The Sunday Telegraph

Tory grandees demand instant 25pc rise in defence spending

Case for extra expenditur­e ‘unanswerab­le’ following the invasion of Ukraine, former ministers say

- By Edward Malnick SUNDAY POLITICAL EDITOR

‘Before this crisis, we were calling for 3pc of GDP as a mediumterm target, and that must now become an immediate target’

LORD FROST, the former Cabinet Office minister, and Sir Michael Fallon, the former defence secretary, have said that defence spending must increase, as senior Tories insisted that funding should rise immediatel­y by at least 25 per cent.

Writing in this newspaper, Lord Frost warns that “we are going to have to spend more on defence and that will mean tough choices. We need to reform and liberalise so that investment keeps coming”.

Sir Michael, who served in David Cameron and Theresa May’s cabinets, said that the case for more spending was now “unanswerab­le” in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, adding that the “ambition” of Boris Johnson’s integrated security and defence review must be “matched by a significan­t further uplift” in funding. Their interventi­ons come after the Polish and German government­s both indicated that they would increase national defence spending. Britain’s level of defence expenditur­e is currently 2.2 per cent of GDP.

Julian Lewis, a former chairman of the Commons defence committee, said that Mr Putin’s behaviour had “dispelled any illusion people might have had about the nature of our adversary”. Until now, political leaders had “lulled themselves into a false sense of security”, he warned.

Ben Wallace, the Defence Secretary, said ministers would “look at the lessons” of Ukraine and “if the threat changes then of course we look at those funding levels”.

Mr Lewis, who chairs Parliament’s intelligen­ce and security committee but was speaking in a personal capacity, said: “Before this present crisis, quite a number of us were calling for 3 per cent as a medium-term target, and that must now become an immediate target.”

Sir Michael said that 2.7 per cent of GDP should be the Government’s “minimum medium-term target”. He added: “In 1999, long before 9/11, before Russian aggression, before Kim Jong-il had nuclear missiles, we were spending 2.7 per cent.”

Last week, Gen Lord Dannatt, the former Chief of the General Staff, said the UK needed to cease “cutting the size of the Army any further”, while Lord West, the former First Sea Lord, said: “We should be looking at a minimum of 3 per cent of GDP for defence.”

A Budget document published last year said that the 2020 spending review had provided “the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War”, with overall expenditur­e exceeding the Nato target of at least 2 per cent of GDP.

However, Mr Lewis pointed out that Cold War levels of defence spending had exceeded 4 per cent. He added: “People have lulled themselves into a false sense of security by looking at the absolute size of the Russian economy without taking into account that a little money in the Russian economy buys a great deal more in terms of personnel and hardware than in a Western economy.

“There has been a tendency to say that in the 21st century what you have to worry about are new forms of conflict such as cyber and even space, whereas those are additional threats and not substitute­s for the threats that require substantia­l naval, military and air forces.”

Sir Michael said: “[My] only criticism of last year’s integrated review [of security and defence] was that its ambition wasn’t matched by significan­t further uplift. I absolutely welcome both the review and the previous very welcome increase in 2020. But … its ambition wasn’t matched by a further increase building beyond 2.5 per cent by the end of the Parliament. That’s the kind of ambition we need.”

Mr Johnson has been criticised in recent days after it emerged that he insisted four months ago that the age of “big tank battles” was over. Defending cuts to convention­al forces, the Prime Minister said in November: “It’s now or never for the UK Armed Forces.

“We have to recognise that the old concept of fighting big tank battles on European land mass are over.”

He added: “I think the investment­s that we are making in new technology are absolutely indispensa­ble to our ability to fight wars of the 21st century.”

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