Asked by Lord West of Spithead To ask Her Majesty’s Government
whether the work being undertaken by the National Security Adviser
has led to any changes to the planned paying off of any Royal Navy
warships. The Minister of State, Ministry of Defence (Earl Howe)
(Con) My Lords, no,...Request free
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Asked by
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To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether the work being
undertaken by the National Security Adviser has led to
any changes to the planned paying off of any Royal Navy
warships.
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My Lords, no, it has not. As the noble Lord will be
aware, the national security capability review will be
published in late spring. Meanwhile, we have launched the
modernising defence programme to make sure that our Armed
Forces are able to meet the intensifying threats that
this country faces.
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I thank the Minister for his reply. I have to say that I
am rather surprised, because the whole reason for the
review was that the threat is greater and more diverse
than it was before. When one adds to that Brexit and its
implications for our territorial seas and exclusive
economic zone, it would seem that making any decisions
about paying off ships that have already been decided
would be rather foolhardy, not least because of the
recent NAO report on the MoD equipment plan showing that
there is no money there at all for the five frigates that
have been much trumpeted. Would it be possible to go back
to the MoD and look at the possibility of not paying
ships off and selling them but rather holding them in
reserve until we have finally come to a conclusion about
the threats and what is required, so that in an emergency
they could be regenerated and used by our nation?
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My Lords, I understand the point that the noble Lord is
making, but he will recognise that putting any equipment,
whether ships or not, into mothballs carries a cost with
it. If he is referring to HMS “Ocean”, I am afraid that
the decision not to extend her life has been taken and
she will decommission this year as planned. But the noble
Lord is right in substance: the aim of the modernising
defence programme is to make sure that defence across the
piece is sustainable, affordable and configured to
address the threats that we face—and I am sure that he
shares those aims.
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Does my noble friend agree that in the modernisation
programme it is extremely important that close attention
is paid to recruitment? Will he confirm that that is
being given high priority in the work that is being
attended to at the moment?
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Yes, my Lords. As my noble friend is well aware, there
are concerns about recruitment in all three armed
services. There is no single reason for that. Some of it
is attributable to the buoyant employment climate in the
economy as a whole, but that is not the whole reason.
This is a matter of constant attention by the service
chiefs.
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My Lords, perhaps I might press the Minister on the
points raised by the noble Lord, Lord West. If the
integrity of the modernisation is to be preserved, no
decisions can be taken that will affect capability
between now and the conclusions of that review. Should
not the principle of “nothing is decided until everything
is decided” rule the Government’s position here?
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No, my Lords. The Ministry of Defence will continue to
take decisions in parallel with the programme that is now
in train. Where significant decisions need to be taken,
their impact on the modernising defence programme and
their relationship with it will of course be considered.
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My Lords, the Navy is in the process of taking delivery
of five Batch 2 offshore patrol vessels. These will
displace four earlier vessels, one of which, HMS
“Severn”, has already been decommissioned. She is only 15
years old. Will the Minister undertake to examine future
uses for these versatile vessels, which might include
Border Force or Royal Naval Reserve duties to augment our
coastal and fisheries protection?
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I am grateful to the noble Earl for those suggestions,
which I am sure will be noted by the department. But the
modernising defence programme that is now in train is the
body of work that will settle the specifics of what we
require to meet our defence needs. As I have said, its
aim is to ensure that we have defence that is
sustainable, affordable and configured to address all the
threats that we face.
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My Lords, can the Minister say what discussions his
colleagues have had with Commonwealth navies about the
building, deployment and operation of warships? Does he
accept that, while frigates are very valuable to our
powered defence strength, they are also a major
transmission of our influence and soft power across the
globe?
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My noble friend is entirely right. We have regular
discussions with our Commonwealth partners in particular
and also with our NATO allies, in the light of the
national shipbuilding strategy which, as he knows, is
designed to ensure that we once again a competitive and
vibrant shipbuilding industry in this country.
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My Lords, we have had report after report and promise
after promise. Why should we have any faith in any of
them? Yesterday, fortuitously for me—but not for the
Minister—the National Audit Office produced its annual
Ministry of Defence equipment plan report. Amyas Morse,
head of the National Audit Office, said:
“The Department’s Equipment Plan is not affordable. At
present the affordability gap ranges from a minimum of
£4.9bn to £20.8bn if financial risks materialise and
ambitious savings are not achieved”.
When reading the report, I got as far as page 14, on
costs not included in the plan:
“As a consequence of the Strategic Defence and Security
Review 2015, the Department introduced a number of new
equipment commitments into the Plan. The Department was
unable to demonstrate that all equipment requirements are
now included within the Plan. We”—
that is, the National Audit Office, the highest analysing
body in the land—
“have established that the Plan does not include the
costs of buying five Type 31e frigates”.
If there is an error of that order of magnitude in the
plan, how can we have any faith in anything that comes
out in the next few weeks or months?
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My Lords, we have been quite open about the pressures
that we face. The defence equipment plan summary,
published yesterday, acknowledged that the equipment plan
emerging from the MoD’s current year budget contains a
high level of financial risk and an imbalance between
cost and budget. It is exactly those risks and imbalances
that we aim to resolve in the programme that is now under
way.
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My Lords, is the Minister aware that, in answer to a
parliamentary Question in the other place from SNP MP
, the Ministry of
Defence said that it had spent more than £100 million on
a study to explore options for a potential future warhead
and whether to refurbish or replace? The noble Lord, Lord
West, told me that he would have done it for much less
money. Did the Ministry of Defence consider that option?
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I am sure that the Ministry of Defence could well have
done with the advice of the noble Lord, Lord West, in
this context—which we, too, are always keen to have. But
I can assure the noble Baroness that, in all work
undertaken by my department, cost-effectiveness and
affordability are key.
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