Ex-Nato Chief Robertson Slams Starmer's Defence Spending Plan
Ex-Nato Chief Slams Starmer's Defence Spending Plan

George Robertson, the former Nato secretary general who led the government's defence review, has criticised Prime Minister Keir Starmer's plan to pay for it, calling the defence investment plan (Dip) insufficient and overly delayed. Speaking to MPs on Tuesday, Robertson said the Dip had damaged confidence in the defence industry and among Britain's allies gathering in Ankara for the Nato summit.

Defence Plan Falls Short of Growing Threat

Robertson told the defence select committee: “We built this strategic defence review based on an assessment of 10 years. That clearly has now been accelerated, and quite simply we’re running out of years, and the reality is that the challenge is now bigger, more serious, and earlier than we had anticipated, and yet the defence investment plan itself doesn’t come up to it.” He warned that defence companies would be disappointed, stating: “Some companies will have gone bust in the process as they waited for the degree of certainty that was required in our view.”

Frosty Reception Expected at Nato Summit

As Starmer travels to Turkey for his final foreign trip as prime minister, Robertson warned he may face a cool reception. “The prime minister is in Ankara today at the Nato summit and he’ll be sitting tomorrow morning beside President Trump in alphabetical order around the North Atlantic Council table, and I think relations may well be quite frosty. The allies round the table who are all stepping up to the mark, and who are all now spending more on defence, and of course some of the bigger countries, like Germany and Poland, are spending considerably more than we are spending.”

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Delays and Funding Gaps Overshadow Legacy

Starmer arrived in Ankara on Tuesday afternoon hoping to present a credible plan for increasing UK military spending. However, delays to the Dip and disputes over funding have overshadowed his efforts. Despite the government stating that Robertson's defence review last year was fully funded, military chiefs later requested an additional £28bn. The Treasury agreed to only £15bn, with £4.7bn still unallocated, leaving a potential headache for the next prime minister, expected to be Andy Burnham.

Government figures and defence bosses have criticised the plan for not setting a deadline for the UK to spend 3.5% of its gross domestic product on defence, a target other countries have been more explicit about. On Monday, Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte called for allies to present “clear, concrete and credible plans” to reach the organisation's spending targets, adding: “President Trump fully expects that all allies will step up immediately and get on the path to 5% and do it with urgency.”

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