Failing Britain! Labour stalwart has turned on Starmer โ now he must listen | Politics | News
As stinging criticism goes, Lord George Robertson’s scathing attack on Labour’s “corrosive complacencyโ regarding defence is about as strong as it gets. For months, the warnings over the state of Britain’s military have been getting louder and louder.
The intervention by Lord Robertson, a former NATO secretary general and Labour defence secretary who led the Governmentโs Strategic Defence Review (SDR), is perhaps the most deafening yet. Lord Robertsonโs warning that the UK is โunderpreparedโ and its โsafety is in perilโ will be ringing in the ears of officials within Whitehall. But what now is Labourโs move โ continue with the defence delays, or wake up and smell the coffee that many will say has been brewing for years?
Decades of salami slicing have slowly chipped away at the armed forces. The Royal Navy has been at the centre of the storm in recent weeks.
The reality of repeated cuts and a lack of warships was horribly exposed as the Navy scrambled to get HMS Dragon to the Eastern Mediterranean, arriving three weeks after an RAF base on Cyprus was hit by a drone.
Warnings Iran had developed missiles capable of striking London โ and that we are effectively sitting ducks without NATO help on the continent โ have become another reminder of the parlous state of defence.
Yet the Governmentโs Defence Investment Plan, setting out details on new equipment orders and capabilities, remains nowhere to be seen after months of delays.
The Government says it will happen “as soon as possibleโ, but no date has been given. This pledge means very little to our hardworking defence industry, which has been left in โparalysisโ by the holdup. It is understood that a tug of war between the Treasury and the Ministry of Defence over funding is the reason for the delay.
But Lord Robertson is very clear, this tussle is leaving Britain vulnerable as international stability teeters and creaks. His SDR co-author, Gen Sir Richard Barrons, agreed with his concerns.
Labourโs defence policy is being questioned like never before.
This is not political point-scoring, but as Gen Sir Richard points out, warnings from a long-term Labour politician who has โhad to say it in these termsโ.
For now, letโs hope Lord Robertsonโs concerns of “complacency” and โperilโ do not escalate to catastrophe.
