Believing 10 Impossible Things Before Breakfast...
At times it can be hard to separate fact from fiction on the
internet and understand what is going on, or know what to believe. This is
particularly true in the field of Defence, where rumours can appear as if out
of nowhere, and quickly gain credence as ‘the truth’ no matter how untrue they
are.
Often these rumours emerge as twisted offshoots from
factually accurate statements, or at other times they can be utterly false. The
challenge is trying to spot where the truth lies, and what, if anything, to believe.
This was brought into sharp focus today by a debate on
twitter where a credible commentator noted they had heard reports that the UK
is planning to ‘sell’ one of the QUEEN ELIZABETH class aircraft carriers to
India. This immediately sparked debate as to whether it was true or not.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
Like all good stories, this seems to have its roots in a couple
of different issues that have been conflated together to form one entirely new
story. The suggestion that one of the two ships could be sold is not remotely
new – In 2009 the
Guardian reported that India was interested in purchasing one of the
vessels from BAE systems.
There was some logic in this suggestion at the time – the UK
was about to go into a Strategic Defence Review where the outcome of the force
was far from certain, but it was known that large cuts were required. Secondly,
India was at the time in the market for new vessels to replace their elderly
force at a time when significant
delays were being experienced with the refit of the former Admiral Gorshkov.
Indeed, one of the now almost forgotten outcomes of the 2010
SDSR was that the RN planned to convert one carrier to CTOL, but that the other
would be mothballed or even sold off to cover the cost of the conversion. This
plan was officially ditched
in 2014 under the plans to operate both full time. Therefore, the seeds had already been laid for the suspicion
that given half a chance, the Treasury would jump at the opportunity to force
the selling off of a carrier.
The next part of the puzzle came together over the last week
as rumours emerged that India has expressed interest in buying
the BAE Systems design and building their own version of the carrier at
home. This occurred at a similar timeframe to a visit by Admiral Lanba (the
Indian Chief of the Naval Staff) to the UK in mid-march, where he visited
HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH.
One of the key outcomes of this visit was the signing of an
agreed ‘Carrier Capability Partnership’ to focus on enhancing both navies
operational carrier capabilities. This makes a lot of sense given the Indian
Navy’s ambition to return to operating multiple carriers, and the increasing
security relationship between both navies. While it may be possible that the UK
would look to forward
base Type 31 in India it remains unclear if this would happen or not.
The final part of the picture is that there have been a
number of very vague announcements recently about rumours of paying off, or mothballing
one of the carriers at the same time as the RN confirmed that it had sufficient
manpower to keep both at sea. Some sensed some kind of conspiracy, perhaps
early manouveres ahead of the Spending Review, or efforts to keep the pressure
on the Treasury to find enough funding for the MOD.
Pulled together it is easy to see how a combination of prior
policy, industrial and government co-operation and new announcements could lead
to speculation by some people that the RN is about to sell a carrier to India.
But is it true?
The question to ask when reading articles suggesting that
the Royal Navy would be on the very of scrapping its newest warship, that it
has invested 20 years in bringing into service and around which the entire future
of the surface fleet is arguably being invested, is what is the motivation for
such a leak, and is there a Spending Review or Defence Review going on?
The sort of decision required to formally change the plans for
operating two carriers, and their associated support forces would only be taken
at the very highest levels of Government. The Carrier Strike capability
represents a truly cross-government asset, and as was seen recently, decisions
on the deployment of the Carrier would be taken
by the Prime Minister. The idea then that the MOD would be unilaterally thinking
of scrapping this vessel, without widespread consultation across Government
would be unlikely in the extreme.
A decision like this, which would have significant impact
across a wide range of National Security objectives would need to be undertaken
as part of a wider review of UK goals. In this case, the only two appropriate
avenues would either be a ‘Strategic Defence Review’ or, less likely, a
Spending Review.
The former is an opportunity every five years for Government
to assess its strategic priorities and goals and determine the capabilities
required to deliver them. These are major set piece events that would need to
be endorsed by Cabinet, and unpicking the direction contained within them is
extremely difficult outside of a Review. The next Review is unlikely to be held
until 2020 at the very earliest, and it would seem extremely unlikely that a
decision would be taken outside of this well-established process to ‘sell an
aircraft carrier to India’.
The Spending Review represents the regular process by which
Government works out how much money it has available, and where it wants to prioritise
or cut spending over a multi year (usually 3 year) period. This process is
about setting overall departmental budgets and trying to agree what needs more
money, and what gets less money. It is usually a very bitter affair, with all
manner of information selectively appearing in the public domain, usually
suggesting that if Treasury planned cuts to Department X’s budget happens, then
Y number of problems will happen, all of which are bad.
The Chancellor has confirmed that a Spending Review will
happen this year, but it is unlikely to happen until such point as more clarity
occurs on Brexit, as this will determine the state of public finances. Given that
the review has yet to begin, it seems exceptionally unlikely that the MOD has
already decided to sell off a carrier to make ends meet.
So, given all of this, what is the genesis of these rumours?
It is possible that a combination of slightly corrupted whispers have over time
given headwind to the ‘ship for sale’ rumour. Alternatively, it is theoretically
possible that as part of very, very early preparatory work for the Spending Review,
some very basic costings have been done on a vast range of options to
understand which would inform how to make savings if required. One of these
options could, possibly, have involved paying off a Carrier to understand the sort
of money it would save both directly and indirectly. This is purely a guess on
Humphrey’s part.
This does not mean that the MOD is going to scrap the QUEEN
ELIZABETH – at best it may mean that much like the NHS is probably doing work that
says ‘£349m a week could be saved by closing X hospitals’ or the FCO is going ‘£2.1bn
could be saved by closing the Embassy network and outsourcing it to a
contractor’ and so on, the MOD is also looking at a range of similar ‘well we
could do it if you really wanted to do that Minister, and it would be a very
brave, borderline courageous decision for you to take’ options, just in case
they were called on for costing.
What all of this means is that a lot of rumours, gossip and
collection of random events seem to have formed into a very odd, and almost
certainly untrue idea. Yet it is the power of the internet that keeps these
ideas alive, and gives them strength even when to all rationale observers they
seem palpably untrue.
Managing this sort of gossip mill is going to be a challenge,
particularly as the Spending Review approaches and all manner of options are
selectively leaked to influence or inform opinions. In a similar vein to the
way that the successful ‘save the LPD’ campaign over time helped shape public opinion
to the point that scrapping HMS ALBION and BULWARK (regardless of any potential
merits and wider operational rationale for doing so) is now effectively
impossible for some years to come, this could be the earliest of shots in a ‘save
the carrier’ campaign designed to make bean counters go and focus on other
issues like the Red Arrows or Household Division or other such traditional
targets at times like this.
There will doubtless be some who feel that this is the ‘long
hand of the Treasury’ making itself known again. Again, Humphrey is dubious
about this – while many across the Public Sector like to regard the Treasury as
Azkaban and its staff as the dementors of Whitehall, the Treasury is also sanguine
about how Departments spend their money once it is handed over to them in a settlement.
The view of the Treasury would probably be that while they
have an absolute responsibility to see that Public money is spent effectively
and efficiently, they also gain little from meddling in established programmes
for the sake of it. While Teams exist to do scrutiny and ensure best use of
resources, the decision to keep or scrap an asset is really a departmental one.
There is a misleading idea that Treasury officials send
demands for equipment to be sold regardless of cost. In reality its down to a Department
to reprioritise its funding as necessary if it wants to keep an asset on, and realise
savings elsewhere. This does not mean that the Treasury can, or would, order a
carrier to be scrapped – as noted this is a decision that would be taken by
Cabinet, and more realistically by the Prime Minister.
So, be wary of believing all you see on the internet and
assuming that it automatically means the worst is happening. While it may sound
slightly flippant, it really is best to wait until an announcement is made by a
Department that something is going on. Often the wrangling and debate on an
issue may be going on until minutes before the final statement is due, and what
is leaked as a ‘100% safeguard, three clip gen dit’ (e.g. true) statement the
night before may be utterly incorrect by the next lunchtime.
In summary – don’t believe all you read on the internet, especially
‘rumours’. If you do read them, ask yourself what the wider angle is here –
what reviews are going on, what is the political dimension in play, and who
benefits / gains from leaking a story like this and why? Usually a spot of analysis
like this will not rule the story out but might make you look at it in a more
questioning manner.
If in doubt, remember the adage of how business really gets
done in Whitehall…
Hacker: If there
were a conflict of interests which side would the civil service really be on?
Bernard: The
winning side, Prime Minister.
QTWTAIY
ReplyDeleteSo, you're crossing your fingers same as the rest of us, Humphrey. You're creditably trying to apply logic to a political systems that appears less and less creditable. The current frontrunners for future PM, the decision makers! from both sides of the house don't inspire any confidence whatsoever. And we're still trying to recover from the 2010 'Strategic' Defence Review! Still, full marks for attemptng to put the most optimistic interpretation on current events, Sir.
ReplyDeleteYours,
Gavin Gordon.
There are always fake news in real news sites.
ReplyDelete