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11 Feb 2009 : Column WS65

Written Statement

Wednesday 11 February 2009

Armed Forces: Defence Planning

Statement

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Ministry of Defence (Baroness Taylor of Bolton): My right honourable friend the Secretary of State for Defence has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.

The Ministry of Defence routinely reviews the planning assumptions which guide the development of capability over the medium to longer term. In the absence of a direct military threat, these assumptions set out in broad terms the types of operation which the Armed Forces should be capable of undertaking. The assumptions are not intended either to constrain or precisely describe the actual pattern of operational commitments at any point in time. But regular review is required to ensure there is a relationship between the planning assumptions and the developments in the strategic context.

Previous defence planning assumptions were published in the supporting essays to the 2003 White Paper, Delivering Security in a Changing World. The department has now completed the most recent review and is publishing the outcome.

On the military tasks which the Armed Forces might be asked to undertake, we have decided to:

eliminate the specific military task military aid to the civil power in Northern Ireland to reflect the continuing normalisation in Northern Ireland;

merge the military tasks integrity of UK waters and integrity of UK airspace as integrity of the UK to reflect the requirement for an integrated approach;

rename and disaggregate the military task defence diplomacy to security co-operation: support to current and future operations which reflects the requirement to maintain international support for operations, ranging from basing to contributions; and security co-operation: strengthen international peace and stability and support wider British interests, which covers the promotion of UK interests, including conflict prevention, counterproliferation and support to other government departments; and

add a new military task military assistance to stabilisation and development to reflect our recent operational experience.

We will continue to group the military tasks under four generic headings. The consolidated military tasks (MTs) are therefore:

Standing Strategic Tasks

MT 1.1—Strategic intelligence;

MT 1.2—Nuclear deterrence; and

MT 1.3—Hydrographic, geographic and meteorological services.

Standing Home Commitments

MT 2.1—Military aid to the civil authorities (MACA);

MT 2.2—Integrity of the UK; and

MT 2.3—Public duties and VIP transport.



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Standing Overseas Commitments

MT 3.1—Defence and security of the Overseas Territories;

MT 3.2—Defence and security of the Cyprus sovereign base areas (SBAs);

MT 3.3—Security co-operation: support to current and future contingent operations; and

MT 3.4—Security co-operation: strengthen international peace and stability and support wider British interests.

Contingent Operations Overseas

MT 4.1—Humanitarian assistance and disaster relief;

MT 4.2—Evacuation of British citizens overseas;

MT 4.3—Peacekeeping;

MT 4.4—Peace enforcement;

MT 4.5—Military assistance to stabilisation and development;

MT 4.6—Power projection;

MT 4.7—Focused intervention; and

MT 4.8—Deliberate intervention.

We have decided to rename the strategic planning effects as strategic outcomes and strategic enablers, and have decided to:

delete the effect contain; and

add a new outcome: reassurance; and three new enablers: insight; resilience; and coalition influence.

The consolidated list is therefore

Strategic Planning Outcomes:

prevention—the stopping or limiting of the occurrence, escalation or resumption of a crisis or conflict;

reassurance—action to protect our own cohesion and that of allied and neutral states;

stabilisation—the creation and maintenance of the security conditions required to allow all levers of power to address the underlying causes of conflict;

deterrence—the convincing of a potential aggressor that the consequences of coercion or armed conflict would outweigh the potential gains;

defeat—the reduction of the military effectiveness of an adversary so that he is no longer able to achieve his aims or prevent us from achieving ours;

coercion—the use of force, or threat of force, to persuade an opponent to adopt a certain pattern of behaviour of our choosing and against his wishes;

disruption—the degradation of specific elements of an adversary’s capability in order to limit his freedom of action; and

destruction—the damaging of an adversary’s organisation, capability or equipment to such an extent that they are no longer militarily viable.

Strategic Planning Enablers

Insight—an understanding of a state or region’s diplomatic, economic and military dynamics in order to enhance the ability to identify the causes and likelihood of impending crisis;

Resilience—the ability at every level to detect, prevent and if necessary to handle and recover from disruptive challenges; and



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coalition influence—the ability to affect the aims and objectives of a coalition force.

On concurrency and scales of effort, we have decided broadly to maintain the concurrency assumptions as set out in 2003 as follows:

That routinely and without creating overstretch we should be able to mount:an enduring medium-scale military assistance to stabilisation and development or peacekeeping operation simultaneously with an enduring small-scale peacekeeping or power projection operation and; a small-scale power projection, peace enforcement or focused intervention.

That we should seek to avoid committing to two concurrent UK medium-scale operations. However, there will be occasions when it will not be possible to draw down an enduring medium-scale commitment prior to a second operation at medium scale. Therefore, that we should, accepting that it will place greater stress on our current force structure and cause harmony guidelines to be exceeded for many force elements, be able to reconfigure our forces rapidly to carry out:



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an enduring medium-scale peacekeeping or military assistance to stabilisation and development or peacekeeping operation;an enduring small-scale peacekeeping or power projection operation simultaneously with; a limited duration medium-scale power projection, peace enforcement or focused intervention operation. That given time to prepare, we should be capable of undertakinga demanding one-off large-scale intervention operation while still maintaining a commitment toa simple enduring small-scale peacekeeping operation.

That, additionally, we must also take account of the need to meet standing commitments, eg quick reaction alert aircraft for the integrity of the UK airspace, and contingent forces.

We have been operating above our planning assumptions for scale of effort and concurrency since 2003, but we do not believe that this is a level of commitment which is desirable for our Armed Forces to sustain for an indefinite period. It is our objective to reduce our current level of operational deployments over the next year or so.

The department is now taking forward the implications of these changes to our planning assumptions.


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