Starmer confirms no new money for defence as military chief warns of cuts
Air chief marshal Sir Richard Knighton, chief of the defence staff, warned that operations will have to be ‘dialled back’ unless new money is found
Sir Keir Starmer has made it clear that there will be no extra money allocated to defence spending.The prime minister signalled the position as one of his military chiefs warned there would have to be cuts to the armed forces. Speaking to journalists at the G7 gathering of leaders of the world’s largest economies in France, a defiant prime minister insisted he had already produced the biggest increase in spending since the 1980s.
Days after he losing his defence secretary John Healey and armed forces minister Al Carns, Sir Keir insisted the money has been allocated.open image in galleryStarmer is defiant over defence spending (PA)He said: “The position on investment in defence is firstly that we increased last year, defence spending from 2.3 per cent to 2.
6 per cent. That's the biggest increase since the 1980s. “And that means £270 billion will be spent this parliament on defence.
On top of that defence investment plan, which obviously gives us the capability for the future, we'll put even more money in, in relation to that. I've been really clear that that's required difficult decisions.”But when asked if there was any more money, he made it clear there would not be saying: “I have taken the decision to reallocate money from other departments.
Obviously, the new defence secretary [Dan Jarvis] is reading in and we're talking to him about how and what we will spend that money in terms of capability.“And he's got his own thoughts now about what the priorities should be and so I think that's the discussion we're in the middle of at the moment.”Mr Healey and Mr Carns resigned because the amount of extra cash available amounted to a tiny proportion of what was needed with just £10bn allocated meaning the UK was far from the trajectory needed to reach 3.
5 per cent in the next parliament.open image in gallery(Sir Richard Knighton addresses the Lords' International Relations and Defence Committee)Speaking to the International Relations and Defence ommittee in the House of Lords air chief marshal Sir Richard Knighton, chief of the defence staff, warned that operations and capabilities will have to be “dialled back” unless the funding offer does not increase from £13.5 billion.
He was questioned at first by the committee chair Lord George Robertson, the former Labour defence secretary and chair of NATO who chaired Sir Keir’s defence review and has been very critical of the prime minister’s approach.Sir Richard said: “We will have to dial back our activities and our exercise and operational activity if the level of resource funding that is available to us does not increase.”He cited the example of aviation fuel rising costs adding a burden to expenditure in the RAF.”
The levers that we have to pull to reduce that expenditure are principally around our activities, which means exercises, training, operations,” he noted. “o, clearly, we would prioritize those activities around what the government cared about most, but it would be disingenuous of me to suggest that there is not going to be a consequence of this settlement.”Join our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments
Đọc thêm từ Thế giới

Asian Games goes digital: Virtual taekwondo added for 2026
Virtual taekwondo is officially heading to the Asian Games, marking a major milestone for the digital discipline just days after a high-profile showcase in Italy. World Taekwondo announced Monday that virtual taekwondo has been added to the official program for the Aichi-Nagoya 2

Hong Kong Science Park, SenseTime partner to build home-grown AI data centre
The Hong Kong Science and Technology Park (HKSTP) and SenseTime, a Chinese artificial intelligence firm headquartered and listed in the city, have partnered to build a home-grown AI data centre by 2030 to support the sector’s industrialisation. The data centre will be built in th
Harry Maguire opens up on ‘awkward call’ with Thomas Tuchel over England World Cup snub
Maguire previously described feeling “shocked and gutted” after he was left out of the 26-man squad for the tournament
Steinar Wangen frifinnes for oppfordring til selvmord i Sverige mot fire personer
Det skriver den svenske statskanalen SVT tirsdag.