Key points from the defence investment plan

Key points from the defence investment plan thumbnail

Sir Keir Starmer has set out the long-delayed defence investment plan (Dip), pledging billions of pounds to prepare Britain for war by 2030.

Below are the key points from the Prime Minister’s speech and the Dip.

– Defence spending will increase by £15 billion, funded by scrapping investments elsewhere

Rachel Reeves said the Treasury had provided an extra £15 billion to fund the Dip, above last year’s increase in defence spending paid for by cutting the aid budget.

The figure is higher than the previous offer of £13.5 billion that saw John Healey quit as defence secretary, but below the £28 billion defence chiefs have reportedly requested.

Sir Keir said he would not cut day-to-day spending on frontline services to fund the Dip, but had scrapped some capital projects that were not “immediately vital”.

These included some roads and energy projects, he said.

“The uplift will see annual defence spending reach £80 billion by 2029, up from £54 billion when Labour came to power.”

– Defence bonds ruled out

The Prime Minister also ruled out using more borrowing to fund defence, amid calls from the Liberal Democrats and others for the Government to issue “defence bonds”.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves and Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis arrive to deliver a speech in Berkshire (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

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Sir Keir said the Government had looked “very carefully” at the proposal, but dismissed defence bonds as “borrowing by another name”.

He said: “The fact is doing this through borrowing would push interest rates higher at a time when one pound in every 10 already goes on paying debt interest.”

– More drones, a “hybrid” navy and a new fighter jet

Learning the lessons from both Ukraine and Iran, Sir Keir has pledged more than £5 billion of spending over the next four years to fund a “drone transformation” for the armed forces.

Some £650 million will be spent on combat and surveillance drones for land forces, which Sir Keir said would help increase the Army’s “lethality” ten-fold.

There will also be funding for a “hybrid” Royal Navy, with smaller, autonomous vessels working alongside crewed ships.

And the Prime Minister pledged more than £8 billion for the Global Combat Air Programme to create a next-generation stealth fighter jet for the Royal Air Force in concert with Japan and Italy.

The new jet will also be supported by smaller autonomous “wingmen”, invisible to enemy radar, he added.

– A £64 billion upgrade to Britain’s nuclear deterrent

Sir Keir said the investment in “renewing” the UK’s nuclear deterrent would include spending on new Dreadnought submarines, a new sovereign warhead and 12 F35-A jets capable of carry nuclear weapons.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer delivers a speech in Berkshire, following the publication of long-delayed defence investment plan (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

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The new Dreadnought submarines will see four boats replace the current Vanguard class from the 2030s, while Sir Keir announced plans to buy nuclear-capable jets at last year’s Nato summit in The Hague.

Some of the money for the nuclear deterrent will also form part of a decade-long £26 billion overhaul of naval bases at Faslane, Portsmouth and Devonport, dubbed “Project Royal Oak”.

– A boost for Britain’s defence exports

The Prime Minister announced a “once-in-a-generation” £50 billion defence export facility to help British firms compete internationally.

He said the money would “support British defence businesses to create more jobs and opportunity up and down the country”.

– Sir Keir expects his successor to back his plan

Sir Keir said the Dip provided a “platform on which whoever comes after me can build” amid speculation Andy Burnham could seek to rewrite part of the plan.

Andy Burnham delivers a speech at the People’s History Museum, Manchester (Peter Byrne/PA)

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He added the Dip was “something which any Labour prime minister would want to stand behind, it’s a platform any Labour prime minister would want to stand on”.

But he did not answer when asked whether Mr Burnham had seen or signed off on the plan.