A recently leaked British government study provides a shocking
glimpse into the decline of the Royal Navy once the most feared
fighting force on the face of the earth. From the Battle of
Trafalgar in 1805 to the Falklands War in 1982, the Royal Navy has
been an imposing force on the world stage. Today it stands as a
shadow of its former self.
The November 1 report titled "Royal Navy Utility Today Compared
with 20 Years Ago", authored by Rear-Admiral Alan Massey, is a
damning indictment of the state of the British navy, after a decade
of under funding. The document, described in detail by the London
Daily Telegraph, reveals that the British fleet has been reduced in
size from 136 ships in 1987 to just 75 today. The number of
destroyers and frigates in service has fallen from 54 to 25, and
submarines from 38 to just 13. The total number of Navy personnel
has been reduced by nearly 30,000, from 65,500 to 38,800. The
report concludes that with an "under-resourced" fleet comprised of
"operationally defective ships", "the Royal Navy would be
challenged to mount a medium-scale operation in accordance with
current policy against a technologically capable adversary."
The report's findings echo comments made last year by Admiral Sir
Alan West, the recently-retired First Sea Lord, who accused the
government of turning the Armed Forces into "a tin pot
gendarmerie". They also give added weight to remarks made last
month in the House of Lords by Admiral Lord Boyce, former Chief of
the Defence Staff, who warned that defence cuts were endangering
the lives of British military personnel.
The ravaging of the Royal Navy mirrors the depletion of Britain's
Army, which is facing a manpower shortage of 4,500 soldiers, the
equivalence of a whole brigade. According to a report in the London
Sunday Times over 1,300 officers have left the army in the past 6
months, a staggering figure, "amid anger about government
cost-cutting and equipment shortages." The British Army has lost
5,790 officers since the Iraq War, with just 4,500 new officers
taking their place. There is currently a shortage of 200 majors, a
highly unusual state of affairs. With over 12,000 troops fighting
in Afghanistan and in southern Iraq, as well as significant
commitments in Africa and Europe, Britain has become seriously
overstretched.
There can be no doubt that ten years of Labour Party rule has
dramatically undermined Britain's long-term fighting capability.
The UK now spends just 2.2 percent of its GDP on defense, the
lowest level since the 1930s, and less than competitors such as
France. As Chancellor of the Exchequer under Tony Blair, Gordon
Brown was a ruthless opponent of increased defense spending, and
now as Prime Minister he shows no sign of loosening the purse
strings. The Treasury is currently considering plans to cut as much
as 15 billion pounds ($30 billion) from the UK defence budget in
the next 10 years. As UK Shadow Defence Secretary Liam Fox has
wryly noted, "Labour has done what none of this countries' enemies
have been able to do: bring the Navy to its knees."
The decline of the British Navy and Army should be an issue of
huge concern on both sides of the Atlantic. The Anglo-American
alliance is the engine of the war against Islamic terrorism, and
the battle against rogue regimes. It is the anchor of the NATO
alliance, and the fulcrum of the transatlantic partnership. It
should be an issue of huge concern in Washington that America's
closest ally might not be capable of fighting alongside it ten
years from now. Indeed, Britain may not even be able to defend
itself adequately within a generation, if she continues to cut her
defense expenditure.
A weaker Britain ultimately means a more vulnerable America, and
the decline of British war fighting capability is bad news for
Washington. It would be a tragedy if the Special Relationship were
to be weakened and ultimately eroded by the short-sightedness of
political mandarins in London, more concerned about funding for the
welfare state than the security of the free world. Pressure for
increased defense expenditure by London and other NATO members
should be a top foreign policy priority for the United
States.
At a time of great uncertainty internationally, from the
continuing Iranian nuclear threat to the resurgence of nationalism
in Russia, this is no time for Great Britain to be reducing its
ability to project military power worldwide. The West needs a
British nation that possesses the willpower and capability to wield
force across the globe in the defense of freedom as it has done for
centuries. A great warrior nation such as Britain, with a proud
history of defending Western civilization, cannot be reduced to a
larger version of Belgium or Sweden, outclassed by the likes of
China and Russia.
The British government must be willing to invest at a minimum 3
percent of British GDP on defense, and ideally 4 percent, to ensure
that Britain's military commitments can be sustained, from the
Middle East to the North West Frontier, to West Africa. Without
such a commitment, the UK can only expect to decline as a global
power, wield less influence diplomatically, and face an
increasingly dangerous world from a position of weakness. It is a
future that Lord Nelson would never have accepted, and nor should
the British people today.
Nile Gardiner is the director of the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom.
First appeared in Human Events