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Mainstream BBC Politics 17 hours ago

Long-delayed defence spending plan to be published

The defence investment plan will be published on Tuesday, around nine months later than expected A long-delayed military spending plan will be published on Tuesday, with Sir Keir Starmer saying it would keep Britain "safe and secure long into the future". The Ministry of Defence said the defence investment plan (DIP) includes £5bn worth of investment to increase the armed forces' use of drones and autonomous weapons. Earlier this month, the Treasury and No 10 agreed a £13.5bn funding increase, well short of the £28bn the MoD wanted - though new Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis has pushed for more in recent weeks. His predecessor John Healey resigned over the funding row. The Conservatives said the plan was "too little, too late", while the Liberal Democrats said it "dangerously short-changed our armed forces". Tense Whitehall negotiations over how to fund it have been ongoing for months, with departments across government asked to make cuts. The row has seen two defence ministers resign over what they said was an inadequate funding increase in the original version of the plan. The DIP will also explain how new equipment and defence infrastructure will be funded over the coming decade. It was initially expected to be published last autumn but now arrives before the Nato leaders summit in Turkey on 7 July. Earlier this month, Healey quit the government, saying the DIP fell well short of what is needed to protect the UK and meet existing spending commitments, while Armed Forces Minister Al Carns resigned, saying it was not "transformative enough" in the face of rapidly-evolving warfare. It has been reported Jarvis has secured some extra money for the plan. He has also spent the last two weeks "refocusing" the DIP to take on more of the lessons from Ukraine and Iran, the MoD said. This includes how drones have been used to destroy high-value targets, with Jarvis saying the "character of warfare is rapidly changing". He said: "In Ukraine and the Middle East, uncrewed systems are defining conflicts. "This largest ever UK investment into these evolving technologies will help our armed forces stay ahead of our adversaries, backed ." The MoD has said plans to replace ageing warship will be scrapped in favour of building at least six new modern "hybrid" vessels equipped to deploy drones. Sir Keir said there would be "game-changing investment" to strengthen the armed forces on land, at sea and in the air.

Original story by BBC Politics View original source

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