Defence funding boost 'extends British
influence', says PM
Published 9
minutes ago
Boris Johnson: Defence spending a boost for
"safety of the British people"
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-54988870
A
"once-in-a-generation modernisation" of the armed forces is required
to extend British influence and protect the public, Boris Johnson has said.
The prime
minister told MPs a new four-year funding deal would protect "hundreds of
thousands" of jobs and create 40,000 new roles.
"I
have decided that the era of cutting our defence budget must end, and it ends
now," he said.
Labour
welcomed more defence spending but asked how it would be funded.
Outlining
the new package in the Commons, the PM - speaking over video link as he is
self-isolating - said the benefits "will go far beyond our armed
forces".
Mr Johnson
described the increase in defence spending as being worth £16.5bn in new money
over four years.
However
economist Ben Zaranko, from the Institute of Fiscal Studies, said that while
this represented a big rise in spending, the figure of £16.5bn was a
"misleading way to present this announcement".
He
continued: "It would be more accurate to say that by 2024-25, defence
spending will be £7bn higher than it would have been under previous
plans."
Mr Johnson
said: "Our plans will safeguard hundreds of thousands of jobs in the
defence industry, protecting livelihoods across the UK and keeping the British
people safe."
The PM
pledged to end defence budget cuts, protect shipping lanes that supply the
country, press on with renewing the UK's nuclear deterrent and restore Britain
as "the foremost naval power in Europe" with a "renaissance of
British shipbuilding across the UK".
He also
said the funding would allow investment in new technology such as:
A new
"RAF space command launching British satellites and our first rocket from
Scotland in 2022"
"From
aerospace to autonomous vehicles, these technologies have a vast array of
civilian applications opening up new vistas of economic progress, creating 10,000
jobs every year - 40,000 in total - levelling-up across our country and
reinforcing our union," Mr Johnson added.
This is a
big win for Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, who's been fighting hard for a
significant increase in defence spending and a long-term financial settlement
to end what he calls a cycle of overambitious, under-funded defence reviews of
the past.
The
Treasury had been arguing for a much smaller annual increase. But Mr Wallace
found an ally in the PM, who says his first priority is defence of the realm.
Boris
Johnson also believes it'll boost Britain's place in the world and create jobs.
The extra
money will be used to modernise the armed forces with more spent on robots,
autonomous systems and meeting new threats in the domains of space and cyber.
Despite the
palpable relief inside the MoD it still has to fill a £13bn black hole in its
equipment budget. Difficult decisions about cutting old equipment to fund the
new are still to be made.
The MoD,
which doesn't have a strong track record of balancing its books, now has to
prove it can spend wisely.
And good
news for defence might also mean bad news for other government departments -
there's already speculation the international aid budget could be cut.
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presentational grey line
Labour
leader Sir Keir Starmer asked Mr Johnson whether the money would be raised
through spending cuts or tax rises, or both.
Mr Johnson
did not respond to the question but said Sir Keir's record of support for the
armed forces was "very thin indeed".
Former
foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt urged Mr Johnson "not to listen to any
voices in his ear" saying that cutting international aid could help to
fund the increase in defence spending.
And Labour
MP Sarah Champion, chairwoman of the international development committee, asked
Mr Johnson to "quash rumours and confirm his manifesto commitment" of
spending 0.7% of national income on overseas aid, "now and going forwards".
The PM
responded by telling the Commons: "I think we can all be proud of our
record on overseas aid and that will continue."
Earlier,
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said "letting go" of some older weapons
would create "headroom" for new investment.
He added:
"When I looked across at the armed forces today I saw them with equipment
that was out-of-date, I saw our adversaries across the world having better
equipment, the ability to attack us and harm us getting wider and wider from
our capabilities."
The funding
announcement is part of the first conclusions of the government's Integrated
Review which looks at security, defence, development and foreign policy.
Labour's
shadow defence secretary John Healey said the extra money would give "a
welcome and long-overdue upgrade to Britain's defences after a decade of
decline".
Conservative
MP and defence select committee chairman Tobias Ellwood said: "This is a
lot of money but ultimately there are still huge financial pressures facing our
armed forces."
But he said
the "key takeaway" for him was the "message this sends to the
British people, to the MoD as well, that we want to be back as a strong power
capability".
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