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‘It’s beyond embarrassing, it’s dangerous’: why Britain must fund defence | Sir Richard Barrons

6/11/202630 min

Britain’s defence review is now a year old – but the government is still arguing over how to pay for it. John Healey, the (now former) defence secretary, has resigned over the failure to set out an adequate plan to meet the need to modernise our armed forces.

General Sir Richard Barrons, one of the architects of the Strategic Defence Review, joins Coffee House Shots to explain why the funding row is about more than budgets. He warns that Britain’s armed forces have been hollowed out after decades of cuts, that modern war is moving at the speed of AI and that Russia does not need to invade Britain to threaten daily life.

Is Britain ready for the next war? What happens if America no longer comes to Europe’s defence? And has the political class failed to explain the scale of the danger?

Tim Shipman speaks to General Sir Richard Barrons.

Produced by Oscar Edmondson.

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First 90 seconds
  1. Tim Shipman· Host0:00

    Given the state of the world today, it's unsurprising that the specter of inflation is never very far away. But if you have savings in cash, it's an ever-present threat. Alliance Witten, however, aims to give you returns that beat inflation. Dating back to 1888, the trust now manages around five billion pounds in assets, and amazingly, has paid an increased dividend every single year for the last 59 years. So if you're looking to move beyond cash and into investing in stocks and shares, it's an ideal way to do so without leaving your comfort zone. Investment value may rise or fall. Dividend increase is not guaranteed. [upbeat music] Hello, and welcome to Coffee House Shots, The Spectator's daily politics podcast. I'm Tim Shipman, the political editor of The Spectator, and I'm delighted to be joined today by General Sir Richard Barrons, um, long-standing military chief, and for our purposes today, one of the three main architects and authors of the Strategic Defense Review, which is now one year old. And Richard, we are still waiting for the money. The failure of the Treasury to provide that money forced John Healey to resign as defense secretary yesterday. Recent days have seen quite the schmozzle inside government. Essentially at the end of the last year, the military chiefs went to Downing Street and said that on the basis of the current requirements, we need 28 billion pounds to modernize the armed forces. Healey found out that the defense investment plan would give him closer to 10 billion, and he resigned with a blistering letter to the Prime Minister. But Richard, none of that actually covers the sort of future of the armed forces and the, the kind of plans that you were laying out when you,

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