The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

SNP backtrack on plans for Scotland’s defence

Intelligen­ce agency proposals of 2014 ditched in policy U-turn

- KIERAN ANDREWS POLITICAL EDITOR kiandrews@thecourier.co.uk

An independen­t Scotland would not inherit UK military assets, the SNP’s defence spokesman has said in a major policy U-turn.

In another ditching of 2014 policy, it was revealed to the party’s conference that plans to set up a separate Scottish intelligen­ce agency are being scrapped in favour of close working with the existing UK set-up.

The SNP defence team at Westminste­r told a fringe event in Aberdeen they are working on “a comprehens­ive, robust, costed and stress-tested defence policy for an independen­t Scotland”.

Although a publicatio­n timetable was not set out, major alteration­s to the strategy employed just three years ago were suggested.

The Scottish Government’s 2014 white paper on independen­ce said an independen­t Scotland would “inherit a share of existing UK defence assets, giving us most of the equipment we need to establish Scotland’s defence forces.”

Brendan O’Hara, the party’s defence spokesman at Westminste­r, called the document “absolutely first class given the circumstan­ces” but added it was now “out of date” because there has since been a UK Government Strategic Defence and Security Review.

The MP for Argyll and Bute suggested the country would “start from scratch” so it could design a “bespoke” structure if there was a vote to leave the UK.

He said: “One of the big debates we want to have is what do we do with the military assets? Do we start from scratch, do we take an 8% share or a 9% share of them?

“If we do take a 9% share, what do we take? What about the maintenanc­e contracts? I’m personally very much of the opinion that if we adopt a 9% share of the hardware then you are pushed down a road from which it’s sometimes very difficult to come back.

“I don’t think you can have a bespoke independen­t Scottish defence policy if you’re immediatel­y saddled with taking 8% or 9% of military assets.”

Meanwhile, Stirling MP and intelligen­ce specialist within the SNP group in the Commons, Steven Paterson, said the SNP expects to spend around 1.6% of GDP on defence, around the European Union and Nato average but less than Nato’s recommenda­tion of at least 2%.

He also appeared to row back on the previous plan to “set up a single security and intelligen­ce agency for Scotland.”

The white paper said that the Scottish Government wanted to work closely with MI5, MI6 and GCHQ rather than replace the security services.

Mr Paterson argued, however, that such a move would make “no sense.”

He said: “There’s obviously a very sophistica­ted intelligen­ce network that exists currently as part of the UK and it would make no sense to tear all that down.

“Once Scotland is an independen­t country we are going to cooperate extremely closely with our immediate neighbour. That is just common sense, so we would want to build on what’s there.

“Yes there would be a change in the emphasis and the responsibi­lities but we would certainly want to work as closely as possible in order to make sure what currently works continues to work.”

 ??  ?? First Minister Nicola Sturgeon poses for a photograph with a love heart at the spring conference.
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon poses for a photograph with a love heart at the spring conference.
 ?? Picture: Allan Milligan. ?? Pro-UK campaign group Scotland in Union unveiled its new poster at the SNP conference, warning against Nicola Sturgeon calling a “referendum­b”.
Picture: Allan Milligan. Pro-UK campaign group Scotland in Union unveiled its new poster at the SNP conference, warning against Nicola Sturgeon calling a “referendum­b”.

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