Troubling Times & Difficult Decisions - The 2023 CDS RUSI Speech
News broke this week that off the coast of Ireland the RoyalNavy reportedly had to track and monitor the presence of a Russian submarine just
outside of Irish territorial waters. The combination of a (presumably) Type 23
frigate and Merlin was used to politely suggest to the Russians to go and play
in someone elses backyard. The Irish Navy was unable to send vessels to police
the incident themselves due to a decision taken years ago to pay off vessels
equipped with sonar and remove the capability from service. A risk that seemed
sensible and pragmatic at the time has proven to have long term consequences.
For Ireland the decision to not invest in sonar made perfect
sense, the submarine threat was negligible and the skills and cost needed to maintain
a truly effective ASW capability would have cost far in excess of anything the
Irish Republic either needed or could afford without making swingeing cuts
elsewhere. Maintaining a semblance of a capability would do little good either
as to go up against Russian nuclear submarines without a genuinely top tier ASW
force would be pointless – like firing a
water pistol at a shooting range. The decision to scrap sonar is a genuinely
good example of bold risk taking - accept
that it makes more sense to stop doing something and move on, than maintain a
figment of a capability that would in reality not achieve much. Perhaps there
is a lesson for the UK here?
In the same week the Chief of the Defence Staff (Admiral Sir
Tony Radakin) delivered his annual lecture to the RUSI on the state of the
world and how he saw global developments. Notable as one of the increasingly
rare occasions when British military personnel are allowed to make public ‘on
the record’ speeches, it is a good insight into where he sees the direction of global
travel. Throughout he portrayed a world in which statecraft is once again
coming to the fore and where alliances, engagement and presence are as
important to deterrence as possessing physical military force. The speech is positive in many ways – for
example the emphasis on growing NATO defence budgets, the way that the
international community is using a variety of levers of statecraft to tackle Russia
and also in which wider challenges from conflict in the Middle East to the
tensions in the Indo-Pacific clash together to create a world of increasingly
unsettled violence.
Reading a senior officers speech is a fascinating business,
usually to see how the speechwriter has structured it to get both ‘killer facts’
and insight into thinking in a coherent way that will be interesting enough to
not send the audience to slumber, but bland enough to not wind up a SPAD. This
speech contains several interesting snippets worthy of further thought.
The first is that in terms of prioritisation the emphasis is
very clearly on the recapitalisation of the British Army and throwing resource
at that as an issue. The lessons of Ukraine have been heard, in that we are
seeing a clear mission to refit the Army to be able to deliver meaningful deterrence
effect within NATO. This is a positive view on where resource should land.
The second is the relative absence of emphasis on conventional
sea or airpower as an instrument of the state. Reference is made to a 6th
generation fighter jet (e.g. the joint British, Japanese and Italian project),
and to the idea of integrated air/missile defence, but little else. No mention is
made of conventional seapower in terms of presence and capability as a priority
– while reference is made to the carriers and commandos, the more conventional
presence like ASW frigates or air defence gets little attention. Instead focus
is on partnership in AUKUS and the long term renewal of the deterrent well into
the 2030s.
It also contains one claim that one must hope the speechwriter
has firmly checked and verified is in claiming that with the arrival of A400M,
the RAF has ‘greater lift capacity than at any time since the 2nd
World War’. Given that the C130J fleet has been scrapped as a defence cut,
reducing airframes only this year, it is hard to see how this claim stands up
to scrutiny, given the relative reduction in RAF air transport, particularly
compared to its arguable heyday of the 1960s and 70s. It would be very helpful
to understand how this metric was calculated as, to put it politely, given that
it is physically impossible for 100% of these airframes to all be airborne at
once, suggesting a theoretical lift capability as opposed to an actual one
given the swingeing cuts imposed on RAF strategic airlift over the last decade
or more, is perhaps stretching plausibility a little. It we took the actual
lift capability on a normal day, with normal availability rates, it would be
useful to know if this claim still adds up.
The speech also focused on the fact that the Service Chiefs
face difficult investment decisions ahead with further reviews looming. This seems
to indicate that all is not well in Whitehall and that the MOD budget faces
significant in year pressure and short term pressures. The recent NAO audit
report into the equipment plan found that it was £17bn short, due mainly to
inflationary pressure. There is no injection of cash on the horizon that will
fix this and unless inflation falls quickly, this pressure will remain in the
system to be solved. Reading the evidence (LINK) to the House of Commons
Defence Committee from Tue 12 Dec, it was fascinating to see senior officials
and officers confirm how challenging the problem is right now. For example, it
was confirmed that the MOD had planned last year on inflation assumptions of
around 2.5%, whereas it is now at around 6.2%, injecting billions of extra
costs for the same projects into the Equipment Programme. Likewise, the collapse
of the GBP-USD exchange rate last year at the time of the Truss premiership has
increased costing significantly too, a particular issue for a Department which
spends heavily in dollars.
Listening to the evidence the depressing phrase “defer / delete”
was deployed in terms of re-equipping the British Army. In other words the Army
has got to work with the wider MOD to significantly change its procurement
plans, deleting wholesale capabilities or slipping other projects to help
afford its newly found priorities arising from Ukraine. This is a grim state of
affairs, to hear that at a time of unprecedented global turmoil, the MOD faces
making substantial defence cuts due to the lack of sufficient funding to meet
its requirements. The UK is practically alone in NATO in being in this
position, but it is hard to see what else can be done. The defence budget has
grown significantly in real terms and there is plenty of delegated authority in
Defence to find money or pockets of unspent money to do things differently. The
MOD is not alone in facing inflationary pressures and every pound committed to Defence
is a pound less for more voter friendly policy areas. Simply put, the MOD is going
to have to find ways to cut its aspirations to match its cloth.
The challenge is trying to do this when the policy headmark
remains that the UK should be a globally focused power interested in NATO and
the wider world and which is keen to do lots of good security work with lots of
nations. There is no doubt that there is a huge amount of optimism and aspiration
in the various national security strategies published in recent years – the problem
is delivering this. Perhaps the time has come to have a very serious analysis not
of procurement but of policy and aspirational vision.
For example, during the HCDC session, it was confirmed that
the MOD is in negotiations to buy 14 CH47 Special Forces Chinooks at
significant cost to meet a policy need to operate at the very hardest end of
the spectrum. The phrasing was subtle but essentially it was implied that the
MOD is buying these because Special Forces have a policy requirement to do very
complicated stuff – it was then admitted that if the policy need changed, the
MOD wouldn’t need to buy these helicopters after all. In other words, part of
the pressure on the defence budget comes from very high-end policy requirements
that could, if the will existed, be amended downwards to remove the need to buy
stuff. Such a move would upset the team in MOD A Block, and doubtless lead to
some choice inspired briefings to friendly media but would help make it easier
to find money for the ‘green Army’. This is a good example of where the UK faces
some binary decisions – so much of what Defence does is built around a desire
to operate at the highest end of the spectrum, and to be the ‘Day 1, Night 1’
partner of the US, operating at the outset of conflict in the highest threat
environments against peer rivals and overpowering them. This in turn drives
extremely expensive requirements for very capable equipment, be it SF Chinooks,
advanced fighter jets or high-end warships – the UK is driven by a need to work
at the very highest level of threat and be seen as credible.
Could one solution be to scale back the aspiration and do
less complex activity in some environments. For example, focus the high-end capability
in NATO while accepting that wider tasks rely on the 2nd tier of forces
– for example cutting back RN deployments outside of the NATO area to a minimum
except for OPVs or the occasional carrier task group? This would mark a return
to the UK military of the 70s and 80s, focused primarily on deterring the
Russians with only a very limited interest beyond this region. How such a move
would sit though with the aspiration to work with partners globally (for
example the ‘Indo-Pacific tilt’) is less clear – having invested time and
effort in a globally focused military, particularly betting the RN ‘farm’ on
Carrier Strike, rowing back from that would be painful to put it mildly.
If the UK is serious about deterring Russia and strengthening
NATO, perhaps its time to ask if the QUEEN ELIZABETH class have a long-term
future in the Royal Navy, or if the Carrier Strike Group concept is laudable
but has been overtaken by events and is now no longer the priority. At its
hardest, has the time come to pay off both carriers into reserve or even sell
them, and reprioritise the people and resources into higher priority tasks like
properly crewing ASW and AAW platforms in NATO? This may sound like heresy, but it feels that
the UK is on the verge of a genuine strategic pivot, faced with the difficult
reality that the global vision of the 1990s – 2010s has been replaced by the grim
future of a world where Russia will dominate our security thinking. It will
call for investment in areas we’ve neglected for too long (infrastructure, logistics,
supply chains) and allow far less time for the ‘fun stuff’ like global carrier
deployments. Is it this sense that we need to change and be truly bold, ditching
the old goals and instead focusing on being truly lethal in certain niche areas
that matters more now?
The key message we need to take from the CDS speech and the
evidence more widely to the HCDC is that really difficult choices lie ahead in
terms of spending and prioritisation and they can’t be easily solved. Much will
need to be cut and perhaps it is time to look at our policy aspirations and
dial back to a more pragmatic approach. The post Cold War era lasted roughly 30
years, enough time for a generation of officers to enjoy a career that helped
them look globally at being problem solvers while dismantling the legacy of a force
intended to deter, and if needs be fight, in a global nuclear conflict. Today we
need to focus on the ‘post-post cold war’ and create a new generation able to
focus once again on deterring Russia and having policy dreams that are less
grandiose in design but which keep the UK safe and secure for the long haul.
It is likely that in this world we will need to accept that direct
military influence will play less of importance outside the NATO area and
instead the means by which we influence as a nation will come from
intelligence, trade, diplomats and low key presence over the ability to be able
to ‘fight tonight’ beyond certain areas. Instead planners need to take a
strategic view, planning for potentially many decades of facing off against a
state threat, investing in capabilities that bolster the NATO alliance and do
so while trying to make the Equipment Programme balance – a task akin to tightrope
walking blindfolded across a chasm, while people shake the rope and the other
side gets ever further away. Difficult times lie ahead, and even more difficult
decisions will need to be made in the next Defence Review.
If a priority for the RN is to reconfigure primarily towards deterring Russia then the biggest maritime threat is the Russian submarine force. If surface ASW ships are to play a part in countering that (and they have to because the timescale to build up the SSN force is so long) then carriers to operate multiple ASW helicopters and UAVs along with fast jets to provide air cover out in the GIUK gap seem to be a pretty useful capability.
ReplyDeleteThe UK is very good and quick at disposing of existing and flexible systems that are bought and paid for. Not so good at bringing in the next generation of revolutionary systems that would have been so much better if only they had entered service in sufficient numbers before being scrapped in turn to make way for the next good idea.
As per usual, your article is very thought provoking. I have to say, though, that as usual, the real elephant in the room is being ignored. Ukraine is teaching us that high-end land warfare requires huge levels of attrition to be taken into account, so if the UK were to reorient itself to the heavy mechanised role, it will be more than a one fighting division that's needed to be credible in this domain. Hundreds of tanks, many thousands of other vehicle types, and thousands more soldiers. And it just isn't going to happen. Nor should it. we no longer have a credible continental role. we should focus on what we do well, and could do even better, and on a role that better suits our geography.
ReplyDeletewe have allies in Europe who have a much clearer interest in this component, and apparently the political and financial will necessary to step up to these realities (Poland, and perhaps, if the 100bn euros do finally materialise, Germany, for example). In reality, we will never be able to field anything like BOAR again, and if our contribution is going to be an exquisit but short-lived brigade level formation in a wider divisional structure, what frankly is the utility of this? And yet, we are in the process of developing a Navy and Airforce that offer significantly greater policy flexibility, and in other types of land warfare, our forces are demonstrating their ability to provide an almost credible capability and reassure our allies - I'm thinking of our role in the coordination that is building with our Scandanavian allies. we fight best when we fight light and we fight fast. Let's play to our strengths, swallow the pill that our BOAR days are long gone, and that it is a very different army that we need, not the ghost of a capability that is keeping alive an unrealistic vision of the Army, and that is stopping good money going to good causes, not lost causes.