Defence in the Round - Thoughts on the Integrated Review
Last week marked the third anniversary of the PinstripedLine
restarting and becoming an active blog again. In that period, covering some 225
articles and almost two million page hits the blog has continued to comment on
UK and wider defence and national security issues.
It is perhaps timely then that this weekend has seen more
articles and press releases emerge about possible options for defence going forward,
and a variety of ‘doom and gloom’ scenarios emerge. The most high profile of
this is built around what would happen to Defence if a 5% budget cut was forced
on to the MOD, and some of the radical steps that would need to be taken to balance
the numbers.
The result is a leaking of what can be described as ‘usual
suspect’ scenarios, talking about removal of capability X or Y and cuts in
headcount. The suggestion appears to be that cutting the budget means no more
meaningful Royal Marines capability, far fewer soldiers and reduced numbers of
aircraft fleets and airbases. The article should also be seen in the context of
saying that there needs to be significant investment in advanced technology and
cyber capability instead.
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Flying in Basra - Authors Picture |
It is perhaps an interesting phenomenon to observe that over
the last three years the debate on defence, and defence cuts, has, when played
out either in this blog or the media focused on numbers and quantities, and not
actually a debate about what it is that we want our armed forces to do.
Everything seems to relate to numbers and how many of X we
have, versus how many of Y. The debate is also closely supported by a separate
debate around how we will no longer matter because suddenly the UK has only Z
numbers of whatever platform and now ranks 123rd in the World – for example,
how many fighters, tanks or destroyers we have usually makes an easy story to
say that we suddenly rank lower than Groombolia (on paper at least.
What is frustrating is that very rarely does the debate move
away from this, or arguments about why River Class Batch 2 OPVs need to have 16”
main batteries fitted to be effective in the newly created Far East Fleet created
on some tediously dull fantasy fleet discussion to instead ask the most basic
question of all which is ‘what do we want our armed forces to do’?
With this in mind it is interesting to spot that the MOD has
issued a surprisingly defensive press release talking about how the Secretary
of State for Defence has held an away day to discuss the preparation for the
forthcoming Integrated Review and wider comprehensive spending review due to be
held this year.
It seems likely that it is leaks from this meeting (sorry, background
briefing) that have helped shape some of the articles emerging today as the
Armed Forces attempt to build popular support to shield them from potentially
difficult cuts. But, Humphrey is actually incredibly sympathetic to the
argument of asking some very deep and probing questions about what it is that
the Armed Forces do, and whether things could, or should, be done differently.
If you were to take a ‘bottom up’ approach to UK national
security, you’d quickly realise that the UK possesses a global range of
interests – varying in nature and importance. A comprehensive diplomatic
network staffed by able diplomats, combined with an effective aid and development
programme and membership of a wide variety of international bodies and
organisations.
There is no doubt that on a diplomatic or economic scale the
UK remains an extremely potent and valued nation – its membership of a variety
of organisations gives it access and influence which are of value to other
countries. People want to hear the UK’s view because, as a permanent member of
the UN Security Council, leading member of NATO and leading member of the Commonwealth,
as well as having close but strained links to the EU, means that the UK is a
country whose views do matter.
This is coupled with possessing an extensive economic and industrial
footprint, with UK companies having global interests and investment potential,
as well as possessing a variety of genuinely impressive world beating companies
in a variety of technology and industrial areas. This global footprint matters because
nations want UK companies to invest in them, in the same way foreign companies
have invested in the UK.
Finally the UK enjoys a strong legacy as a nation with a
variety of strategic interests and the presence of real estate and
relationships around the globe which lends itself to taking a strong interest
in other regions. This ranges from close links to some foreign leaders, through
to territories which wish to remain aligned with the UK, and also legacy links
to locations whose people and situation still matter to us.
But bring all of this together and what this doesn’t then
say is ‘why does this situation warrant retaining the British Armed Forces as they
are constituted today’?
There is perhaps a regular inferred negativity about the
state of the modern armed forces – every conversation that is had on capability
often seems to stray into a well worn rut of ‘isn’t it depressing, when I joined
we had X of this, and at least twice the headcount’ – people perceive the debate
about defence not as one of saying ‘what is it that the armed forces are here
to do today’ but instead look back at times gone by and wonder why there is so
much less.
The debate has become stuck on being framed around
capabilities and numbers and not roles. When the Navy is worried about funding,
it leaks about losing carriers, or the Army will threaten the lose of Battalions
or tanks. There seems to be a perpetual fear of less money meaning less kit,
but not a sense of having a deep discussion about what does this change for
what Defence can contribute to UK national security objectives?
The wider challenge too is not just an obsession with ‘back in
the day’ but also perhaps a constant desire to be seen to compare ourselves to
the US and then assume we don’t matter. It is a source of immense frustration
that we constantly seem to look at what the UK has, count up how much of the
same that the US has and then reach the conclusion that somehow we don’t
matter.
Of course the US has more soldiers, aircraft and ships than
we do – they have a vastly larger economy and a population almost 6 times
greater than our own. It would be somewhat worrying, and economically scary, if
we were to seek to match the US person for person, ship for ship, because it is
economically and logistically almost impossible to do so.
This constant obsession with deciding we are irrelevant
compared to the US is tedious because it is so utterly pointless. Every nation,
with the exception of China, is probably militarily irrelevant compared to the
US – very few other countries seem to struggle with this as a concept though.
What we see far less of is a rational debate explaining the
focus on why we matter to the US – we don’t see coherent explanations of our offers
of real estate access, diplomatic leverage and support and also some very niche
military capabilities that complement their own in certain ways. Instead there
seems to be an assumption that we don’t matter.
Humphrey’s strictly personal view is that there is perhaps a
combination of both ‘back in the day’ wistful memories and also a desire to safeguard
capabilities that drives much of the UK defence debate.
Instead of seeing a sensible debate openly around where UK
interests lie, what benefits are gained from one approach or the merits of it
over another – for example the discussion around whether UK interests lie in
defending Eastern Europe via NATO or a more global role as peacemaker / enforcer,
there instead seems to be a sense of going ‘we matter less if we do these cuts
because we have less of the people and kit’ without asking whether there is
actually any UK interest in us mattering in the first place.
A good example to offer of this is the subject of the deployable
division. This is seen as central to the British Army’s offer to national security
– that it provides policy makers with choices around how they could put significant
amounts of heavy metal on the ground to do ‘stuff’ if required.
But as a taxpayer, it is perhaps hard to discern what is it
the national security question or goal that requires the answer to be ‘deployable
division’? There seems to be a relentless focus on showing off the shiny stuff
and hyping up how good it is, and how much more at risk we would be as a nation
without it, without perhaps explaining what it is that this does and why it
matters to our national security policy.
What is needed is perhaps some genuinely honest and painful
discussions about why we have the armed forces that we do, and move to actually
remodel them in a way that is best for our national security needs.
If you were creating the British Armed Forces today, you
would not end up with either the organisation or real estate that it currently
has. The MOD has to waste huge amounts of public money on upkeep of an estate that
is far too big for its needs, and spread the maintenance budget far too thin.
A major win for the MOD would be the ability to radically shrink
the built up estate to a fraction of the size it currently is, but to do so in
a way that frees up money for investment. Usually when the word comes out about
bases to close, you can all but guarantee a long line of talking heads moaning
about how bad it is, and how awful the outcome is for national security if the
site closes.
But wander round large parts of the defence estate and you’ll
see ancient buildings closed off due to health and safety problems. There are
lots of areas literally falling apart because there is no money to fix them.
Accommodation in many sites is in a shocking state, and it has become a reality
that in many RAF bases, hot water for showers no longer happens because they
are unable to fix the problems as the money isn’t there.
The estate is far too large and unwieldy and in many cases
relies on buildings that are being run on far past their natural life cycle. If
you want to recruit, train and retain the best people the nation has to offer,
you need to offer them a modern safe working environment and accommodation that
isn’t trying its hardest to kill them through freak accidents.
Many of the sites are not in good locations and are a legacy
of WW2 that have yet to be disposed of. There are all manner of now positively
ancient airfields and other locations that don’t make much sense to retain, but
which all drain the maintenance budgets down to keep them vaguely compliant
with health and safety standards.
A genuine debate on defence and making it fit for the 21st
Century needs public buy in and support for the idea that the estate badly
needs downsizing and made for the 21st Century. It also needs really
tough decisions on how much is needed – there are probably too many RAF active
airfields out there, and the Royal Navy could easily reduce its shore
infrastructure and consolidate the fleet in Portsmouth and Faslane, leaving Plymouth
purely for refit work like Rosyth.
The difficulty is though that this requires decisions that
are politically unpopular and which cause dissent. Why bother causing grief
with the backbenches over closing a site when you could instead just run it on
quietly and hope it doesn’t fall apart in the next few years? Its worth remembering that every pound spent on the defence
estate is a pound less for more pay, or more equipment. What matters most for
the needs of UK defence?
The other issue that the review needs to grasp with is where
is the UKs strategic priorities and where needs investment now and for the future?
The armed forces we have today are arguably a product of decisions taken 30-40
years ago in order to develop ships, tanks and aircraft and bring them into
service against a very different set of threats.
We have to work with the hand we’ve been dealt, but is the
discussion on defence planning going to focus on retaining what we have, accepting
that what exists isn’t the answer necessarily to every problem, or walking away
and reinvesting in new areas?
The challenge for the military is that as threats evolve and
grow, they move increasingly into murky domains where it is much harder to spot
a direct military role or organisation. For all the focus on cyber warfare, the
armed forces have yet to really embrace this in a way that is effective – there
has been much talk of cyber forces, but little in the way of action.
Notwithstanding the suggestions around the importance of the
Law of Armed Conflict when it applies to cyber warfare, there is perhaps a
sense that cyber is seen as a difficult sell because it breaks the existing
career models, needing people who are not necessarily natural officers and
leaders, and it needs talent that is not necessarily drawn to a career in a
structured and disciplined military.
At the same time, pushing the case for cyber is hard because
it isn’t something tangible that you can design a uniform for or put on an
ORBAT. Saying we have invested in cyber means investment in infrastructure like
PCs, not investing in easily quantifiable metrics like more tanks or planes.
For Defence the challenge ahead is to show that it is the
right organisation with the right mixture of skills and people to solve these
sorts of challenges, and that its force structure accurately matches the needs
of national security now and for the future.
This will require a narrative shift away from talking about assets
and numbers and instead focusing on outputs. It requires talking about Defence
as an enabler that solves strategic challenges by providing a variety of options,
and not about Defence as a long list of equipment in search of a mission.
It also requires an explanation that reducing capability in
some areas does not threaten national security – rather it requires a more adult
explanation that national security is about trade offs, and reducing in one
area allows uplifts in another, and setting out the overall benefits gained from
the decision.
This also requires the ability to explain that national
security is more than just the defence budget. Cuts to Defence may be needed to
enhance other areas outside, but it needs to be shown how this benefits the UK
clearly – and not just rely on leaked angry documents suggesting that fewer
soldiers automatically means that the nation is in a more difficult place.
One has to hope that the Integrated Review genuinely means
an integrated review. It hopefully means that the discussion reaches above that
of force structures into a wider discussion around what it is that the British
Armed Forces bring, and what they no longer need to do in such a way that we
can set the stage for the next 20-30 years of operations.
The worst possible outcome for Defence is that more of the
same continues – that there is a lack of tough decisions taken on stepping back
from roles, that the budget continues to fail to balance, and that salami
slicing on the pretence of doing a little bit of everything continues rather than
radical reinvention and change to survive.
The next few months will be critical, for they mark a real
chance to have a genuine debate about what role armed force plays in the security
needs of a globally focused 21st century power, and whether these
forces are properly configured to handle the tasks ahead.
Finally, its been a fantastic three years commenting on all
of these issues, and hopefully there will be a lot more to comment on in due
course. The most significant challenge in recent months has been finding material
to comment on, as COVID-19 has significantly reduced defence coverage. But the intention remains that PSL will continue as a blog
offering objective opinions, reasonable challenge and alternative views that
pushes the positive vision ahead for UK defence and national security issues.
Thank you to all those who have supported the blog in the
last 3 years. It is an amateur labour of love done in my spare time at home and
enjoys no official backing, patronage, or status. Nothing is discussed here
that cannot be quantified via google, and it remains at heart a chance for me
to sound off on issues I find interesting, and not act as a mouthpiece for the
establishment.
If the blog supports MOD or HMG position, it is because I
fundamentally and genuinely believe that their actions are correct, not because
I believe in defending the party line at any cost. The blog is also not some
kind of underground view of the inside of the MOD or leaking material that
should not be in the public domain. I write under a pseudonym, partly as it has
defined this blog since it launched in 2011 and also because, like most people
on the internet, I value a modicum of digital privacy, although I have happily
met with and enjoyed many pleasant drinks with many readers over the years.
The blog continues to exist to express strictly personal
views and offer alternative views, usually on media reports that are of interest.
I know some are uncomfortable that this blog offers reasonable challenge to media
reports, particularly as it is done under a pseudonym. I would ask why they
feel it is okay to complain about someone critiquing their work via a pseudonym
on a private blog but feel happy that they rely on anonymous defence sources
when writing their work.
This blog is about offering alternative views in a respectful
manner, and challenging opinions to offer a different perspective of the situation,
and not acting as a ‘digital policeman’, as some portray it to be. Over the
year it has been a bit odd to be on the receiving end of what can best be
described as (and certainly felt like) ‘cyber bullying’ by certain public
figures who seemed uncomfortable that their word was not taken as gospel, and
was instead subject to reasonable challenge. Frankly, it is not nice to be on
the receiving end of some people, who have abused their position of public
trust by using twitter to attack, vilify and block, rather than engage in
civilised debate.
But outside of tthis tiny minority of people, the
overwhelming experience of writing this blog has been tremendously positive. Thank
you to all those who have engaged and made this such a fulfilling blog to write.
Here’s to the next three years!
Sir Humphrey - thank you for the three years of insightful and thoughtful comment. It has been challenging and nothing will change in the foreseeable future. But having a differing point of view has been fascinating and very worthwhile. BZ and keep up the good work.
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Still one of the best UK defence blogs around, I don't always agree with the view points but they are very well put.
ReplyDeleteOn the specific point of the defence estate I couldn't agree more. With the sole exception of airfields for AD missions and radar heads, together with training grounds, it's difficult to justify why we have so much money spent on something which doesn't directly contribute to the nation's defence.
Compare our recent efforts with Australia’s Strategic Update. We could cut and paste the themes but not sure people would like those answers. https://www.defence.gov.au/StrategicUpdate-2020/
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work, Humphrey!
ReplyDeleteI don't comment often, but read without fail.
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Congratulations on the blogs 3rd anniversary. Please keep up the good work, what you produce is always good and thought provoking.
ReplyDeleteA thoughtful piece, thank you. Posters often comment along the lines of 'We need to decide once and for all what we want to be' and 'Integrate foreign and defence policies. How hard can this be?' Not as easy as it sounds. If it was we would already be doing this.
ReplyDeleteWhat we want/need to achieve changes as do foreign policy imperatives. As Professor Eric Grove said of SDR 1998 recently 'Well it all made sense at the time, didn't it?' Impossible for defence to keep up with the pace of change as capabilities and new equipment take decades to develop/bring into service.
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Thoroughly enjoyed your articles over the years. Occasionally disagree with your views, but often those are the articles I enjoy the most. Always good to have your personal thoughts challenged by a well reasoned and written piece. BZ.
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ReplyDeleteWe don't need a nuclear deterrent. If that type of war kicks off we are all doomed anyway. The US has deterrent enough for all of us, and however strained our relationship is it's highly unlikely that a nuclear power would threaten us and not similarly threaten the US.
ReplyDeleteWe probably still need to spend a set amount of defense budget with the US, so if we did not have our nuclear deterrent then the spend would need to go elsewhere.
If we think of it this way then lots of things make sense. Supply ships get built where it's value for money to do so, not have to be built in a country that is the base for our nuclear subs.
Osprey's get bought for refuelling, so cats are no longer an issues for longer range F-35C's instead we refuel B's.
LRASM are more than 20x cheaper than a single trident. Would you rather destroy 20 warships or 1million people. Which will stop a war without destroying all of us? So we can buy a lot... F-35b, and LRASM, is a great deterrent to keeping an enemy navy in port.
More Astutes. More Type 45's.
I think we could have everything we want, if we gave up the nuclear deterrent.
And let's make things where it makes sense. The idea that a country whose main defense contractor is BAE would "lose the ability" to make anything is ridiculous. Germany makes better tanks, as does South Korea, maybe Spain makes cheaper frigates, Swedish submarines, US jets.We may lose some manufacturing jobs but our sweet defense deals with Arabian countries should be based on services rather than manufacturing, just like the rest of our industry changed it's tack in the 90s. Making steel isn't where the money or intelligence is.
It's a huge step to take, but realistically there is no UK government that would use that nuclear deterrent. We are neither a superpower, nor a rogue state, nor under threat from a rogue state. It's a Ferrari sat in a garage, looking the part but never being driven.
Ditching Trident would just make us even weaker and more irrelevant. The nuclear budget is not large enough to make major improvements to the conventional forces. Remember that the total cost is spread over ~50 years, i.e. 15 years development and build plus 35 years in service.
DeleteIn any case the money saved would be spent mainly on public services and infrastructure projects. No nuclear deterrent is not a justification for larger conventional forces so defence gets a few crumbs from the table if it is lucky. The options are:
i) Small conventional forces plus Trident.
ii) Small conventional forces without Trident.
I would choose option i every time.
glad you are going to continue with the blog as i really enjoy reading about UK defence matters.
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ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your 3rd anniversary. I don't always agree with your analysis, but it's always thought provoking, which is surely the point. Keep up the great work.
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