2012 – The year that was; 2013 – The year that could be?
As we draw to the end of 2012,
it is perhaps a good time to take stock of where the UK finds itself at the end
of a particularly busy year, and see whether any initial lessons can be drawn
from the year gone, and what we can possibly predict lies ahead of us in 2013.
2012 – A very good year indeed…
In the eyes of the author, 2012 has been a very good year in some ways for HM Forces. From a practical perspective, the standing of the Military in the UK has never been higher. The ability to step in at short notice and provide outstanding support for the Olympic Games, while simultaneously carrying out operations in Afghanistan, the Gulf, the Falklands and elsewhere demonstrates that for all the reductions that have gone on, the UK military can still rise to the occasion. Very few nations would be able to operate at the tempo that HM Forces have done this year, fewer still could then continue with the operational tempo of day to day operations that the UK is currently committed to doing.
This year saw the deployment
of 20,000 troops for the Olympics from all three services and the provision of
a very complex air defence, maritime security and ground defence plan plus
discrete specialist assets. Additionally, thousands of troops were surged at
short notice to provide manpower when it became clear that the security plan
would not cope without them. This has clearly demonstrated the ability of the
UK to put together, mobilise and support hugely complex operations at very
short notice. For all that some commentators seek to knock the UK capability,
we should remember just how few countries could have pulled of what happened
over the summer.
It is fair to say that right
now, the standing of the Military in the public eye is in a very good
place- there is enormous public support
for the Military as a whole, and there is a real gratitude for the work done to
ensure the Olympic Games were a resounding success. While there is clearly much
opposition to the Afghan mission, there remains strong popular support for the
troops who conduct it. In short, at the end of 2012, the UK military finds
itself in a place where it is unlikely to be again for a generation – at the
centre of the national consciousness.
The problem is how to
capitalise on this – one of the challenges the MOD could conceivably face going
to face in the run up to the next spending round is continuing to justify
current budget levels. The problem is that the Military are almost too successful
at supporting operations and delivering success, no matter how difficult the
situation. In the last 18 months British forces have engaged in campaigns
across the globe, utilising almost the full spectrum of types of military
activity, from peacekeeping and support to the civil power, to cruise missile
strikes and kinetic fighting in Afghanistan. Throughout this they have
continued to generate sufficient personnel and equipment to publicly meet these
challenges, even if privately we do not see what maintenance is being skimped
on, or leave being cancelled. Even at the peak of the summer activity, only
30-40,000 UK service personnel were employed on operational duties (Olympics, fuel
tanker drivers striker, HERRICK, Gulf, Falklands, Deterrent etc). This is
barely 20% of the current regular armed forces, and 25% of the post Army 2020
forces.
The challenge for the MOD is
going to be making the case that supporting this level of activity will
continue to require 160,000 regular and 40,000 volunteer reserve personnel in
future. After all, outside of general war, it is hard to conceive of HM Forces
needing to stand up beyond 40,000 troops in future, and while the complexities of
force generation, and sustainment beyond a single tour are well understood in
the MOD, it is perhaps a more challenging argument to make in public. The
question asked by the public, the politicians and the Treasury for the next
review may well be – do we really need an Army of 82,000 people after all?
A Financial Even Keel?
The good news is that the budget appears to be in a much better place now than it has been for some years. This has not been an easy or straightforward process, and it is genuinely good news that things look like they are balancing out. The fact that MOD has been able to escape any front line cuts in the Autumn Statement is to be welcomed, although we do not know whether any cuts will occur to support services.
It is useful to see that there
is a ‘contingency fund’ in place to fund new procurement in the future,
although this has doubtless come at the cost of swingeing cuts to the equipment
programme in order to bring some balance to the plan. So, while a fund may exist
to buy new equipment, it remains to be seen what was sacrificed in order to
bring this fund to existence. The loss of the Co-operative Engagement
Capability (CEC) is one high profile loss, and doubtless other ‘stealth cuts’
will emerge over time as it becomes clear that new capabilities will not be
funded, or equipment replaced in service.
That said, the ability to go
into the next spending round and SDSR with a balanced budget will be good news –
particularly if Afghanistan is drawing to a close, which will significantly
reduce wider expenditure on operations from the Treasury Reserve.
Moving forward from SDSR
In general, 2012 has been the year in which the final parts of the SDSR cuts were implemented, and we saw the bedding in of the various changes put about by the Levene Review. The standing up of Joint Forces Command was a big step forward, as was the scrapping of the three 4* CINC posts. There is a genuine change going on at the top of the system, as the military moves to a more streamlined command structure in future. We also saw the vision of the Army in 2020, in which a smaller army will focus more on preventative training and capability building, while reducing the teeth equipment it has previously drawn on for use. There will be many challenges in taking forward the future vision of the Army – 18% smaller, with significant reductions in equipment and cherished capbadges. On paper though, if the CDS vision of an Army with Brigades focusing on regional engagement can be delivered, and if it is properly funded, then there are grounds for cautious optimism that as we move forward into the post HERRICK future, we will see an Army which remains operational capable and globally employable.
As we move to 2013, it would
be fair to suggest that the following themes will feature heavily in the year
ahead. Firstly, there will be continued light skirmishes ahead of the SDSR
between various branches of the Services, as they jockey for position to gain
favour for their vision of the future. The Royal Navy will remain cautiously
optimistic that good times lie ahead, with HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH coming ever
closer to completion, and the Type 45 and ASTUTE class will start to come on
stream in ever greater numbers. The much vaunted ‘future fleet’ which has been talked
of for years is finally beginning to emerge in strength. The questions for the
RN will be whether there is continued support for a small but high tech navy,
or if the transition to a more French style structure of larger numbers of
lower capability vessels is the way forward.
The Army will focus
predominantly on operational success in HERRICK and setting out a pathway to a
vision of a future Army. It is going to be a challenging period as the first
real cuts start occurring, and experienced personnel leave ahead of the 2015
pension reforms. The challenge will be to convince an Army that has spent the
last 12 years on operational tasking that the future of ‘proper soldiering’ (as
some on ARRSE would see it) involving training, limited engagement and the odd
NEO is a worthwhile task. This will have to be done against the backdrop of a
vociferous opposition to any change in capbadge, and the inevitable campaigns
to save one much amalgamated regiment and its inherited traditions over
another.
Finally the RAF will see
itself with Typhoon entering service in ever greater numbers, while the less
glamorous, but arguably just as vital Air to Air refuelling aircraft (Voyager)
finally enters service. The RAF is in a position where it too will begin to
change away from the business of supporting ops in Afghanistan and returning to
regional engagement and delivery of airpower where needed.
In terms of engagement, the UK
military will continue to operate across all the continents of the planet, and
engage with a huge variety of nations. The Middle East will almost certainly
loom large in most calculations, both from capability, sales and training, but
also from ensuring global security against threats from an increasingly belligerent
Iran. There will potentially be increased interest in low level engagement in
Africa, and the RN will continue to fly the flag for defence relations with
South America and the Far East. The Levant will remain a flashpoint, and it may
well be the case that growing international pressure may see that something
happens in Syria – although speculation on the nature of when, why or how such
a force would be deployed is not something that the author would wish to
speculate on.
One of the biggest challenges
externally may well be to understand and respond to wider defence cuts,
particularly in the US and Europe. If, as seems likely, the US drops off the
Fiscal Cliff, then major cuts to the US military, even beyond that already
scheduled seem likely. The UK will need to ensure its own interests are not
damaged – particularly on high profile programmes like JSF. More broadly, there
will be further cuts in defence expenditure across Europe, but increases in
China and elsewhere. No matter how the media portray it though, the Chinese
Navy will remain some years from a truly carrier capable navy, while the Indian
Navy will continue to experience major delays and problems with trying to
introduce the ex Admiral Gorshkov into service.
Finally the Media will
continue to report innacurately on defence matters - after all having spent the
year convincing the UK public that we no longer had a military worth a damn,
then praising it for saving the day (again), and then condemning the military
as a bunch of out of date types who wouldn’t know a good idea if they saw it,
its clear that little has changed in the Fourth Estate.
Media coverage for next year
is likely to focus on damning the MOD civil service for decisions that were
actually taken by the military, to damn the Military for failing on some unspecified
issue or matter, and for the odd silly season or ‘human nature’ story. If in
doubt, the old faithful that the UK is no longer properly defended because the
UK doesn’t have Harrier, Carriers, SLRs, Spitfires or Brown Bess Muskets still in
service will be trotted out.
Defence think-tanks will
continue to generate headline stories that bear little resemblance to the
reality of the military today, but it will unfortunately not stop distinguished
ex officers from making fools of themselves by writing angry letters to
Government ministers or the papers, citing ‘when I was serving’ as a reason why
30-40 years later that the UK requires equipment of a type which has not been
produced for decades, and which is utterly obsolete.
So, 2013 is likely to be a
busy year, but probably less busy than 2012. There will be probably no headline
orders or cuts, but instead HM Forces will quietly get on with business as
usual. Along the way they will probably deploy at least once to somewhere
unexpected, and will be required to do the near impossible at least once!
Sadly, given the deployment to Afghanistan, it looks as it 1968 will remain the
only year in which no UK personnel was killed overseas since 1945.
The end of the year also marks
the first Birthday of ‘Thin Pinstriped Line’. Thank you for all your comments
and support over the year, and here is hoping that the next year provides plenty
more opportunities to write about Defence matters of interest.
Happy New Year!
A good post on a great site, keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteAn excellent and actually somewhat inspiring little read. I look forward to 2013 with baited breath. The things I'm watching for?
ReplyDelete- Whether there'll be any confirmation of a Typhoon deal with the UAE. That sort of contract will lower the costs for us too in the long run.
- To what extent Watchkeeper will start to make a bigger show of itself.
- Whether Taranis will at last take flight to match Neuron and the X47.
- The first opinions and proper reports on the Foxhound filtering in. Thus far all we've heard are suits who've never driven one in theatre talking about how it's apparently brillaint.
- The potential installation of harpoons on the Type 45's from the disappearing type 22's from decommissioning.
- The initial reports of the Scout SV testing.
That's my line to watch for. Hopefully we'll see positives on all of them, they all have a lot going for them!
An excellent article to finish the year off on. A Happy New Year and Happy Birthday to this blog. :-)
ReplyDeleteSir Humphrey,
ReplyDeleteA fine end to a good year. Thank you for a year of thoughtful, considered opinion which helped me stay abreast of my UK colleagues and HM Forces.
Thanks Sir H...always an enjoyable, balanced & informative read.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year Sir H
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to reading many more great posts in 2013
Upcoming olympic 2013 details are here..
ReplyDelete2013 Olympic Games
In keeping with my reputation, *late* good wishes for the New Year and thanks for your informative site.
ReplyDeleteI would be much cheered if there was some sign of a joint services (and civilian) 'electronic defence' unit, by which I mean, a gathering of expertise and equipment that would help safeguard our computer networks. For sure, they will be the first to be attacked and I don't think too many people realise what a catastrophe it would be even if such an attack was only partially successful.
Sir Humphrey,
ReplyDeleteIt has been a pleasure reading your Blog over the last year. Highly informative and intelligently written, I still browse ARRSE now and then mainly for the humour and the odd informative post, but if I want to see a point cut to the chase then..