Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Starmer boosts defence spending but is it enough?

Keir Starmer has only got another 20 days or so as British prime minister before he "voluntarily" steps down and hands over to Andy Burnham. But he has managed to find the time to publish, at last, the defence investment plan to fund the armed forces and modernise their equipment for future wars. It has taken a long time and he has persuaded the Treasury to hand over an extra £15 billion to help build a new class of warship which will be a mother ship for drones, plus some additional vessels for the Royal Marines and a fancy new combat aircraft that will fly alongside unmanned air veihcles. Yes, more drones. The Ukraine war has taught the whole world that warfare is now different. Forget tanks and traditional warships, the requirement is for drones, drones, drones, whether in the air, on land or on the water or under the water. Thousands of them are needed to fight off Russia in the future. The problem is that drones are not the answer to everything. When it comes to big military powers like Russia, they have hypersonic ballistic and cruise missiles and if the UK doesn't have the most advanced air-defence systems, we would be crushed in a war. The UK should be buying US Patriot missiles and parking them around the country if we want to be safe from Russian missile attack. Drones are great, they are more potent than in the past, they have longer ranges and can be guided to hit targets spot on. But we need so much more than drones to stay ahead of our enemies. And this is where the extra money is going to seem paltry by the time it has been spent on new fancy drones. With the UK economy drifting like a slow-moving barge, it's difficult to see where all the money for defence is going to come from. PLEASE BUY AGENT REDRUTH, MY NEW SPY THRILLER. WATERSTONES, ROWANVALE BOOKS, AMAZON.

No comments:

Post a Comment