UK military chief warns of RM151b shortfall as defence plan stalls amid rising Russia threat
- Defence Investment Plan delayed from last year
- PM confirms it will be published before Nato summit in July
- Military chief warns of growing threat βfrom Russia
- Reports say delay due to rows over budget
LONDON, June 5 β Britain is running out of time to boost its defences in response to the threat posed by recent Russian βactions, the countryβs military chief said today, after months of delays to the countryβs Defence Investment Plan.
βRussia is definitely raising the stakes and risks crossing a line,β Chief of the Defence Staff Richard Knighton told BBC Radio. βWe need to spend more on defence and do it faster.β
The Defence Investment Plan will lay out the funding for military equipment and services to ensure the armed forces move to a state of βwarfighting readinessβ, but reports say it has been held up since last year by budget rows within government.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer confirmed on a visit to a drone factory today that the plan would be published before a July 7 Nato summit, following a period βof close work between government and military leaders.
βIt is no exaggeration to say that weβre living β in more dangerous and volatile times than at any β time in my life,β Starmer said.
US President Donald Trump, who has β repeatedly called on Starmer and other European β leaders to spend more β on defence and become less reliant on Washington for the continentβs security, is due to attend the summit.
Threats greatest since Cold War
Knighton said the risks and threats to Britain were greater than at any β time since the Cold War, and the government needed to spend on defence accordingly.
βThe challenge for ministers is to make those difficult trade-off decisions,β he said.
Media reports say military chiefs have warned Starmer that there is a Β£28 billion (RM151 billion) shortfall in funding over the next four years, and say that is behind the delay to the investment plan.
Starmer has pledged the largest sustained increase in defence spending β since the Cold War, aiming to lift it to 3 per cent of national output in the next parliament, but he has been criticised for not following through on his promises.
George Robertson, β who served in the 1990s as Britainβs defence secretary and then as chief of Nato, said in β April that there β was a gap between Starmerβs rhetoric and action and he was βnot willing to make the necessary investmentβ in defence.
Knighton said Russia was stepping up its threat, with more incursions into British airspace and through regular βprobing, challenging, testingβ βof defences, as well as being behind cyberattacks, sabotage and attempts to steal technology.
βWe do need to step up and enhance our capability as the threats from potential adversaries grow,β he said. β Reuters
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