The Daily Telegraph

Cut the aid budget to boost defence funds, says Jenrick

- By Dominic Penna

ROBERT JENRICK has urged the Government to halve Britain’s foreign aid budget in order to spend 3 per cent of GDP on defence.

The former immigratio­n minister said the Trident nuclear deterrent had been “appallingl­y neglected” as he called on Rishi Sunak to counter threats from Russia, China and Iran by allocating more money to the Armed Forces.

Mr Jenrick said this should be done by curbing many of the “incoherent and wasteful” spending programmes that make up the foreign aid budget, which is set to rise to £8.3 billion – or 0.5 per cent of GDP – in 2024/25.

The UK currently spends 2.27 per cent of GDP on defence, while the British Army has shrunk to its smallest size in centuries, with around 72,500 fully trained soldiers.

Writing in the Mail on Sunday, Mr Jenrick said Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine, record Chinese military funding and Iranian-backed attacks on British ships by Houthi rebels represente­d “the greatest [security threats] in a generation”.

He said: “The cost of sustaining Trident is cannibalis­ing the rest of the Armed Forces budget. We have no choice but to increase defence spending to 3 per cent of GDP to deliver the uplift we need to defend ourselves. If Greece and Poland can do it, why can’t we?”

The MP for Newark said it was “ludicrous” that China, India and Pakistan continue to receive hundreds of millions of pounds in foreign aid despite possessing nuclear arsenals, adding: “Halving the aid budget would free about £7 billion a year and immediatel­y push defence spending above 2.5 per cent of GDP.”

Mr Jenrick, who quit Mr Sunak’s government last year in protest against the Rwanda Bill, backed allocating 3 per cent of GDP to defence by 2030.

The Prime Minister and Mr Hunt, his Chancellor, faced a backlash from several former defence secretarie­s after no new cash was given to the Ministry of Defence in the Budget.

James Heappey resigned as an Armed Forces minister amid the row.

In a highly unusual move, Tom Tugendhat, the security minister, and Anne-marie Trevelyan, a minister at the Foreign Office, also called for Mr Sunak to raise spending to 2.5 per cent by writing a joint article on Linkedin that appeared to criticise the Budget.

While the Government is required by law to spend 0.7 per cent of GDP on foreign aid, this was temporaril­y reduced by Mr Sunak in an attempt to claw back spending during the pandemic and it has remained at 0.5 per cent ever since.

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