Mr Francois
According to the MOD’s own figures in the latest supplementary
estimates, the amount we are spending on what it calls the
defence nuclear enterprise is now gusting towards 20%. Everything
my hon. Friend says about the risk of that gradually eating
everything else is entirely correct.
I thank my right hon. Friend for that. If we managed to get the
genuine increase in defence spending that is needed, the question
then arises of how to spend that and where the money should go. I
say this not just on behalf of the 20,000 or so defence personnel
in Wiltshire, but because it is the right thing to do: we need to
put people first. I recognise that there has been a significant
step change in the doctrine of defence policy in recent years
towards the recognition that an army is fundamentally about its
people, and I respect that. The fact is, probably because of the
many decades of disinvestment, that we have problems of low
morale, low pay, often poor housing and a shoestring training
budget, all of which contribute to the recruitment crisis we have
in the armed forces that my right hon. Friend mentioned.
The PAC report makes clear that we are losing people faster than
we can recruit them, and that is entirely unacceptable. We have
to improve recruitment. The Public Accounts Committee heard that
for every five people recruited to the armed services, eight are
leaving. That is a national security crisis. It is not just a
problem for recruitment, but a profound security risk.
I recognise the point that the hon. Member for Hackney South and
Shoreditch (Dame ) made that we have had too many reviews, so I
hesitate to use the word—if I could think of another word, I
would use it—but we need a quick total review of the people issue
in our armed forces. It could be done quickly and all it probably
entails is an amalgamation of all the work done by others, but I
would like to see that with a great degree of urgency. It should
look at recruitment, terms and conditions, families—crucially—and
onward progression in all three services, so that we can with the
urgency required turn around the recruitment crisis.
Having made the general point about the importance of investment
in people, I come quickly to the major services of the armed
forces, and first is the Navy. It is important that we invest in
all five domains, including in the grey zone and sub-threshold
activity, which are so important. Our principal specialism in the
United Kingdom historically and now remains our sea power. It is
a good thing we are moving towards a maritime strategy. I
recognise that is the Government’s priority, and I say that as a
representative of a land-locked county with all these soldiers in
it. Nevertheless, we need significant investment in the Navy. We
would all like to see these things, but let us actually do it and
have more submarines, more escorts and more minesweepers. We need
seabed warfare vessels. On that point, I call the House’s
attention to a report from Policy Exchange a month or so ago
talking about western approaches and the significant threat we
face in these islands and across Europe to undersea
infrastructure. It is fundamentally our responsibility on behalf
of Europe to protect that.
I have mentioned the new model army and the New Bletchley report,
and I would like to see a real commitment to a reformed and
modernised Army. We have to recognise the point made by the
former Chief of the Defence Staff Nick Carter when he said that
the Army is the weakest of the three services. That is a sad
state of affairs. I suppose one has to be the weakest; I am sorry
it is the Army. There are big questions over our ability to field
a division in Europe, as promised to NATO. According to a senior
US officer, the UK cannot even be called a tier 1 power. I
understand that the Committees were told by a former commander of
joint forces command that our Army will not be ready to fulfil
its NATO commitments until the early 1930s. Indeed, that was the
assumption of the integrated review, so in a we are sense back to
the 10-year rule, which is not how things should be.
[Interruption.] Did I say 1930s?
Sir
You did.
I think we are up to speed on that— the 2030s.
The case for investment in the Army is obvious, and the good news
is that it is easier, quicker and cheaper to refit and upscale
the Army than it is the Navy, because kit is smaller and cheaper.
However, we do not just need the same Army but a bigger one. We
need a medium-sized Army that is bespoke for the job that will be
done—the right hon. Member for North Durham (Mr Jones) made the
right point about the sort of Army we need. The Army needs, in a
resonant phrase, to defend these islands, but it also needs to
act in partnership with other services and with our allies in the
west. We do not need another great new major continental army
such as the one the Poles are building. We need a rapid reaction
joint expeditionary force that is agile, mobile, and able to do
the job that is required, in partnership with our allies.
On the sphere of operations, ultimately our commitments need to
reflect the threats we face. In a sense, those are classified,
and I recognise the challenge that the Committees have had in
identifying what our capabilities are, and the tasks that
Ministers set for them, because we cannot always know exactly
what those threats are, with defence planning assumptions now
classified. Nevertheless, I echo a point made by the right hon.
Member for North Durham: I am delighted about AUKUS, which is a
tremendous step forward in our international role and a great
thing for British security. I am not averse to those global
arrangements—they are absolutely right. I loved the deployment of
the Queen Elizabeth and the carrier strike group to Japan.
Fundamentally, however, we are, and should be, committed to the
defence of the Euro-Atlantic area, and for that purpose we must
restore the mass of our own armed forces and Army. That means
growing our capabilities here at home. We need more regulars, and
to get back towards having 80,000 or 90,000 regular forces. We
must significantly grow the reserve force because 30,000 is not
enough, even if that figure of 30,000 is real, which I do not
believe it is. The campaign to grow our reserves is necessary not
just for its own sake, but as a great exercise in communication
to the public about the imperative for us all to step up and play
our role in the defence of our country.
There is a great deal of concern, which I think is misplaced,
about the attitude of the British people to fighting. We had that
in the 1930s, with lots of people saying that the British would
not fight, but of course they would, of course they did, and of
course they will if they have to answer their country’s call.
That is young people in particular. They will do it with irony,
and certainly with memes, but they will do it and sign up if they
need to. This is not an abstraction. We have already seen in the
past year or two what war in our region means. It means
inflation—imagine that tenfold if a war breaks out in which our
country is directly involved—and cyber-attacks on a terrible
scale.
We are now at a turning point, as so many Members have said, and
it is time for all of us as a country to step up. There is an
opportunity and an imperative for us to strengthen our nation. It
is about industrial resilience and our own food supply; it is
about our supply chains, and our steel and manufacturing
capacity. There is a huge opportunity, as the hon. Member for
Hackney South and Shoreditch (Dame ) said, in the importance of the industrial supply
chain. This is a time for us all to do what is needed.
Several hon. Members rose—
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. I am getting concerned because although I do not have a
problem with interventions, some of the speeches have been not 13
minutes but 16 minutes, and that means we then have pressure for
the Front-Bench speeches to be shorter than we hope them to be.
If colleagues take interventions, I ask them to please still try
to keep within the limit. Another debate is due to start at 3
o’clock, and I must get as near to that as I possibly can.
1.33pm
(Tiverton and Honiton)
(LD)
I echo the positive words that have been spoken already this
afternoon about the reports from the Public Accounts and Defence
Committees, and it is timely that we get all this out into the
open. In the Budget earlier this month, the Chancellor of the
Exchequer said that defence spending “will rise to 2.5% as soon
as economic conditions allow.”[—[Official Report, 6 March 2024;
Vol. 746, c.
846.]](/search/column?VolumeNumber=746&ColumnNumber=846&House=1)
What indications has the Minister had from the Prime Minister and
Chancellor about when economic conditions might allow? What are
the conditions that might allow, and when might they be met?
This week the Chair of the Public Accounts Committee, the hon.
Member for Hackney South and Shoreditch (Dame ), gave an interview to the i newspaper, in which she
described “big nasties” facing public spending. She talked about
“slow politics”, where decisions are made with a long-term
strategic perspective at the forefront. That is especially
pertinent when it comes to defence capabilities. As we are
entering a period of global uncertainty, it is concerning to read
in the PAC report that there are glaring discrepancies around how
spending is identified for single services. For example, the
report highlights the way that planned spending is reported.
Whereas the Royal Navy includes all costs in its plans, creating
an on-paper deficit of more than £15 billion, the Army includes
only what estimates it can afford, resulting in a running deficit
of about £1.2 billion. Had the Army followed the same procedures
as the Royal Navy, its deficit would soar to over £13 billion.
Such inconsistency in budget reporting is, I am sure, not a
deliberate lack of transparency, but it can bring about distrust
when it comes to planned defence spending.
The Defence Committee’s “Ready for War?” report stresses the need
to replenish our much depleted munitions stockpiles. It
highlights that there has been a “hollowing out” over the past 14
years—we have heard that talked about, including from the
Dispatch Boxes—but that has been brought into sharp relief by an
emboldened, aggressive, nationalist Russian state. If we cannot
co-ordinate defence spending in a clear manner, we risk weakening
the perception of our defence capabilities. The issue of the
budget deficit goes further, with the Committee highlighting a
£16.9 billion deficit over 10 years, due in part to rising
inflation. We know that defence inflation is greater than other
measures of inflation, partly because a lot of our defence
equipment is imported from overseas, particularly the United
States.
There is a 62% increase in spending on the Defence Nuclear
Organisation, and the report states that defence spending would
need to increase to around 2.5% of GDP to plug that gap.
Ministers are entrenching the uncertainty around budget planning,
meaning that important projects risk being deprioritised. At
present, the defence budget is thought to be about 2.1%, and some
measures try to include our defence commitment to Ukraine, so
that it might rise to 2.25%. The MOD said that the difference
between 2.25% and 2.5% of GDP is about £6 billion or £7 billion.
There are important reasons why that increase might be necessary.
Although we spend 2.1% on defence as a whole, around 6% of that
goes to fund our nuclear capabilities. Prior to 2010, the UK’s
strategic nuclear deterrent was kept out of Ministry of Defence
spending measures and held centrally, whereas now it is all
included in the defence budget, meaning that our conventional
spending has seen a great deal of squeeze over the last
decade-plus.
By failing to invest in our armed forces over a sustained period,
we have heard cries of operational readiness being affected, and
people crying about overstretch. I recall that word from my own
service about 20 years ago, when people were declaring that the
armed forces were running hot and that they were overstretched.
That is why it is essential for Governments to know how much they
can commit their armed forces. That comes back to what we used to
call the defence planning assumptions about how many operational
overseas deployments might take place simultaneously. Up until
2015, those defence planning assumptions were published, but
since 2015 they have not been published and have been very much
held behind a cloak. I see no real reason from a security
perspective or from the point of view of what our adversaries
might think, for keeping those withheld. As was pointed out to
the Defence Committee, our adversaries probably know our
capabilities well, and they will be analysing our intentions. It
is arguably better to be transparent about those defence planning
assumptions if that means a reduction in the call on the armed
forces by other Departments of Government.
In recent years, we have seen that a lot, with Departments having
sought to use the armed forces for military aid to the civil
authorities, whether for ambulance strikes or to cover for the
fire service. The armed forces have been pulled in for those
roles and taken away from training, which is essential to their
mission. Transparency is very much required.
When that is combined with the persistent issues of repeated cuts
and reductions in personnel, our armed forces could be in an even
more challenging place than is currently suggested. We really
need to sort this out. The right hon. Member for Rayleigh and
Wickford (Mr Francois) referred to the recent speech by the
Secretary of State for Defence about moving from a post-war
period to a pre-war era. I was alarmed to hear that speech. I am
an advocate for the Roosevelt phrase,
“speak softly and carry a big stick”.
In talking about moving from post-war to pre-war, I felt that he
was doing quite the reverse: investing no new money in defence
while speaking with a rather loud mouth.
It strikes me that the Defence Secretary is not doing enough to
advocate for spending in private, because he is doing it in
public through leaked letters to the Chancellor, as reported in
The Daily Telegraph. His predecessor, the right hon. Member for
Wyre and Preston North (Mr Wallace), did the honourable and
decent thing by stepping away from his Cabinet role when he could
no longer tolerate Cabinet collective responsibility in relation
to defence spending.
Does the hon. Member agree that the strategy the Defence
Secretary is employing has nothing to do with defence but is
possibly to do with a future bid to become leader of the
Conservative party?
I grateful to the right hon. Member. While I will not speculate
on the Defence Secretary’s intentions, I certainly think that has
had the effect of putting him out of step with the Chancellor and
the Prime Minister such that he is no longer engaged in
collective responsibility.
It seems to me that by talking up increases in the defence budget
in cash terms rather than real terms, the Government are hiding
behind recent high inflation. I will give the House a specific
example. Following the publication of the PAC report on 8 March,
the Prime Minister’s spokesperson, who was asked to respond to
that report, replied:
“We are ensuring that we have the largest defence budget in
history”.
That is so much spin as to be like a vortex—it is way off to
suggest that. As we heard from the right hon. Member for New
Forest East (Sir ), during the cold war, defence
spending was north of 6% of GDP. I am not advocating for defence
spending to return to anything like those levels, because I
recognise that we were dealing then with an eastern Europe in the
grips of Russia and very much surrounded by and part of the
Warsaw pact, with all its contributions assisting the Warsaw pact
inventory, whereas now our spending is very much contributing to
NATO’s defence of Europe and the deterrence of Moscow. I would
understand the phrase “as soon as economic conditions allow” if
we were talking about an absolute cost—for example, the cost of a
frigate or a platform, with a price tag—but we are not; we are
talking about a relative cost. The Government need to set out
what those economic conditions are.
Finally, I turn to land. As we have heard rehearsed in the House
many times, the Army is being reduced from 82,500 to 73,000
soldiers. Earlier, Mr Deputy Speaker talked about the
considerable expertise in this place, but the greatest defence
experience is probably in the other place. Those who rose to the
top of their professions in the armed forces now speak with the
greatest wisdom on defence. I would therefore like to quote from
some of them, starting with three former Chiefs of the General
Staff.
In January, Dannatt said:
“The bottom line is numbers do matter… It is a fact that at
73,000 the British Army has never been smaller”.
In March 2021, Lord David Richards said that “mass still
matters”. In May 2022, General Sir Nick Carter said that
“in the order of 80,000”
soldiers are required to ensure that the UK could field a full
division as part of a combined NATO force.
Although the current Chief of the General Staff is somewhat
restricted in what he can say while in post, in June 2022 he said
that the UK was facing a “1937 moment”, and that
“it would be perverse if the CGS was advocating reducing the size
of the Army as a land war rages in Europe”.
I firmly advocate for the Army to be restored to that 83,000
figure. When will those economic conditions be met so that we
might see 2.5% spent on defence?
1.46pm
Sir (Elmet and Rothwell)
(Con)
I thank my right hon. Friend the Member for Horsham (Sir ) for leading the debate with
his report. On the first Thursday back in January 2022, six weeks
before Russia further invaded Ukraine, many hon. Members
currently in the Chamber were here for a debate about the need to
increase defence spending. There was an argument about whether we
were in a cold war scenario, which came back to the same thing:
it is all very well talking about increasing spending, but where
do the threats lie?
The mea culpa from my point of view is that, right up to 22
February 2022, I was saying that I did not believe Putin was
going to invade Ukraine. I thought he was testing the borders and
seeing where the strengths were. That day, I learned the
important lesson that politicians often use the word “think” when
they should be using “hope”. Much of the debate is based around
what we want to see happen and what we hope will happen.
We may say, “I think perhaps we don’t need to expand the military
as much as that. Perhaps the money is better off being spent
elsewhere. Are we really going to go nuclear? Is he really going
to do that?” We talk about development in the High North and
maritime. Perhaps we need more Navy, because that will become a
much more critical area in our security, our trade and our
defence, but we hear the same thing: it is highly unlikely that
there will be a surface warfare battle. Well, nobody thought
there would be a tank battle in Europe. Since the second world
war, nobody thought there would be an armoured vehicle and troop
battle with trench warfare in Europe again, but that has
happened.
I have been asked recently, “Are we going to have world war
three?” It is an interesting question. How do we define world war
three in the 21st century? Will it be the nuclear armageddon that
people think? I do not believe that—I will come back to that.
Will it be several instances of wars and armed conflicts in
several areas that affect our country directly? Yes, and I
believe that is where the world is moving to, especially when we
look at the supply chains around the world. That affects not just
this country, and it will lead to other investments having to be
made.
There is a famine taking place in Sudan because of what is
happening in the Red sea, where there is a reduction in supplies
getting through. When these events take place, they have
consequences in many areas of the world. We can talk about
whether there is a world war and whether we will be involved, but
we are—we are in the Red sea and we are giving support to Ukraine
and other areas, which is building up.
We should not look at Ukraine as an individual thing that Putin
is talking about and that ridiculous interview he did with Tucker
Carlson in which he said, “Well, I haven’t got any intentions to
invade anywhere else.” He literally wrote it down in July 2021.
It takes about half an hour to read, and he lays it out line by
line—“Not only do we need to rebuild the Russian Empire, but we
need to reunite the historic Russian-speaking people”. We heard
all of this in another book 100 years earlier, and we all know
where that led, so we all know the consequences of us not
preparing for it.
Something about NATO has been forgotten and overlooked. Everybody
talks about article 5—that an attack on one is an attack on
another, and we come to the rescue—but everybody forgets article
3, which says that members must be able to defend their borders
first and foremost. There are only 14 articles in the actually
very well-written Washington treaty, and article 3 makes it clear
that members have to be able to defend their borders and that
article 5 is a reinforcement that can take up to three weeks to
arrive.
Do we believe that if Putin invades the Baltic states, that is
where the effect on NATO will be? That would be tactically daft
of Putin. It is more likely, if he decides to invade NATO
territory, that he will want to tie all the NATO allies up to
start with. There is good news and bad news. There is good news
in what China has said to Putin because of their trade with
India, South America and southern Africa. The Chinese especially
have made it crystal clear that if Putin was even to demonstrate
his ability to use a nuclear weapon—say, in the middle of the
Black sea—they would say, “That’s it, we’re gone; we are not
dealing with you.” That has probably taken the nuclear weapon
issue off the table, especially with strategic nuclear
weapons.
By the way, I do not want the House to get excited and think I am
saying that we do not need to renew Trident, because there are
still plenty of places around the world that are pushing that
territory. As we always come back to, Trident is a deterrent
weapon; it is not a weapon to be used. If it were to be launched,
quite frankly we would not be arguing about it anyway. This does
mean that we are in a far weaker position if nuclear is off the
table, because we know, and Putin knows—he is doing it right
now—that he can outproduce us in shells, tanks and people. Russia
is paying €2,000 a month to people coming in from the far-flung
areas of the country. People from some of these places do not
earn that in a year. They have no shortage of personnel or
cash.
Therefore, we have to start being honest with our questions. Do
we need to build more capital equipment? Do we need more
personnel? Yes, we do need more capital equipment, and we are
going down that route, but we also need the revenue budgets to
run that. To follow the fiscal rules and say “Look how much money
we are putting into defence” is great, but it has to be capital,
because they have not given the revenue. It is a case of: “Let’s
line up all our shiny ships, but we can’t fuel them, maintain
them or crew them.” It is the same in the Army and the Air Force.
There must be a fundamental change at the Treasury in how the
money is spent.
As the right hon. Member for North Durham (Mr Jones) said, let us
have some honesty in this Chamber. We can sit here and say, “We
need to go to 2.5% or 3%, or maybe 4% or 5%.” What Government and
which politician will stand up in this House and say, “That 3%
reduction in GDP since the end of the cold war has gone into the
health service and the Department for Work and Pensions, so we
will cut the health service and DWP by 3% to invest in defence”?
Who will stand up here and say that? Who will put that in their
manifesto? Let us not pretend that that will happen, but the
money does need to be spent more efficiently.
My hon. Friend the Minister for Defence Procurement has done an
excellent job with the integrated procurement model, which talks
about things that he has worked on for a long time, I believe—for
example, spiral development. We are very fond of talking about
where we were in the 1920s and 1930s, but I want to take us back
even further, to the 1910s, when the Dreadnought model was
brought out. HMS Dreadnought was the most incredible ship ever
built in terms of firepower, but it hit the reset button by
making every other ship irrelevant. It could sink all of them, so
there was an arms race. Within eight years, HMS Dreadnought was
useless. HMS Iron Duke, which was still a Dreadnought class, was
a totally different ship, but it had been part of the design
process as it went on. Bear in mind that we were still only
producing four Dreadnought battleships a year when we were
chucking all our efforts in leading up to 1914 and beyond.
I recently spoke at a dinner, and a young person in their early
20s asked me, “What do you think about this comment from General
Sanders about conscription? Because there’s no way I would be
conscripted to go and fight for this country. Why should I
bother? I am not going out to get killed. It’s not worth it. You
spend all this money and waste money there. What are you offering
me? It’s not worth it.” I said, “Well the problem is that you are
looking at this in the society you live in today. If you are
going to get conscripted, it is because our cities will lay in
rubble. You only have to look at Kyiv. Forget wanting to sit at
home and watch Netflix or play Xbox or do whatever you want,
there is no electricity. There’s no water. There’s no gas or
heating. There is starvation.” That is happening in Europe
today.
How does one stop that happening? The word is deterrent. I have
never met senior military personnel who are not at heart
pacifists. They understand what warfare means. They understand
the death and destruction that it brings and the decades it takes
to recover. They do not want to go to war. I have never met
anybody in the military who wants to go to war. This all takes
investment. The honest fact that we are not going to cut health
services or the DWP—some of our biggest spending budgets—and
spend the money on defence means that we have to work with what
we have. Yes, we can grow the economy and take more tax revenue.
We can do all that, but that has not really happened in the 21st
century. The 21st century has roughly been 50/50 between the
Government and the Opposition. Even when the economy has grown,
it has been around the margins. There has to be an honest
conversation.
The procurement strategy my hon. Friend the Minister has produced
is the right way forward. We are aware of the costs. I will say
one more thing, almost directly contradicting myself. The war in
Ukraine has shattered its economy. Forget the spending to fight
the war; the loss in GDP of being able run an economy and export
when at war is significantly bigger than an increase of 2% or 3%.
Be under no illusion: if Putin wants to invade NATO territory, it
will not be tanks rolling over the line up in the Baltics or
maybe in east Poland, and we will have to go out there; it will
be a full-scale NATO attack, and we will have to work out what we
do.
The best way we can stop that is to make sure we have the
deterrent. Our nuclear deterrent has always been valuable because
they have no idea when or where we would strike back from. That
has made it a useless weapon to use, but we have to have that
weapon. If we say that is cancelled out, because of the attitude
of China and Russian allies towards Russia were it to use one,
then we have to accept that our conventional weapons are not
going to counterbalance Russia and what is happening.
Nobody in this Chamber, in the military, at the MOD or in Europe,
and probably anywhere in the western world, wants to go to war
and see death and destruction on the scale we are seeing in too
many areas of the world. We see famine and humanitarian crises
taking place. Yes, we are going to have to spend more money, but
we need to spend it more efficiently, and we need to make sure
that when the increases come they will be used effectively. We
need to remember that this is an investment so that we do not
have to use the deterrent. If we do not have it, we will have to
end up using something we do not actually have.
1.58pm
(Rochdale) (WPB)
On that surreal note, let me quote Rudyard Kipling:
“We don’t want to fight, but by jingo if we do,
We’ve got the ships, we’ve got the men, we’ve got the money
too!”
There is plenty of jingo, but the ships, the men and the money
are more difficult to find. I genuinely hope that some of the
fantasy talk in this debate is widely seen by the general public.
It was a Gilbert and Sullivan performance as Members first
conceded that our weaknesses are such that we had to conceal the
extent of them in the report—that is what the right hon. Member
for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr Francois) said in an
intervention.
Mr Francois
Will the hon. Member give way?
No, I will not. I am mindful of Madam Deputy Speaker’s injunction
that she is fast running out of time, and I do not intend to take
my whole 13 minutes. The right hon. Member should not worry—I
will make sure that people see his performance. He said that we
need to conceal the extent of our weakness, then he adumbrated
our weakness. If that was not our total weakness—if there are
weaknesses that he concealed from that list—I ask myself, why on
earth are these people pirouetting in this Parliament about which
enemy they are going fight, and in which theatre of war?
Mr Francois
On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. I will keep this
brief. For the record, the gentleman has traduced me. He has said
directly the opposite of what I actually said, as Hansard will
show.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I thank the right hon. Gentleman for that point of order, which
he has used to make his point. Let us return to .
Pomposity, but not a point of order. The right hon. Gentleman
said that we were careful to conceal some of our weakness, and
then he adumbrated those weaknesses. If there are more that he
concealed, we are in very big trouble. My point is this: we
haven’t the men, we haven’t the ships and we haven’t the money,
so why are we picking enemies? I have lost count, in the course
of the debate, of the number that we are either already fighting
or may have to get ready to fight. That is the absurd “Alice in
Wonderland” nature of this debate.
We cannot retain even the low numbers of people we recruit. Why?
We ought to know why: the lions do not much like the look of the
donkeys who lead them into war after war, which they later disown
and admit should never have been fought. You know to what I
refer, Madam Deputy Speaker. I had a debate at the Oxford Union;
the then Defence Secretary ran away and did not turn up. I had to
deal with his subordinates, but I made the point there. I was a
boy soldier: Royal Artillery Battery 2, Army Cadet Force. I
trained with the Royal Marines for weeks in Poole, in Dorset. I
am in no sense a pacifist. I want to defend our country. I want
our soldiers to be properly paid, properly housed, properly clad,
properly trained and properly armed.
I have picked up Tommy Atkins, stricken with addiction, from
Piccadilly Gardens in Manchester, just out of Strangeways,
addicted to Spice and abandoned by the politicians who gayly sent
him off to one needless, pointless, fruitless war after another.
Don’t come here and say you’re standing up for Tommy Atkins. The
donkeys who sent him to wars that even the donkeys now disavow
are the reason that people do not join our armed forces. They do
not trust those people over there not to send them to another
Iraq or Afghanistan, and they are right not to trust them.
The truth is that our country is in very real danger of falling
into the same trap as Mussolini: going around the world,
threatening people with Germany’s army. Our politicians go around
the world threatening people with America’s army, but there is a
big change coming, and they do not like it on either side of the
aisle. President Trump is coming back in November, and he does
not much fancy their NATO. He does not intend to send American
soldiers to die for Kupiansk or for the Zelensky regime in Kyiv.
He has no intention whatever of continuing its war in
Ukraine.
I heard a senior Member of the House say, “If America withdraws
from NATO, we will have to increase our contribution to 5%, 6% or
maybe 7% of GDP.” Do these people seriously imagine that they
will continue in NATO without the United States of America? What
kind of NATO would it be—it really would be Gilbert and
Sullivan—unless we devote not £50 billion of our public treasure
but hundreds of billions on defence? Have any of these people
seen the state of the public realm in Britain? Have they seen the
state of the national health service? Have they seen the state of
our streets, public buildings and public transport? Have they
seen the wage packets earned in this country? Have they seen
pensioner poverty and fuel poverty in action? Have they met
people who have to choose between eating and heating? These fools
want to spend not £50 billion but hundreds of billions on weapons
of war, which we will fight with an Army that could fit into
Villa Park—70,000 soldiers can fit into a single football
stadium.
For some time, I was the Member of Parliament for a naval
shipbuilding yard, Yarrow’s on the Clyde—producers of excellence.
I wrestled—not physically—with our late and lamented friend Alan
Clark when he was the Procurement Minister, and I won. I got all
five of the Type 23s procured at that time. I want us to have a
good Navy, and a good Army, but not so we can sail it to bombard
the natives in the Red sea or send a Gilbert and Sullivan
squadron to the South China sea, like a peashooter firing at an
elephant—or a whale in the case in the Chinese navy. I do not
want us to send our 70,000 soldiers and our aircraft carriers
that break down and have to be glued together, or our destroyers
that crash into each other in the Solent.
I do not want us to pretend that we are a Rudyard Kipling-era
imperial power. That is the key problem. Some of these people
still think that we are in the 19th century and can send gunboats
up the Yangtze and not have them sunk, and that the natives in
Yemen are the natives we used to push around for a century or
more. The empire strikes back, and the empire is bigger than us
now. We owned India; now the Indians own us. Shall I take that
metaphor further? There is an idea that those in this little
country of ours—this dear green place, with all its problems and
enfeeblement caused by our economic decline and the rapid and
massive economic advance of others—are still in a position to
stand in this Parliament making dispensations to this
battleground or that, or that we can still slice our diminishing
national wealth in a way that allows us to pretend to be an
imperial power.
I have time only for one last point. I was startled by the hon.
Member for Hackney South and Shoreditch (Dame ), the Chair of the Public Accounts Committee, when
she told us that £2 billion of our defence budget is going on
foreign exchange costs, meaning that not only are we spending 50
billion of British taxpayers’ pounds, but that we are spending it
in foreign countries. We are allowing foreign companies and yards
to build our defence infrastructure in a way, as the right hon.
Member for North Durham (Mr Jones) pointed out, that France would
never dream of doing. Whatever we are going to spend, spend it in
Britain, spend it in British yards, spend it in British
factories. You’ll save £2 billion in foreign exchange costs at
the very least.
2.10pm
(South Shields) (Lab)
I genuinely will not take 13 minutes for my contribution, Madam
Deputy Speaker.
Our armed forces give it their all every single day for our
protection. Their level of commitment and courage is, sadly, not
matched by this Government. Worse, as our Defence Committee
report and the reports from the Public Accounts Committee chaired
by my hon. Friend the Member for Hackney South and Shoreditch
(Dame ) show, the Government have presided over reductions
in personnel, depletion of kit and delays in new capabilities.
When it comes to the biggest threat of all, war, there is not a
single service that is fully ready. This did not happen
overnight. This is a culmination of, to use the words of the
former Defence Secretary, the right hon. Member for Wyre and
Preston North (Mr Wallace), the “hollowing out” of our forces
over the last 14 years. The new Defence Secretary rightly said
that we are in a pre-war world. But to acknowledge that and then
do nothing about it is negligent.
The world is in turmoil: war in Ukraine, conflict in the middle
east, fear of conflict in the Indo-Pacific, an aggressive Russia
and an unpredictable China, as well as our armed forces
responding to humanitarian missions and MACA—military aid to the
civil authorities—requests, as they did throughout the pandemic.
This all makes a pre-war footing all the more urgent. This is not
an exhaustive list, but when it comes to our Royal Navy there are
delays to the Type 26 frigates, issues with the availability of
SSNs, delays to Dreadnought and an over-reliance on RFA Fort
Victoria. Our Royal Air Force has a shortfall in fixed-wing
transport aircraft numbers, insufficient numbers of maritime
patrol aircraft and Wedgetail airborne early warning systems, a
lack of air-to-air refuelling, and a lack of ground-based air
defence systems or an anti-ballistic missile capability. Our Army
lacks infantry fighting vehicles, multiple launch rocket systems,
Challenger tanks and armoured fighting vehicles.
We have rightly committed ammunition to Ukraine, but the £1.95
billion announced to replenish stockpiles was not ringfenced. We
have heard that the Ministry of Defence is potentially using it
to help offset funding shortfalls, instead of using it to restore
our warfighting ability. Our lack of industrial capacity is also
causing problems with replenishment in particular, as many
companies, both at prime and sub-prime level, are facing
challenges in scaling up. A failure to address supply chain
issues represents a significant risk to production. As the PAC
report from my hon. Friend the Member for Hackney South and
Shoreditch on the MOD’s equipment plan found, there is no
credible Government plan to deliver the desired military
capabilities.
As for our personnel, the Haythornthwaite review in 2022 found a
net outflow of 4,660 per year from our armed forces. There are
significant pinch points in cyber, digital and AI skills. Those
who serve in our forces are exceptional people, but they are
constantly being asked to do more with less. The result has been
significantly lower morale, with recruitment and retention issues
across our services and across the reserves. Our Defence
Committee report notes:
“Either the Ministry of Defence must be fully funded to engage in
operations whilst also developing warfighting readiness; or the
Government must reduce the operational burden on the Armed
Forces.”
These are difficult decisions to make, but it is obvious that the
Government are not going to make them as they are limping towards
electoral oblivion. Frustratingly, the Government hindered our
inquiry considerably by not sharing with us the information they
hold on readiness—information that used to be available. Worse
still, they were unable to explain to us why this information has
become classified. Bearing in mind that our allies and countries
at greater risk than us share theirs, it is fair to conclude that
the reason the information is not being shared is because
readiness levels are far worse than even we conclude in our
report.
Our conclusion, bluntly speaking, is that we are not ready for
war. The recent Budget saw no increase for defence, and that is
after the cuts referred to by my right hon. Friend the Member for
North Durham (Mr Jones). Just this week, ex-defence and security
chiefs said we must prepare genuinely for war. But we do not have
the personnel or the kit to be ready for war. Far worse than
that, we do not have the right Government in place to be ready
for it either.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
Before I call the SNP Front-Bench spokesperson, let me just say
that the Front-Bench contributions in this debate are longer than
normal, but we will be able to finish the debate by 3 o’clock as
I had indicated. The SNP will have 10 minutes, the Opposition 15
minutes and the Government 15 minutes.
2.16pm
(West
Dunbartonshire) (SNP)
Well, this was a debate that certainly went in directions I never
thought it would go.
It is always a privilege to follow the hon. Member for South
Shields (Mrs Lewell-Buck), who may be in a different party but is
a very good friend on the Defence Committee. I commend the report
from the Committee, of which I am once again a member. There are
a few things we do not agree on, but on the vast majority of
issues we do agree. That brings me back to the old Scottish
nation’s motto, which is “In Defens”. I am very much akin to
that. I also share some of the issues raised by the hon. Member
for Rochdale () on how we do not push
ourselves into conflicts that are unnecessary. I may come back to
that in a few moments.
I want to come back to the points made by the right hon. Member
for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr Francois) on background and family.
I have said umpteen times in the Chamber that my brother served
in Iraq and had two terms in Afghanistan as a reservist. I will
come back to the specific point on people in the armed forces
later. The right hon. Gentleman talked about his dad. My dad is
99. I am lucky my dad is still here. He survived the worst aerial
bombardment these islands have ever seen. It was only after about
75 years that the Government recognised that it was the worst
aerial bombardment the UK had seen during the second world war.
Last Wednesday, I was able to attend, as I try to every year, the
83rd commemoration of the Clydebank Blitz, which took place on 13
and 14 March 1941. I also stood at one of the mass graves in
Clydebank on Saturday to lay a wreath on behalf of my
constituents. I do so with privilege and in honour of our family
of survivors.
I want to pick up on three points relating to readiness in terms
of people, partnership and position, and how they link critically
to the word resilience, which I think I heard some Members
mention. The right hon. Members for North Durham (Mr Jones) and
for Warley () are probably sick to death of
me talking over several years about resilience, but it is
inextricably linked to what readiness should be all about. Let me
talk about people first and how resilient are the armed
forces.
It is a pity that the hon. Member for Wrexham () cannot be here today—I did
tell her that I would mention her today—because she chaired a
sub-committee on women in the armed forces, which exposed some of
the most profoundly difficult questions and scrutiny in
Parliament about recruitment and retention that the armed forces
have ever had to face. I hate the term “ordinary ranks”. What
does “ordinary” mean—people on the frontline who have to go over
the ditch? There is nothing ordinary about that. As I said
earlier, my brother did it as a reservist, but the report exposed
dreadful questions about women and members of black and ethnic
minority communities. Why are we not retaining or even recruiting
them? Why, moreover, are young men not wanting to join up? This
returns me to the issue of terms and conditions, which I have
often talked about.
I remember arguing with a former Chair of the Defence
Committee—he is not here, but I see that the right hon. Member
for New Forest East (Sir ) has turned up—who was also a
former Minister. He had said that members of the armed forces
were not employees or workers. That may be the case in law, but
they still deliver a service. If we want to retain people, it is
critically important that we copy what so many of our NATO allies
do in recognising the value and worth of members of the
forces—whether in the Royal Navy, the Army or even the Royal Air
Force—and recognising their rights, one of which is the right to
representation. My party and I have always said that we believe
the armed forces require a representative body like the Police
Federation.
The kingdom of Denmark, for instance, which paid the blood price
in Iraq and Afghanistan, has a very robust armed forces
representative body. The problem there is not about recruitment,
but about how in God’s name you persuade people to leave the
armed forces in Denmark, because it is such a good—wait for
it—employer. They are still willing to go over the ditch and take
up the cudgels on behalf of their country. That brings us to the
question of how we should deal with people here in the UK who may
be over-reliant on charitable organisations, which, of course,
are very well-meaning and committed.
I agree with the points that the hon. Gentleman is making, but I
think that there must be a real, radical revolution in the way in
which the armed forces not only recruit but employ people. The
number of 18-year-olds is falling. We are going to need more
flexible employment models enabling people to leave, come back
in, have career breaks and so forth. Unless we do that, we will
not be able to persuade them to join our armed forces.
I agree with the right hon. Gentleman, and I am glad that his
party has joined mine—I think; I am not sure whether this is
still a Labour manifesto commitment—in recommending the
introduction of an armed forces representative body. However, a
critical issue is how the skills that already exist can be
utilised. I cannot believe that I am going to use the word
“emulate” when speaking of the United States, but that
flexibility is emulated by the United States and also by many of
our other NATO allies.
When it comes to readiness and having people on the frontline in
the physical armed forces, I am not going to play the numbers
game, because this is a political and philosophical issue. It is
about how we retain and recruit. I think that fundamental rights
for members of the armed forces should be enshrined in law. They
should not need to go to those very well-meaning charitable
organisations to receive assistance with housing, with their
mental health, and even with their physical health. Members of
the Danish armed forces who have suffered an injury do not go to
a special unit; they go to a Danish national hospital like every
other Danish citizen, because there they will benefit from the
delivery of a robust public service.
That, in turn, brings me to the way in which the armed forces
and, critically, the Army in particular have been challenged
during the pandemic. Some former members of the Defence Committee
who are not present today kept going on about the need for the
Army to step up to the plate in dealing with resilience. The
right hon. Member for North Durham has heard me talk about
resilience in Committee. It is not, in my view, the role of the
Army to pick up civilian action. During the pandemic, the Army in
England and Wales had to do that in respect of the Nightingale
hospitals, not just in terms of logistics and design but in terms
of the actual physical infrastructure. Why was that? It was
because most parts of the NHS procurement processes to build the
Nightingale hospitals had been privatised years ago. We had taken
a very physical state ownership of that civil structure of
resilience and readiness out of the hands of the Government and
the NHS and given it to private contractors, who have made
billions on the back of it.
Let me give a Scottish example, the Louisa Jordan Hospital. The
Army stepped up to the plate in helping with the logistics, but
they were not required to build the internal structure of the
Louisa Jordan. Most of it was in the Scottish conference centre.
That internal structure was built through NHS Scotland
procurement, because it was fit for purpose and ready to play its
part. When we are talking about people, we should bear in mind
that readiness is not just about members of the armed forces; it
is also about the larger civilian infrastructure.
The right hon. Member for Warley is not present now, but he and
I—along with, I think, the right hon. Member for New Forest
East—travelled to Washington some years ago with the Defence
Committee. Part of our purpose was to understand where our
infrastructure was. How, for example, do we transfer, through
partnerships between states—critically, within the continent of
Europe —a division, or tanks, across bridges and roads which,
since the end of the cold war, are no longer equal in terms of
weight or infrastructure? How difficult is it to move a tank from
a port to, say, technically, the eastern front if that is
required? Partnerships of that kind have been allowed to
disappear in the post-cold war era.
However, there are other important partnerships, such as the
United Nations with its peacekeeping role. It was disappointing
that not only the United Kingdom but other countries have had to
pull out of Mali, at the instigation of the Malian Government, in
the last couple of years. That peacekeeping role is a crucial
part of the infrastructure of maintaining international order
grounded in the rule-based system. I was also disappointed by the
Government’s decision to postpone, or put into abeyance, their
investment and funding for the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency in Palestine on the basis of a very small amount of
information, or accusation, from the Government of the state of
Israel in respect of the conflict in Gaza. I hope that the
Government recognise the value and worth of that partnership in
trying to quell some of the many big problems that are faced in
that part of the world.
I think I have had my 10 minutes, but let me end by saying a
little about the European Union in relation to partnership and
position. I was glad to hear that the official Opposition may now
be considering an improved relationship with the EU. We in the
Scottish National party believe it is important to have a mutual
defence agreement with the EU. As for the question of position, I
am a Euro-Atlanticist, and I think it important for us to
reposition ourselves, away from the issues of the
Indo-Pacific.
I agree with the hon. Member for Devizes () about the nuclear
proposition. I think that the hon. Member for Rochdale and I are
the only Members present who oppose nuclear weapons, but I think
there is general agreement on the need to take the deterrent into
another budget heading so that we have a full understanding of
what that two-point-whatever percentage of GDP is. I hope that
the Government will be able to respond to that in the debate
today.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I call the shadow Secretary of State.
2.27pm
(Wentworth and Dearne)
(Lab)
I started by knocking a glass of water over when I came into the
Chamber, Madam Deputy Speaker, and I have finished by doing
so.
I thank all Members for their contributions today, but I also
thank the armed forces, as we all should, for everything that
they do to keep us safe. Our UK armed forces are essential not
just to the defence of our nation but to the members of our NATO
alliance, and also to our UK role in upholding international law.
We respect, as the world does, the professionalism with which
they do their job.
I welcome the further AUKUS agreements that that are being signed
this week between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United
States. This is our most important strategic defence alliance
outside NATO. It is so much more than a big submarine building
programme. It demands UK national endeavour and UK national
leadership, and it has the complete support of the Labour
party.
President Putin claimed 88% of all the votes in last week’s
Russian poll. It was a total sham of an election, but a serious
moment for UK defence. Over the next decade, we will face Putin
and an alliance of aggression from autocrats who have contempt
for international law, and who squander freely the lives of their
own people.
The Chair of the Defence Committee, the right hon. Member for
Horsham (Sir ), opened the debate by saying
that we should start where all defence debates should start—with
the threats that we face. The threats that we face will only
increase, which is why we need a new era for defence, why these
reports are so important, and why this debate is so
important.
Madam Deputy Speaker, before you took the Chair, Mr Deputy
Speaker said of this debate that it promised to be one of the
best informed on all sides, and he was right. The right hon.
Member for Horsham brought his experience not just as a former
Minister, but as the Chair of the Defence Committee. I pay
tribute to him, because we now agree that it is right to move
away from competition by default and to see the defence sector as
a “critical strategic asset”, as he called it, which is a
reflection of the work that he has done.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Warley () asked the right question:
what are we doing to create new industrial capacity in the UK and
in collaboration with close allies?
My hon. Friend the Member for Hackney South and Shoreditch (Dame
) said that she has seen the arguments and excuses,
yet no efficiencies arrive. That was captured not just in her
report, which is the subject of this debate, but in other reports
that her Public Accounts Committee has undertaken into defence
procurement since 2019, and in nine National Audit Office reports
looking at the same problems.
The right hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr Francois)
made a very moving speech about his father’s D-day experience. I
particularly enjoyed the emotive part of his speech, where he got
stuck into the Government and the MOD.
The hon. Member for Devizes () was quite right to say that
we are now in a moment of existential risk, because we are not
ready to fight the wars that we may face. It is a theme that
picked up by the right hon. Member for Hereford and South
Herefordshire (), who said that we should be
looking at not just our operational readiness, which is the
subject of the Defence Committee’s report, but our strategic
readiness. Part of that is about taking responsibility as a
nation to develop greater resilience and, interestingly, greater
talent, including in our political parties and in this House.
My right hon. Friend the Member for North Durham (Mr Jones) made
a very strong argument for defence plans that are based on
reality and on honesty about the UK’s role in the world, and
especially the priority that we must give to our role in NATO.
He, too, said that we must see defence investment directed first
to benefiting the UK’s economy.
The right hon. Member for Elmet and Rothwell (Sir ) has been a Defence
Minister too, and he leads the NATO parliamentary delegation from
this country. He was right to remind us that for NATO member
nations, article 3, on the obligation to defend their own
country, is as important and fundamental as article 5, on the
obligation to defend each other.
My hon. Friend the Member for South Shields (Mrs Lewell-Buck)
spoke in some detail about the equipment shortfalls that the
Defence Committee’s report lays out, and rightly spelled out the
concern that the MOD is covering up the scale of the problems by
not providing information to the public or Parliament. That was
echoed by the hon. Member for Tiverton and Honiton (), who said that operational
planning assumptions, which were published up until 2015, are no
longer published.
The hon. Member for Rochdale () was right to talk about
the concealment of truth about the state of our armed forces, but
in fairness to the right hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford,
that is exactly what the Defence Committee—he played a leading
part in producing its report—is arguing the Government are not
doing. Defending our people and our allies is not “Alice in
Wonderland” or Gilbert and Sullivan; it is what people have a
right to expect of their Government and Parliament.
Finally, we heard from the hon. Member for West Dunbartonshire
(), who speaks for
the SNP and has great experience on defence. I followed his three
P’s, and I was particularly struck by his discussion of people.
There is a requirement to do better in recruiting and retaining
members of the armed forces. He argued that it is not just about
numbers and that our forces must better reflect the diversity of
the people they serve to protect.
I am very grateful to the right hon. Member for making those
points, but I would push him on the issue of an armed forces
representative body. Is it something that he and his party remain
committed to?
No, it is not. We have a much better solution, which is to
legislate for an independent armed forces commissioner, like
there is in Germany. They will be a voice for armed forces
personnel and the families who support them, and will report to
Parliament, not Ministers. In that way, we can reinforce the
accountability of our military to this House and the public, as
well as making it more responsive to those who serve. I will come
to some points on that, if I may.
I pay tribute to all contributors to this debate, particularly
those who are members of the two Committees on whose reports it
is based. As they know, there are deep and long-running problems
across defence, but I want to marshal my remarks into three main
areas of findings in both reports: first, the hollowing out and
underfunding of our armed forces; secondly, defence mismanagement
and waste; and thirdly, the increasing lack of openness that we
have seen recently from the Ministry of Defence.
On hollowing out and underfunding, my hon. Friend the Member for
South Shields reminded us that it was the last Defence Secretary,
the right hon. Member for Wyre and Preston North (Mr Wallace),
who told this House last January that the armed forces have been
“hollowed out and underfunded” over the last 14 years. These
reports reinforce that sobering assessment of our UK military
power and readiness.
The Defence Committee found that there are
“capability shortfalls and stockpile shortages”
across the forces, that resilience has been undermined by
reductions, and that there is a
“crisis in the recruitment and retention of both Regulars and
Reserves”.
Our armed forces are
“losing personnel faster than they can recruit them.”
The hollowing out and underfunding is getting worse, not
better.
The Minister for Defence Procurement ()
Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?
The Minister can have his say later.
The Defence Committee report says that capability gaps are
growing, reliance on allies is increasing, and we now have the
largest ever deficit in the MOD’s equipment plan, at £16.9
billion. The PAC concluded that there is an “unmistakable
deterioration” in the MOD’s financial position.
Like the right hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford, I have
brought along the Red Book. I have studied tables 2.1 and 2.2.
The Treasury and the House of Commons Library confirm a reduction
in defence budgets, which will be cut by £2.5 billion in cash
terms for the next financial year. These are the budgeted
baseline figures on which defence can plan, procure, deploy and
develop capabilities—not the one-off add-ons for specific
purposes, such as nuclear or Ukraine, which are the figures that
Ministers too often use to inflate the figures on total spending
and disguise the real budgets. This is where the country is left
after 14 years of Conservative failure on defence, and the right
hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford said that this is wholly
unworthy of a Conservative Government. I say it is wholly
unworthy of a British Government.
Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?
I will not. The Minister has 15 minutes in which to make his
point. [Interruption.] Okay, I will give way.
I am very grateful to the right hon. Gentleman. I have a specific
question: does he support our target of 2.5%?
As has been pointed out in this debate, 2.5% is an aspiration for
when economic circumstances allow—there is no timetable, no plan
and no credibility. The last time this country spent 2.5% of GDP
on defence was in 2010, under a Labour Government.
I turn to mismanagement and waste. My hon. Friend the Member for
Hackney South and Shoreditch said that mismanagement and waste
runs widely across defence. The PAC report found that only two of
the 46 MOD equipment programmes are rated as “highly likely” to
be delivered on time, on budget and on quality. Many defence
procurement programmes are being delayed and are over budget.
Ministers are failing British taxpayers and British troops but,
most concerning of all, they have no plan to fix this. My hon.
Friend said that one of our major concerns is that the MOD is
putting off decisions—serious threats, serious problems and a
serious lack of action from the Government to fix them.
The third area I want to mention is transparency. Civilian
authority over our UK military involves accountability to elected
civilian Ministers and elected Members of this House. Reducing
MOD transparency is a theme that runs through both reports. The
Defence Committee says it is “unacceptable” and the PAC says the
MOD has refused even to publish a full equipment plan this
year—that is the Minister’s responsibility—despite
“undertaking the same depth of financial analysis as in previous
years.”
That should worry all Members, and it has been a growing concern
of mine for some months. Whether it is Royal Navy ships’ days at
sea or MACA agreements struck with other Departments, data that
had previously been published and released to me is now being
withheld. Instead of responding to my questions, Ministers are
now saying, “We will write to you instead.” I am currently
awaiting 26 letters, some of them dating back as far as
December.
There are, of course, legitimate security reasons why some
information cannot be released, but there are also obvious
political reasons why a Government nearing an election would not
want some of this information to be made public.
The Defence Committee expressed an important and clear warning in
its report. Threats are increasing, just as concern is increasing
about the state of our armed forces not just from the members of
these Committees and from Members on both sides of the House but
from Ministers, too. The Minister for Security, the Minister of
State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, the right
hon. Member for Berwick-upon-Tweed (), and even the Defence
Secretary are publicly challenging their own Government’s defence
policy in the press. The Defence Secretary is making arguments in
the Daily Mailthat he failed to win with the Chancellor. I feel
for the Minister for Defence Procurement, who is almost the last
man standing by the Government’s defence policy.
Labour will always do what is required to defend the country. If
we win the confidence of the British people at the next election,
our pledge is that Britain will be better defended under Labour.
First, we will reinforce the protection of the UK homeland.
Secondly, we will ensure that our NATO obligations are met in
full. Thirdly, we will make our allies our strategic strength.
Fourthly, we will renew the nation’s moral contract with those
who serve. And fifthly, we will drive deep reform of defence, and
we will direct defence investment first to British jobs and
British business. This is how Labour will make our country secure
at home and strong abroad. We will consult across the House in
doing so because we want our plan to be not just Labour’s plan
but Britian’s plan to be better defended in future.
2.42pm
The Minister for Defence Procurement ()
I am grateful to all hon. and right hon. Members for their
contributions, and I thank all those on the Defence Committee and
the Public Accounts Committee for their thorough reports on armed
forces readiness, defence equipment and inventory management.
I have a lot of time for the right hon. Member for North Durham
(Mr Jones), but I think he said that our armed forces are a gnat
on the backside of an elephant.
No, I did not. If the Minister had actually listened, what I said
is that our contribution in the event of a crisis in the South
China sea would be a gnat on the backside of an elephant. That is
very different from what the Minister said.
I am grateful for the right hon. Gentleman’s clarification.
Either way, I think we can all agree that it is important that we
understand the extent to which our armed forces are ready and are
out there serving the country as we speak.
Our continuous at-sea nuclear deterrent is entering its sixth
decade of service, and our armed forces have helped us to become
Ukraine’s most front-footed ally. We have trained more than
60,000 Ukrainian military personnel since 2014, and we are
delivering more than £7 billion of military aid to Ukraine within
our overall aid package worth almost £12 billion. That support is
unwavering, with the recent announcement of our latest £2.5
billion package of military support for Ukraine being a £200
million uplift on the previous two years. Beyond our support for
Ukraine, our armed forces are participating in every single NATO
mission.
Sir
I am grateful to the Minister for allowing me to intervene. I did
not apply to speak in this debate because I could not be sure
that I would be here at the end. Will he impress upon the House
how our aid to Ukraine is vital because, if Ukraine successfully
thwarts Russia, all those dread scenarios about an attack on NATO
will not happen? Similarly, although President Trump is a worry,
it is at least a relief that he has begun to say that, provided
Europe does its bit, he will continue with America’s support for
NATO, should he be elected.
My right hon. Friend makes an excellent point. The hon. Member
for Rochdale () accuses us of imperialism
in how we deploy our armed forces, but the whole purpose of our
support is precisely to help Ukraine resist the imperialism of
the Kremlin that he has shamefully supported while condemning
what he calls the “Zelensky regime”. We heard him say it, and it
is absolutely shameful.
Will the Minister give way?
The hon. Gentleman did not give way to anyone so, if he will
forgive me, I will continue.
My right hon. Friend the Member for New Forest East (Sir ) made an excellent point that
we have heard a change of tone from Donald Trump in recent
days.
Mrs Lewell-Buck
The Minister says it is important to understand how ready our
forces are, so can he tell us why key information on readiness is
no longer published and why none of it was shared with our
Committee?
I am happy to engage with the Committee, as I did during the week
on artificial intelligence. There will always be a balance to be
struck between what we can share and where we have to recognise
the sensitivity of defence.
From the High North to the Mediterranean, we are deploying 20,000
service personnel from our Navy, Army and Air Force on the NATO
exercise Steadfast Defender, which is one of the alliance’s
largest ever training exercises. It is a valuable opportunity to
strengthen interoperability between us and our allies.
I am happy to report that, as the right hon. Members for
Wentworth and Dearne () and for Warley () said, overnight we have had
confirmation that a new defence and security co-operation
agreement has been signed with Australia, which will make it
easier for our armed forces to operate together in each other’s
country. It will also help facilitate UK submarine crews to visit
Australia as part of AUKUS.
A large number of points have been made in this debate, and I
will try to take as many as I can. The Chair of the Defence
Committee, the right hon. Member for Horsham (Sir ), and several others,
particularly the right hon. Member for Warley, talked about the
importance of industrial resilience, and I totally agree.
The right hon. Member for Warley made an important point about
finance. We must not forget the private sector’s role in
investing in defence. We have seen commentary on environmental,
social and governance, on which he wants to see cross-Government
work. I am pleased to confirm that, with my Treasury colleagues,
we held a meeting at Rothschild’s in the City to see what more we
can do, and I am confident that we will be saying more on this
important point about how we make the case for investing in
defence as a way of investing in peace.
Mr Francois
On ESG, there have been many references to the second world way
today. Is it worth reminding the House and the country that, if
we had not had a defence industry building Spitfires and
Hurricanes in 1940, this debate would not be taking place? In
fact, this place would no longer exist.
My right hon. Friend makes an excellent point. It shows why I
want to see us supporting our sovereign capability, because where
the Spitfire was there in the 1930s, we hope that the global
combat air programme will be there in the 2030s.
Sir
Will the Minister allow a brief intervention?
As my right hon. Friend has already intervened, I hope he will
allow me to make some progress and refer to comments from
colleagues.
Obviously, there has been particular debate about spending. The
shadow Secretary of State was unable to answer whether Labour
would match the figure of 2.5%, but a number of my colleagues
wanted us to go further and faster. This point was put well by
the hon. Member for Tiverton and Honiton (). The Chair of the Defence
Committee and others have suggested that we should look back to
the sort of GDP figures in the cold war, although they did not
necessarily say that we should go to exactly those amounts.
However, as was said by the hon. Gentleman, who I believe was in
military intelligence, in those days almost all of eastern Europe
was an armed camp full of Soviet divisions, whereas now those
countries are in NATO, so the situation has changed
profoundly.
As was rightly said by my right hon. Friend the Member for Elmet
and Rothwell (Sir )—one of my predecessors as
Minister for Defence Procurement—if we increase defence by a
significant amount, the money has to come from somewhere. An
increase from the current level of about 2.3% to 3% equates to
£20 billion, which is not a small amount of taxpayers’ money.
Even an increase to 2.5% equates to an extra £6 billion. So it is
Government policy to support that but to do so when we believe
the economy can support it on a sustained basis.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr
Francois) made a passionate speech about how there had, in
effect, been a cut to defence spending in the Budget, and several
other Members said the same. I do not agree, although I accept
that there is a debate about it. It is about the difference
between the main estimate and the supplementary estimate, and
some people have said it is about the inclusion of nuclear. To
me, the nuclear deterrent is fundamental to defence, so of course
it should be in the defence budget. We are not going to take out
GCAP or frigates, and we are certainly not going to take out the
nuclear deterrent, which is at the heart of the UK’s defence.
Sir
I like a lot of what the Minister is saying. It is right to say
that we have, in Poland, Finland and Sweden, allies in NATO that
produce great capability in terms of dealing with the threat from
Russia, but since 1989 China, now one of the two biggest
economies in the world, has gone on to be spending £232 billion
alone on defence—and that is just the official number. We also
now have a nuclear armed North Korea, with Iran making its way in
the same direction. The world picture is darkening. That may not
necessarily “directly impact” us, to use the words of other hon.
Members, although I think it does, but it has indirect impact on
some of our allies and on where they need to place their
resources. It is a real concern and we should not forget
that.
I am grateful to my right hon. Friend for that. It shows why I
have repeatedly said that we need to reform defence procurement
because of the need to stay competitive with our adversaries.
I agree with the Chair of the PAC, the hon. Member for Hackney
South and Shoreditch (Dame ), and my hon. Friend the Member for Devizes (), that we cannot just look at
what we want to spend and at the future aspiration; we have to
look at how we spend the money that we have better. That is why
on 28 February I announced our new integrated procurement model,
to completely overhaul our approach to acquisition. I said in my
speech—and I stand by this—that the current delegated procurement
model, under the Levene reforms, has created an inadvertent
tendency towards over-programming: as soon as there is financial
pressure on the equipment plan, such as we have had through
inflation, the single services compete to get their capability on
contract. By contrast, the very definition of our integrated
approach is pan-defence prioritisation, as we are seeing in
practice in our pending munitions plan, which will address many
of the concerns of right hon. and hon. Members about getting our
industry up to spec in terms of missiles and other key munitions.
Let me be clear that such prioritisation would be challenging
even if we went to 2.5%, such is the nature of defence.
A particular priority of our new acquisition model, as was
referred to by the Chair of the Defence Committee, is spiral
development: accepting 60% or 80% of requirements rather than
100% exquisite. The key to that is ramping up our engagement with
industry, so we have held far more engagement events with
industry at a secret level. Just this week, for example, we have
held engagement between the strategic command and industry about
cyber and electronic warfare—at a secret level, because we want
to empower industrial innovation.
I have also said that exports are a key part of getting our
industrial base as resilient as possible. So I am delighted to
confirm the overnight news that BAE Systems will partner in
Australia to build its nuclear-powered submarines. This is a
major moment for AUKUS, and the collective submarine-building
will support 7,000 additional British jobs across the programme’s
lifespan.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Hereford and South
Herefordshire () and the hon. Member for South
Shields (Mrs Lewell-Buck), who this week chaired the
Sub-Committee on AI, both rightly stressed the importance of
technology. To see that, one need only look at the situation in
Ukraine and at the extraordinary propensity of electronic
warfare, which underlines how the battle space has changed. So a
key part of our system will be about learning the lessons from
the frontline as rapidly as possible, as we spiral our own
developments in response. We are learning those lessons. For
example, as part of its drive to incorporate autonomous platforms
flying alongside crewed fighters, the RAF is now progressing to
procure drones to overwhelm an adversary’s electronic warfare
defences. That underlines an important point: that advantage in
future warfare and uncrewed combat, will not necessarily be
gained by individual platforms and technologies; it will be their
smart integration, across crewed and uncrewed systems, that will
enable us to develop a force fit for the future. That is why I
believe we need an integrated approach to procurement.
To conclude, the brief snapshot of military exercises that I have
outlined today does not do justice to the breadth and reach of
our armed forces. They are more than ready. They are out there,
deployed all over the world, keeping us safe and defending our
interests. Meanwhile, the reforms we have made to procurement
will help us adapt to emerging threats and evolving technological
possibilities. That is a key lesson from Ukraine and from our
Defence Command Paper.
This Government will continue to back our armed forces with
record levels of defence spending, an ambitious 10-year equipment
plan and by forging a new partnership with industry to co-develop
cutting-edge capabilities. It is a plan that will ensure that our
defence industrial base is more resilient and our armed forces
are better equipped. It is a comprehensive strategy for our
national security, and I commend it to the House.
2.55pm
Sir
Madam Deputy Speaker, as the shadow Secretary of State said, your
predecessor in the Chair at the start of the debate complimented
the hon. Members standing, saying that he anticipated the debate
would be rich in facts and high in quality. Almost universally,
he was absolutely right. It was an excellent debate.
There is an almost universal view, on both sides of the House,
that our brilliant armed forces are simply running too hard
against all that is demanded of them to meet essential
commitments. A war is taking place on our continent. As the
Defence Secretary has said, we are in a pre-war phase. Our Select
Committees have an essential role to play in highlighting
difficult issues, as we have been doing this afternoon. I endorse
what the Chairman of the PAC said in relation to finding more
ways in which Select Committees can scrutinise the most sensitive
of defence programmes. That is important for Parliament and
helpful for the Government.
We have to rise to the significant challenges set out in the two
reports, on the readiness of the armed forces by the Defence
Committee and the equipment plan by the PAC. I welcome what the
Minister said about AUKUS. I did not expect him to answer all the
questions that were raised in the reports, but he must work on it
because I know the Department will work on it. We have our job to
do. It is our duty to raise these difficult concerns, and I know
both Committees will continue to do so.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the First Report of the Defence
Committee, Ready for War?, HC 26, the Eighth Report of the
Committee of Public Accounts, Improving Defence Inventory
Management, HC 66, and the Nineteenth Report of the Committee of
Public Accounts, MoD Equipment Plan 2023-33, HC 451.
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