Yorkshire Post

Nerves at Catterick over troop numbers

- Toby Dickinson Toby Dickinson is a policy adviser and consultant on defence and internatio­nal security strategy. He served in the RAF from 2002 to 2018.

DELAYED by coronaviru­s, the belated release of the Government’s Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Developmen­t and Foreign Policy should be a welcome sight for everyone who cares about the UK and about our security, freedom and relationsh­ips with the rest of the world.

The successor to the 2015 National Security Strategy, the Integrated Review has some damage to repair: having proclaimed the UK’s desire to uphold the institutio­ns of internatio­nal order in the 2015 strategy, the Cameron government waited seven months before putting its foot through that plan with the EU referendum.

This Integrated Review is the first government document to seriously address the UK’s new position. Without quite acknowledg­ing the UK’s part in bringing about the change, it rightly describes the internatio­nal system as more fragmented and our interests and values more contested.

While it may be true that “a defence of the status quo is no longer sufficient for the decade ahead”, Ministers and officials will have to think in detail about the implicatio­ns of that assertion, which is not something that can be filed away for 10 years. The Government must, to quote General Allenby, “think to the finish”.

For our region, there are some positive elements to the Integrated Review. Tackling climate change and biodiversi­ty loss is described as the UK’s internatio­nal priority.

Yorkshire is well-placed to both support and benefit from this objective through programmes like Drax’s carbon capture and storage and the continuing growth of offshore wind farms along our coast.

Maximising these opportunit­ies will require us to continue to invest in and maintain a workforce with the right skills and in continuing to support innovation, something threatened by a potential £1bn cut in Government-led R&D funding this year.

In spite of talk of an Indo-Pacific “tilt”, the Government remains on the fence with its policy on China: an uncomforta­ble but prudential choice for now.

While Covid-19 will have prompted such a review by many organisati­ons, businesses reading the Integrated Review may conclude that it would be equally prudent for them to ensure they understand the financial, reputation­al and practical dependenci­es and risks of their relationsh­ips with companies in China.

The forthcomin­g Defence Command Paper will bring more detail on the consequenc­es of the Integrated Review for our armed forces.

There will no doubt be a weekend of some nerves at Catterick as the size and shape of the British Army seems up for debate again, and the state of its current and replacemen­t armoured vehicle fleet finds itself the subject of Parliament­ary criticism.

The Integrated Review announces that the Government will make the UK a “meaningful actor in space” (though we’ve heard similar pronouncem­ents before).

RAF Fylingdale­s will no doubt find its profile growing over the next decade as the increasing congestion and competitio­n in space make space situationa­l awareness and – perhaps sooner than we think – space traffic control more important.

The Future Combat Air System for the RAF will have had £2bn in developmen­t funding by 2025 and offers opportunit­ies for Yorkshire in R&D as well as in the supply chain in specialise­d areas like radar filters.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson describes himself as “profoundly optimistic about the UK’s place in the world and our ability to seize the opportunit­ies ahead”.

However, as we used to say in Afghanista­n “hope is not a course of action”, and this review will need sustained cross-Government and cross-sector effort, and funding, if the strategies it proposes are to succeed in the fragmented and competitiv­e world it accurately describes.

RAF Fylingdale­s will no doubt find its profile growing over the next decade with congestion increasing in space.

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