"You Say It Best When You Say Nothing At All" - Thoughts on the MDP Review Announcement
The Secretary of State for Defence has provided an update to
the House of Commons on progress towards the Modernising Defence Programme
review (MDP), setting out its progress to date. To say that this statement has
left some commentators underwhelmed is an understatement – the response landed
with a resounding ‘is that it?’ on social media.
The MDP is the successor review to the National Security
Capability Review (NCSR) that was launched last July, and was intended to
function as an update on the 2015 Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR)
outside the normal five yearly cycles of defence reviews. Reasons for the
review being conducted differ depending on who you listen to – some will claim
it was a timely and reasonable update chapter, intended to ensure that UK
national security policy was well placed to address the post Brexit referendum
security dynamic. Others will suggest it was due to the money running out, and
defence procurement writing cheques its ego couldn’t cash.
The challenge with the NCSR was that it seems to have become
painfully clear that the appetite by the MOD to deliver effect is not matched
up by its financial package, and that major cuts would be needed to keep the
Department fiscally solvent. It was last autumn that the first rumours began to
emerge of deep cuts to force levels, causing unrest on the back benches. The
unexpected resignation of Michael Fallon, and his replacement by Gavin
Williamson seems to have led to further concerns as the MOD struggled to pull
together a force package that was credible to allies, amenable to the
backbenches and affordable to the Treasury.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
A further series of leaks over the spring, particularly on
the state of the amphibious force led to the conclusion that the MOD work
should be spun off into a separate review – to be known as the Modernising
Defence Programme – which the MOD explained was about ensuring the British
armed forces were fit to meet the current strategic challenges and threats
facing the UK.
Little more has been heard about the review, with the usual
dynamic of leaking for effect replaced by a full-frontal public relations assault
on the Treasury by a significant number of MPs and Ministers, leading to
possibly unimaginable of scenes of a Secretary of State for Defence very
publicly standing up for his department and its budget. The sense was that the
dynamic had shifted and that given the strong feeling in Parliament over this
issue, more money would need to be forthcoming to fund Defence and give it
additional resources to meet the challenges placed on it.
The announcement then came as a surprise to many, who had
been expecting an insight into the findings of the review at the NATO summit.
Instead, after a year of work, the findings were boiled down into a barely
2000-word statement on what the review had concluded to date.
Key Findings
The statement noted that the complexity of the threats had
accelerated since 2015, with adversaries deploying new capabilities and
engaging in passive aggressive hostilities, often via proxies, in a manner that
threatened to undermine the existence of the Rules Based International System:
“Threats and risks to national security have diversified and
become more complex since 2015. Although we anticipated many of the threats and
risks we now face, we underestimated the pace at which they would intensify and
combine to challenge UK national security at home and threaten the rules-based
international order that has delivered peace, security and prosperity over many
decades. And, we did not fully understand the ways in which they would interact
with each other.
Alongside this, the character of warfare has changed since 2015. We are
in a period of constant aggressive competition between states, often developing
into undeclared confrontation and, in some cases, proxy conflicts. Technology,
especially digital technology, is developing at a breath-taking pace, making
pervasive many capabilities once only imagined in science fiction.”
This scene setter then goes onto discuss how the potential
adversaries are using these opportunities to threaten the UK, using a variety
of new environments and operating spaces to pose fresh threats and challenges:
Our adversaries are working to take
advantage of this contested environment by systematically identifying and
exploiting our vulnerabilities and those of our allies and partners. Peer and
near-peer states are investing heavily in both conventional and emerging
technologies, and are increasingly adopting hybrid or asymmetric approaches to
gain advantage.
This has included attacking our digital
networks and those of our allies, and operating in unconventional and legally
questionable ways. Broader developments in the world including demographic
change, increasing urbanisation, the risk of pandemics, resource and
environmental pressures will all contribute to a global strategic context which
will become more complex
At the risk of
sounding harsh, there is little in any of the above paragraphs that should come
as a surprise to anyone who has studied the future nature of conflict – indeed
the 2014 publication ‘'Global
Strategic Trends Out to 2045’ by the MODs own in house ‘Doctrine & Concepts
Development Centre identifies many of these issues as challenges back then.
What Role for the Armed Forces
The review sets
out three key findings for the structure of the Armed Forces that it sees as
being how they will operate in the future:
1. Contribute to strengthening global security through our leading role
in NATO, and provide the structures and capabilities to defend the UK;
2. Meet the challenges of the wider threats to international security
and stability, including through operations and activities alongside our global
allies and partners. Defence must be engaged and outward looking, meeting the
challenges of our age, from state-based competition and confrontation, violent
extremism and terrorism, instability and crises in Africa and Asia, illegal and
irregular migration, serious and organised crime, to climate change and
environmental disasters.
3. Act independently, when appropriate, to protect UK interests and
citizens overseas, leading multi-national operations and developing strong
defence relationships with partners around the world.
Again, this is nothing new or surprising here. Although some
of the emphasis may have changed, for instance the increased reference to NATO
compared to previous years, there is nothing in this statement that should
trouble or cause surprise to anyone with a passing interest in UK defence
policy. In many ways this is, so far, a routine statement that could have been
written for any of the Defence Reviews conducted since 1991.
There are though
several interesting statements which are worthy of further comment. To start,
the emphasis in Para two on the role to be played tackling instability and
crisis in Africa and Asia – both regions that have traditionally seen a lower
commitment of UK forces in recent decades. This focus suggests an increased
need for forces capable of both training and educating to enhance stability,
but also capable of intervening at speed and distance to stage a decisive role
in a possible crisis.
Secondly, the
heavy emphasis placed on tackling state-based threats (competition and
confrontation) serves as a timely reminder that the armed forces need to be
capable of executing conventional deterrence again – ensuring that potential
aggressor nations do not see the UK as a soft touch. This is a strong signal
that for UK defence policy, focusing resources against a specific national
threat will once again become the norm, much like in Cold War days.
The final
paragraph focuses on the role of acting independently, to protect UK interests
and citizens overseas. This is a very open statement that could lead planners
to a range of conclusions. For starters, it doesn’t define what ‘acting
independently’ means – is it a Falklands Islands style scenario of a Task Force
liberating territory, or is it about permitting discrete hostage rescues or
evacuations of nationals from war torn countries?
The reason this
is of interest is that many of the assets needed to conduct independent
operations, such as amphibious platforms were the ones seen as most likely for
being scrapped earlier on in the review. It would be helpful to understand what
the planning appetite is here – is it to sustain large scale operations, or
scale back and accept that ‘acting independently’ means ‘rescuing the small
party of holiday makers from a beach resort in Obscuristanaloinia’?
Similarly, the
emphasis on commitment to leading multi-national operations is intriguing and
raises questions about what it means in practise. Leadership of multi-national
operations calls for a specific set of skills and capabilities, such as
Divisional / Brigade HQ’s, or being able to deploy command platforms with
battlestaffs capable of managing a coalition of diverse actors. It also
requires being able to deploy sufficient weight and capability to justify your
claim to a leading role in a coalition (and in turn, this requires a forward
leaning interventionary foreign policy that favours taking on the mantle of
operational leadership).
How will the MOD respond?
There is a line
of interest which notes : “Today, our adversaries disguise their
actions by launching attacks that are hard to attribute, or by operating below
the conventional threshold for a decisive, collective response. Whilst our
Armed Forces already protect us against these challenges every hour of every
day, we need to be able to respond to this new character of warfare, both in
the traditional land, sea and air domains, as well as in the new domains of
space and cyber.”
The clear
inference here is that the rules of the game are changing, and that traditional
deterrence, both through conventional and nuclear means is no longer sufficient
to be certain of preventing malign state activity against the UK. Incidents
like cyber attacks and the Skripal poisonings prove that other nations are
willing to conduct operations to achieve an effect, and that for the UK, there
is a need to both deter, and be able to pick up the pieces afterwards.
This leads to a
reasonable conclusion that an already crowded budget will have to find
additional room for more spending in cyber defence and CBRN measures, as well
as enhancing the role of Space. This is
all important, but not necessarily a ‘traditional’ measure of military capability.
Choosing how to prioritise funding, and also explain to a cynical public and
backbenches that scrapping ships was essential to fund and preserve a hard to
define, and probably highly classified
cyber capability (for example) will be a hard sell. This cuts to the
heart of the national security challenge facing the MOD – the sort of the
threats it will need to guard against are often difficult to explain or show as
they aren’t traditional military hardware.
There are several
comments in the statement about the importance of the international aspect of
Defence, both by presence and training value – for instance:
“The Armed Forces have a unique network of alliances and friendships
spanning every corner of every continent. We have made significant progress in
making Defence more ‘international by design’, and we will look at how we could
do more… We will consider our global defence network, to make sure we have the
right military and civilian staff deployed around the world… And we will continue to lead multinational forces
and deepen our relationships across the globe”
It is right to
point out that the UK occupies a strategically unique position, benefitting
from overlap across a range of
alliances, partnerships and relationships that are of mutual benefit. These
often only work by the presence of low level liaison or exchange officers,
prestige postings that are often the first to be chopped when budgets get tight
and protecting core capability is deemed more important.
It is reassuring
to see a commitment to review the Defence Network, particularly as the UK has
one of the largest and most global Defence Attache and Advisor networks in the
world. It must be hoped that the outcome of this review is to expand it, to
deepen relationships and not draw it in on itself again. The short term savings
accrued from deleting an exchange post often pale into insignificance from the
long term damage such a move can do to bilateral relationships.
It must also be
hoped that this review reinforces the message that Defence Diplomacy is a
critical force enabler for the UK, and enhances our standing around the world.
But, it relies on high quality individuals going on defence attaché tours, not
final tour SO1s being given a ‘thank you and goodbye’ posting. While progress
has been made in this area in recent years, it is vital that the message is
sent clearly – Defence Attaches are a force multiplier, not a holiday posting
for duffers.
It was also
intriguing to note the comment:
“Most importantly, we need to make sure we can respond rapidly to future
crises on our terms. Our elite and high-readiness forces are critical in this
regard, enabled by collective training and our high-end exercise programme. We
will consider how we can rebalance our training and equipment to mainland
Europe, the Far East and the Middle East and review our overseas basing to
improve our interoperability with allies and partners.”
There are two key issues in this
statement. Firstly, there remains an affirmation to the continued value of high
readiness forces, which remain of critical importance to the UK, and the
importance of the international exercise programme. This again is often an easy
cut to make during times of financial shortages, but if you want a globally
deployable capability, then you need to be able to fight in whatever climate
you’re likely to encounter. Its hard to simulate jungle or desert warfare
training in the UK – you either need to train, or get out of the business
altogether. It must be hoped that this is a code for confirming the ongoing
work to train with allies abroad.
The phrase ‘rebalance’ is one that
often sounds like a code for ‘how do we do less and spend less without looking
like that’s the case’! The second part of the statement reads like a list
of where the UK currently has personnel and assets has based, and how it can do
better with them.
It is perhaps ironic that the
decision to withdraw from Germany in 2010 is coming to fruition now, just as
the need for British forces in Continental Europe is greater than at any point
since the end of the Cold War. It already seems likely that the UK will commit
to keeping a training presence in Germany, probably not dissimilar to the BATUS
setup in Canada, using the Sennelager training area.
More widely, the Middle and Far East
have in recent years seen a significant increase in UK presence and operational
tempo. The recent opening of the Jufair support facility in Bahrain, coupled
with the commitment to enhance both maritime and land presence in Oman also
points to an ongoing UK commitment in the Gulf region. The imminent Exercise
Saif Sarrea 3 in Oman is also a good example of testing the readiness of
globally deployable forces to exercise across a range of environmental terrain.
The UK has one of the largest global
footprints of any nation when it comes to overseas basing facilities and real
estate, some it quite elderly (for instance the wharves and fuel depot in
Singapore). It is likely that this review will consider issues like whether the
current estate is fit for purpose, whether it could be more effectively served
by lodging with other nations (for instance, could the UK ‘piggyback’ off a
third nations infrastructure in places like Africa or the Gulf).
It may also examine issues like
whether you need a permanent presence in a region, or merely stores and a
warehouse to issue kit when required. There is also a lot of issues over
permissions, and whether basing in another nation reduces our own national
ability to conduct operations (e.g. what veto / approval is given to the UK to
conduct operations out of a friendly country).Sometimes overseas basing can be
restrictive – for instance, are the Gurkhas in Nepal the right place to keep a
regional reserve of acclimatised infantry for the UK, given they are funded
mostly by the Sultan of Brunei?
There is also a question over how the
global network of Permanent Joint Operating Bases could be used – are they in
the right place to support operations where we are likely to work? Do we need
to invest in more facilities in places like Africa or nearer to the West Indies
(recommission HMS MALABAR?), or do we close them down? Playing devils advocate,
does the UK need anywhere near the level of force presence currently in the
Falkland Islands, or could it safely reduce considerably the local forces?
The final observation worth making is
that having access to globally deployable bases and possessing rapid reaction
forces is very different to having amphibious lift. It must be asked whether
there is a subtle hint in the statement that the likely future interventionary
capabilities do not necessarily require an LPD force to deliver them, relying
instead on local bases and allied forces or assets.
This ties into
another line in the statement – “We
intend to modernise our force structure so that it is better able to meet the increasing
threats we face. The key design principles of Joint Force 2025 are right; we
want Armed Forces able to operate with agility and pace in the information age.
Our Armed Forces need to be able to meet a full range of missions now and into
the future. This includes, if necessary, warfighting operations under NATO
Article 5 and further afield”.
There is a forum
on the internet discussing British Airways, where it is noted that the phrase
‘British Airways Enhancements’ usually means cuts. A similar line could be
applied to the phrase ‘modernise our force structure’! In an era of resource neutral budgets, where
defence equipment costs increase year on year, modernisation can only happen if
you buy less of the new equipment, or make headroom elsewhere by removing
capabilities from service. A cynic would suggest that this statement is setting
out the argument why major force structure cuts seem likely.
But, what is also
important here is the statement that the ambition set out in the 2015 SDSR to
field Joint Force 2025 seems right is important, as this sets the likely
headmark of aspiration for what the MOD will be intending to field in the
future. As a reminder, Joint Force 2025
sets out the aspiration to ensure the UK can deploy a force of up to 50,000
personnel for a short period of time, or sustain a smaller force for an
indefinite period of time.
In broad terms
this equates to a deployable division for the Army, a maritime task group for
the Royal Navy and an Expeditionary Air Wing for the RAF. It is reassuring to
see that this remains the key aspiration, and that the UK is not reducing its
ability to project substantial amounts of force into the field.
There will be
questions about what falls into this force though, noting the 2015 SDSR was
light on information, and it will again raise questions about the structure of
the armed forces. There is no commitment within the Joint Force 2025 model to
specifically deploy an LPD or amphibious force (merely 10-25 ships). Similarly,
there is no specific commitment to aircraft or vehicle types, making it harder
to read what the force will actually be equipped with. While the UK may be able
to deploy 50,000 people, its not at all clear what the units or capabilities
will be.
One guide is the
continued aspiration to be able to conduct warfighting operations under NATO
Article 5, a strong statement of the UK’s continued commitment to NATO and its
willingness to field forces capable of taking on an external aggressor prepared
to attack a NATO member state. It is reasonable to assume this means Russia,
which in turn reads across into the UK being prepared to provide capabilities
that can be credible against the Russian threat – one would expect this to
focus particularly on ISTAR, tackling the cyber and other unconventional
threats like ‘little green men’ and also being able to deliver credible ASW and
MCMV protection to ensure the ongoing credibility of the Strategic Nuclear
Deterrent force.
The other
commitment is to ‘wider afield’, not defined in any more detail. This implies
an ongoing commitment to providing a force capable of operating beyond the
traditional NATO area of responsibility. What is particularly interesting is
the subtle way NATO has taken primacy again in these statements, with Article 5
defence coming first, and out of area operations second – after decades of
focusing on global operational presence, the UK is once again signalling that
its prime operational area of focus and war fighting preparation seems to be
NATO. There is an extremely strong message in that statement, both to NATO
members and potential aggressors.
Another key
phrase is ‘agility and pace in the information age’ – some may suggest that
this means an emphasis on lighter systems (e.g not tanks or heavier capability)
and being far more network centric in focus. This may sound the death knell for
some units, while opportunity for investment in others. This is also hinted at
in another part of the statement where it says:
“We may need to accelerate elements of the programme to meet the most
acute threats sooner. Equally, we might want to introduce new capabilities or
equipment that provide significant advantage in the immediate term. We intend,
in each case, to look to the right balance of conventional and novel
capabilities to meet the threats we face.”
There is an entire blog article
to be written on what the likely accelerated elements of the programme could
be, and what these threats are. What is clear is that the MOD appears to be
considering a substantial change to its equipment programme, rescoping a number
of programmes to bring them into service sooner, and potentially introducing
some kind of ‘UOR’ programme to gain ‘significant advantage’.
What is clear is that the next phase
of the MDP is likely to see significant and major changes to the equipment
programme. This in turn comes at a price, either through reducing funding for
capability, total unit buys or outright cancellation of projects. When coupled
with the mantra of faster, lighter and able to fight in an Article 5 conflict,
there does appear to be major change likely to happen soon to the equipment
programme.
The final part of
the statement focused on wider issues, such as people and the relationship with
the defence industry:
“we should also ensure that we use the combined talents of our Whole
Force of Regulars, Reserves, civil servants and industry partners more
effectively. The character of conflict and the world of work more generally are
changing, so Defence will need to up-skill our people, harness the advantages
offered by Reserves, and reflect the expectations of the modern workforce… To help create financial headroom for the additional
modernisation, we will consider how to deliver greater efficiency by adopting
ambitious, digitally-enabled business modernisation. In parallel, we will
consider removing existing areas of overlap and duplication within our force
structure and burden-sharing more effectively with allies and partners.”
These statements
suggest two things. Firstly, despite many years of public statements and view
that the MOD and armed forces need to modernise, this still hasn’t been done.
The phrase ‘harness the advantages offered by the Reserves’ suggests that the
Armed Forces are finally going to try and match individual skills to experience,
and make best use of their reservist workforce, or more worryingly they will
look covetously to the Regular Reserve and see it as a pool of manpower to be
tapped to solve short term manning crises.
The ongoing
commitment to making efficiency savings and modernisation again reads like a
standard line from many prior statements. Whether the MOD can deliver this
though remains a moot point – one of the reasons for the MPD occurring was the
financial crisis caused in part by the Department failing to meet a substantial
sum of efficiency savings. It is not clear why the MOD now feels it can reap
further savings from the budget, given its ongoing failure to identify and
deliver several billion in savings as it is.
The final line is
perhaps the most important, as it hints at substantial structural changes
internally (e.g. does the RAF Regiment still need to exist or could the Army do
it), and discussions with allies about how the operational burden is better
shared. This is likely to lead to some difficult conversations as the MOD tries
to identify where duplication exists, how it can be fixed and what cost it
comes at – noting that even very minor changes that could save money will cause
controversy (e.g. closing sites ,amalgamating units etc).
The phrase burden
sharing also implies that the MOD can expect allies to provide some of the
required capability, reducing or removing the need for the UK to retain it in
such large numbers. This could range from cutting a deal with the Netherlands
to provide the LPD if the UK provides the Strategic RORO capability for the
UK/NL landing force, or looking to France to share air tanker assets. These
sorts of discussions are complicated and never easy to deliver, balancing
national aspirations with the difficulty of working out the circumstances when one
country can call on anothers assets, and the incredibly complex legal and
policy framework that underpins this.
Burden sharing
though if successful does offer the UK an opportunity to take risk on force
levels if it knows that it can call on specific assets when needed to support
operations. Given the renewed focus on NATO, and the desire to enhance
relationships with partners like France, this is a credible way of trying to
balance resources and capability.
Overall Thoughts
This statement
was not particularly long, but it contained a lot of oblique hints and subtle
references that with a bit of thought seem to suggest how UK military thinking
is evolving and where the likely outcome of the MDP Part Two goes next.
Baring a
substantial injection of cash in the spending review, the likely outcome would
seem to be structural cuts in a manner intended to preserve the headline
capabilities of interest and relevance to our allies, and a wide range of efficiency
savings and further base closures designed to help close the funding gap.
The MOD does find
itself in a bind though, having proven itself unable to predict how the world
was likely to change so quickly (raising reasonable questions about the ability
of its strategic assessment organisations to predict and assess future trends),
it now faces the challenge of trying to reorientate itself to meet the increasingly
important NATO commitment, while also maintaining a global focus and supporting
the ‘Global Britain’ narrative. It is doing this under significant resource pressure,
coupled with strong opposition to structural cuts, even when doing so would
free up resources for enhancements elsewhere.
It is too early
to make a judgement on the MDP process – there is a lot of intriguing and
interesting lines within it, that hint at a continued UK global presence and capability,
but which remains worryingly light on details. The challenge will be over the next
few months as the single Services begin to leak options to fight their corner,
and the future force structure emerges – this is when the lobbying campaign is
likely to get vicious.
Given how much of
this depends on last minute deals and changes of heart by Ministers, it would
be wise to assume nothing is done and dusted with the MDP until it is announced
in the House of Commons in due course. A better question may be ‘when on earth will
that be’?
Good analysis, but surely the major point is that Williamson has been unable to announce the increases to defence funding for which he has been unsubtly been campaigning in the MDP timescale he promised. So it's a reasonable conclusion that he is losing the argument with HMT and the PM. Hence his increasingly excited publicly leaked criticisms of both. Will he have to eat humble pie and make cuts or will he manage to pressure PM enough to get more money? Suspect that the outcome will be determined by issues completely unrelated to defence.
ReplyDeleteSpot on. Williamson has been completely out of his depth on this one, a good whip doesn't necessarily make a good minister a la house of cards.
DeleteWilliamson has boxed himself into a corner over this one. He promised the forces he could get more money for defence and, as expected, then found he could not. His intentions may be good (though still not sure how much of this is genuine commitment to defence as opposed to self-promotion) but his childish behaviour will probably have damaged him in the longer term. Williamson clearly has quite a bit to learn, e.g. throwing tantrums tends to be counterproductive.
Deletethat is a very beautiful description . how you did it. unbelievable. i really like your post.
ReplyDeletemeet and greet heathrow