Key facts
- UK military operations and exercises will be reduced without increased funding for the Ministry of Defence.
- Chief of Defence Staff Rich Knighton highlighted concerns about day-to-day operational budgets.
- Defence Secretary John Healey resigned due to disagreement over defense spending increases.
- Healey stated that the proposed budget increase to 2.68% of GDP by 2030 was insufficient.
- Knighton stressed the importance of NATO's defense spending target of 3.5% of GDP by 2035.
Britain's military operations and exercises will need to be scaled back in the coming years if the Ministry of Defence (MoD) does not receive additional funding, according to the UK's Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton. Speaking to a House of Lords committee, Knighton expressed significant concern over the budgets allocated for day-to-day activities, a notable shift in emphasis from capital investments.
Knighton explained that the split between resource spending and capital spending has changed dramatically over the past two decades. Twenty years ago, it was approximately 80% for capital and 20% for resource spending. Currently, this has shifted to about 60% for activity and resources and 40% for capital. Projections indicate this could become a 50/50 split by 2030. He noted that key costs, such as aviation fuel, have escalated.
The resignation of Defence Secretary John Healey last week was directly linked to the government's defense spending proposals. Healey quit because Prime Minister Keir Starmer would not commit to increasing defense spending beyond an agreed 2.6% of GDP by 2027 to 3% by 2030. Healey stated that Starmer's offer of 2.68% would compromise the UK's safety. Healey was also reportedly unhappy that the UK would fall short of NATO's spending target of 3.5% of GDP by 2035.
Knighton underscored the importance of adhering to the longer-term NATO target, stating that allies agree this level of spending is necessary to meet NATO capability targets. The planned release of the 10-year defense investment plan was halted following Healey's resignation, as the MoD was offered £13.5 billion to cover an £18 billion budget gap. Armed forces minister Al Carns also resigned, citing the DIP's inadequacy and insufficient focus on drone warfare.