A Priceless Pittance - The Benefits of the British Indo-Pacific Tilt
As the new year dawns, and the third British Prime Minister
in four months tries to grapple with an ever expanding and complex in-tray,
questions are being asked about where the UK’s national security priorities should
lie. The invasion of Ukraine, now almost a year ago, has led to calls for a
reappraisal of British defence policy and priorities, and another look at the
findings of the Integrated Review, published in 2021, which heralded a wider
strategic shift by the UK back towards the Indo-Pacific, the so-called ‘tilt’
about which much has been written. There
is a growing number of articles suggesting that the tilt is a fantasy and that
British national security objectives are best served by refocusing on Europe at
the cost of other commitments. The purpose of this article is to roundly rebuff
such views.
The arguments against the tilt focus on a couple of main concepts,
which were illustrated in this early January
article which put forward that the UK should abandon the region and shift
as a fundamentally Johnson era legacy, and that the UK should refocus itself as
a ‘continental power’ with apparently limited defence budgets and aspiration
and instead focus on supporting Kyiv and deterring Moscow. The best use of the
British armed forces is closer to home, not far from it. These articles seem to
share a common view of both defeatism and a sense that the UK does not matter
as a globally focused power. This is a common viewpoint in some areas, which
for decades have taken great pleasure in pronouncing the death of UK influence,
bemoaning the UK as a small nation that doesn’t matter and suggesting that it is
a small island state that has ideas above its station or means. They are, in the authors view, unnecessarily
defeatist in approach.
During the early Cold War there was a significantly larger
force in the region, based on a major naval fleet and supported by large scale land
and air forces. This was due to the combination of operations in Korea, Malaya
and Borneo that formed part of the complex post war colonial drawn down, and were
very much coalition in nature. Additionally the presence of the RN and RAF
served to help deliver the nuclear mission for the myriad of lesser known military
alliances that emerged to counter communist influence (CENTO and SEATO for example)
as part of efforts to be able to fight a global nuclear war if required. At its
peak in the 1950s there were comfortably over 100,000 personnel based in the
region, many of whom were national servicemen. The successful completion of
operations in the region and the wider moves to independence, coupled with wider
economic problems at home led to the decision to significantly draw down the
British presence ‘east of Suez’ in the 1960s, with withdrawal occurring between
1968 – 71, and the UK focussing the majority of its defence assets at home to
counter the Soviet Union from this date.
After 1971, the British presence in the region stabilised in
a form that has remained relatively unchanged to this day (other than the
closure of the garrison in Hong Kong). A small naval facility in Singapore,
built around wharves and oil depot, but (other than the Hong Kong patrol ships)
no permanently based vessels but intended to support the occasional naval
deployments in to the region in varying form from carrier task groups to singleton
escorts. A very small naval shore presence in Diego Garcia, but no meaningful naval
base. The RAF had no permanently based aircraft or airbases in the area (other
than until the closure of Hong Kong). Finally the British Army had a small
garrison built around a Gurkha battalion based in Brunei, with supporting helicopters
and a jungle warfare school, with the cost of the facilities paid for by the Sultan.
There was a myriad of defence attaches
and loan officers in some areas, with the biggest presence being in Australia
and New Zealand as part of the 5-EYES alliance. There was also some limited
engagement with the Five Powers Defence Arrangement (FPDA), the primary defensive
agreement that the UK is party to in the region, and also some isolated
oddities – for example some personnel were in Korea to support the UN armistice
commission work (reference can be found to Gurkha platoons occasionally deploying
to the DMZ until the 1980s too).
The UK military presence in this region has been slender
since the 1970s and is unlikely to grow significantly again. What was significant
though was the scale of diplomatic representation, with the FCDO global network
of embassies and High Commissions maintaining a significant representational presence
across the region, supported by wider UK departmental interests (e.g trade and industry).
Even if Defence was not a key player, the UK has, and will continue, to engage
in soft power in this space.
Think back three years and the disruption caused by the shut
down of the global supply chain when Covid hit for the first time. The way that
problems in China resulted in a hard stop to the global economic machinery,
causing shortages of stock in UK shops and making a material difference to our
quality and way of life. As a consumer of manufactured goods and as a key user
of imported energy, the UK is at the end of a long and vulnerable supply chain that
can easily be disrupted by terrorism, conflict and other manmade problems as
much as it can by natural disasters or pandemics. We may not want to be involved,
but if we are not, then we have no ability to shape the response or take steps
to resolve matters when things go wrong.
We also need to accept that this is a region in which
relationships and engagement are built over a long period of time and in which sustained
delivery of commitment for the long haul matters far more than short term promises
of glitzy tomorrows that are not delivered. Being able to build meaningful
links that turn into long term benefits means having presence, it means opening
doors and it means working with people, often at junior level, so that nations
are used to having the UK in the room with a seat at the table. In the medium
term this matters because if we have to engage in military operations in the region,
be it counter-piracy, counter terrorism or more kinetic acts, or even just humanitarian
aid post disaster, then being able to work with people you know and trust is
far easier than starting out from scratch.
One of the reasons why NATO works so well is that the member states have worked together in meaningful ways for nearly 80 years. Armed forces understand each others communications, they have shared standards of interoperability and operational procedures, meaning they can work together effectively when required. If Russia were stupid enough to attack the Baltic states, it would find itself opposed by a capable alliance of nations able to work, fight and overcome any military threat. This has not happened overnight, but as a result of decades of exercises, joint operations and closer building of personal relationships. It requires constant engagement and willingness to invest people and resources to make it a success.
If the UK takes a long term view, then the Indo-Pacific tilt
is not a KPI on an excel spreadsheet that can be marked ‘green’ in a years time
because we’ve sent some ships to the region. It’s a decades long commitment that
requires investment of people and presence in a small but meaningful way.
Sending Ministers to visit and have bilateral engagements helps bolster
goodwill and government links, that in turn is supported by visits from UK industry
to win business orders and build long term financial links to the region. The
presence of diplomats helps thicken links at working level that can be used to
call in support when the UK wants to mobilise international opinion for common
cause – for example helping call out Russia for their barbaric invasion of
Ukraine in a variety of international fora has been made easier by having existing
good relationships to diverse states. If we want to be serious about deterring
Russia, then this means taking a global approach and being willing to build
links in all manner of places to have the credibility and credit to cash in at
a time when we need it. Sitting at home waiting for a crisis is not going to
make resolving it easier – when it happens we have the choice of participating
without having laid the foundations required to be effective, potentially hampering
effectiveness, our influence and ability to shape the outcome and potentially
costing lives, or we can engage in a meaningful manner.
Indeed it could be argued that the war in Ukraine shows the
UK returning to and continuing to deliver national security objectives via very
traditional policy means. Historically, for centuries British support or engagement
in land wars in Europe has been through the provision of financial support to
one side, provision of equipment, material and uniforms and using the Royal
Navy as a way of conducting interdiction far from home to reduce a nations ability
to act. The means used by the British in the Napoleonic wars to support allies like
Prussia and Russia are little different in concept to those we see today with
our support to Ukraine. If anything, the Ukraine concept has proven that the UK
is not a continental power, but a global maritime power that relies on soft
power to influence kinetic outcomes on continental land wars.
If the UK were to cancel its plans for a tilt and instead
focus on Europe, what would this look like? In practise it would save very
little money – the troops nominated for exercises and joint work in the region
would instead be allocated to NATO, and likely spend a similar amount of time
and money deploying on NATO exercises. There is limited cross over though between
formations assigned for the defence of NATO (which are mostly heavier land
based assets) and those that could be committed to the Indo-Pacific. Bringing
home the two RIVER class OPVs would save a tiny amount of money and make no material
difference to NATO security – both ships are ideal flag wavers and diplomatic
platforms but would die quickly in a NATO conflict environment. They are ideal for
building low level military links with nations the UK has historically rarely
worked with, but would add relatively little extra to NATO beyond flag waving
missions. In other words, we’d end up losing significantly more value from staying
East of Suez at low cost to do the same mission, at similar cost, back home but
for less impact.
Were the UK to be serious about scrapping the tilt and
focusing on being a continental power, then this requires a series of decisions
that would fundamentally alter the shape and formation of the armed forces for
decades to come. It would mean stepping away from a lot of already paid for
power projection capabilities (tankers, assault ships etc) and focusing more on
heavy army capability (which does not exist, would cost billions to reconstitute
and take years to do) and focusing on being ready to fight an airland battle in
central Europe. Would this deter Russia though? It is highly doubtful that Moscow
would alter policy or strategic goals were the UK to focus more on investing in
European NATO right now – there is already a glut of spending going on from other
partner nations, who are rearming and restocking their munitions. Focusing
additional defence resources would alter some tactical and operational
calculations, perhaps in Russian planners eyes for operations in the Baltics or
Finnish border areas, but would not change their strategic intent. The gain
would be, at best, an increased level of operational efficiency at the cost of
sacrificing long term strategic gains in the wider world.
At the same time, we need to take a genuinely strategic
approach to how we as a nation approach the challenge of global security. While
it is fashionable to paint the UK as a nation in decline, it remains an extremely
potent global actor, drawn from its economic interests, its diplomatic
footprint and its military reach. We benefit from wider participation in some
areas to help us achieve our goals in others. Russia is arguably a declining
power that will struggle to pose a credible threat to European security in
years to come given its birth rate collapse, the huge losses caused by the war
in Ukraine and the decline of their financial and industrial base. This means
that in the not too distant future the West will need to think about Russia in
a different way to now – as an increasingly depopulated, technologically
backward and militarily increasingly obsolete nuclear power. But in the same
breath it needs to be able to focus on the wider threats to security.
There is no doubt that the future industrial engine of the
planet lies, in the medium term, in the Indo-Pacific and in the longer term
potentially Africa. With growing economies, complex security problems and an
assertive China trying to stake a claim to territory now before its own demographic
time bomb explodes (the Chinese population is on track to drop from well over a
billion to ‘barely’ 650 million in the next 80 years, the majority of whom will
be over 50), then whether we like it or not, global events will be dictated in
the region. Stepping back from it does not make the threat or risk of these
events go away, rather it means that they will happen without our ability to
influence or shape them. At the same time, a rapidly modernising regional set
of economies will look hungrily to much of the UK’s export offering (namely
advanced technology and ‘middle class tat’) providing a rich vein of business
wins for industry and tourism through soft power if properly exploited.
We need to take a decades long strategic view here that
recognises that this is a space where if we are not in it for the long haul, we
will not be in it at all. The (relatively speaking) tiny investment of a small
number of ships and some troops - maybe 2000
people if you include the Gurkhas in Brunei, is very low cost and very good value
for money. It costs a pittance to run, yet the output it generates is priceless
for our long-term national interests. The benefits are significant – the increase
in UK presence and engagement in recent years has opened the door to bilateral cooperation
with Japan on a 6th generation jet fighter, something that would have
been unthinkable even a few years ago, but which will pay huge dividends for
our long term defence and aerospace industry for decades to come. Similarly
AUKUS, which exists in part because the UK has shown it has the long term
vision to commit to the region will not only improve regional security, through
better joint operations, but also benefit the UK industry too – with nuclear propulsion
and quantum computing real potential areas of interest.
Our presence too is not something that the UK clings to in
isolation as a post imperial delusion – you only have to look at the way that France,
Germany and other nations routinely deploy ships and military capability in the
region to bolster their own national objectives. Most European powers now see security
concerns in the Indo-Pacific region, the 2022 Dutch defence white paper for
example cites China as a key security threat. It is not some fit of post
imperial fancy to deploy to the region and seek to build links there – our European
security friends but business competitors are doing just that now – if we
choose to step away we leave open an opportunity that others will profit from. It is also worth recalling that the tilt is a
means of helping enhance European security through joint operations – the 2021
Carrier Strike Group deployment included a Dutch frigate, and future deployments
will almost certainly include allied vessels in the same way. The UK can
package up deployments to the region as a way of enabling our European partners
to deliver their own small scale tilt, at lower overall risk – stepping back
from this would paradoxically harm our relations with European defence partners
too.
The Indo-Pacific tilt has been a very cheap and small-scale
investment that has already paid dividends more widely. It mirrors the growing aspiration
by our European allies to operate in this region and it is far more about trade
and diplomacy than it is about pure military presence. The savings from
stepping back from it would be non-existent – fractions of a percent of the
annual defence budget, but it would do huge damage. Through low level engagement
the UK has been able to bolster links with partner nations that in turn benefit
our longer term goals – for example ship visits to remote Pacific island states
help generate goodwill, and more importantly increase the potential for being
able to lobby and influence these states to support shared UK goals in
international fora – be it calling out Russia at the UN, or working together to
tackle the problem of climate change. The
danger is we look at the tilt as a purely military thing and not a more
coherent national security goal that brings all departments in together. Before
decisions are made on stepping back from it, there needs to be a coherent understanding
of what soft power objectives could be harmed as a result of withdrawing hard power
from the region.
The real risk we face as a nation is that having spent time
and invested diplomatic effort and credibility on convincing partners in the
region that the UK is a credible returning player, we now for the sake of short
termism throw this away to solve a tiny part of the MOD’s financial problems. To
do so would do huge long term damage to the UK’s strategic interests, without materially
enhancing our security in the process.
Well reasoned and considered analysis. As an Australian, I do hope policy makers in the UK continue with the Indo-Pacific tilt. As already argued above it is a small investment with great potential returns.
ReplyDeleteWould love to host more RN tours to the Indo-Pacific in Australia. Having a RAF squadron rotate through RAAF bases in Western Australia and the NT would also be great. And as an Australian taxpayer would happily subsidise MODs costs in this.
Great piece, thanks. Agree in general. Some points: FCAS and AUKUS and type 26 wins seem to be more about what options work best for Japan and Australia rather than resulting directly from a change in policy emphasis and delivery by the UK. My main challenge is that Russia will only deploy an airland force against European NATO. The Ukrainian experience shows they also use their naval forces, and this would likely be at larger scale against NATO. Therefore some members of NATO need to lead and focus on countering in these other domains in the European theatre. Fortunately a focus on airnaval capabilities by the UK also suits our global defence responsibilities, such as Bost whole also enabling a modest amount of international defence diplomacy as a bonus. Also NATOs ability to reinforce and supply the frontline in eastern Europe requires us to play a lead role in achieving dominance of the North sea and North Atlantic. From a continental and global perspective, we betray our and our allies interests by shifting focus to deploying one or more capable divisions to Europe. A lot of the current angst has been caused by the use of the word tilt, which implies to many a fundamental rebalance, rather than a minor correction of effort. Something more clear like targeted, limited, persistent engagement is less pithy but more accurate.
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