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23 26 OCTOBER 2009 Territorial Army<br />

24<br />

Territorial Army<br />

3.32 pm<br />

Dr. Liam Fox (Woodspring) (Con) (Urgent Question):<br />

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence if he will<br />

make a statement on his proposal to change the funding<br />

for Territorial Army training?<br />

The Minister of State, Ministry of Defence (Bill Rammell):<br />

I apologise on behalf of the Secretary of State, who is<br />

unable to come to the House as he is dealing with<br />

departmental business overseas.<br />

The Territorial Army makes a vital contribution to<br />

keeping our country safe, and 540 TA members are<br />

currently deployed on operations in Afghanistan. When<br />

we have forces in the front line putting their lives on the<br />

line for us, they must be the priority, and Afghanistan is<br />

the main effort for defence. It gets the first call on<br />

money, the first call on equipment, and the first call on<br />

training and support.<br />

More than £3 billion has been drawn from the Treasury<br />

reserve to support operations this year, but we need to<br />

reprioritise the core defence budget as well. That means<br />

that tough choices need to be made. Recruitment to the<br />

Army has experienced a significant boost this year—over<br />

1,000 more recruits are expected to complete training<br />

than did so last year—but those additional recruits<br />

need to be paid for. The Chief of the General Staff<br />

presented proposals to help bring the budget into balance,<br />

and, as extra money cannot be drawn from the Treasury<br />

reserve for the purpose, the Army proposed to reduce<br />

the amount spent on the Territorial Army this year, as<br />

well as taking other measures.<br />

After discussion, the Secretary of State endorsed<br />

the approach taken by the Army. We did so while<br />

making it clear that we would not allow any risk to the<br />

Afghanistan campaign in the future to materialise.<br />

No TA soldier will be deployed on operations unless<br />

the Army is satisfied that he is properly trained and<br />

prepared, and pre-deployment training is emphatically<br />

not being cut.<br />

Our initial proposal was to suspend the remainder of<br />

non-deployment TA training in this financial year, with<br />

a saving of £20 million; but, as a Government, we do<br />

listen. The Secretary of State has therefore decided on a<br />

small adjustment to our original proposals to ensure<br />

continuity for those not immediately being deployed to<br />

Afghanistan, and to help retention. All TA personnel<br />

will now receive at least one training night per month in<br />

the current financial year. This measure reduces the<br />

in-year savings by £2.5 million.<br />

I realise that the reductions in normal activity are<br />

disappointing for TA members, but I believe that they<br />

will understand the reasons behind those reductions<br />

and the exceptional circumstances in which they are<br />

being applied. Tough choices cannot be made without<br />

consequences, so let me be clear. The media and the<br />

Opposition have been calling for more focus on current<br />

operations, but they cannot will the ends and then<br />

oppose the means. These measures are sensible,<br />

proportionate and will ensure that we make Afghanistan<br />

the main effort, and I hope they will be supported on<br />

both sides of the House.<br />

Dr. Fox: I would like to ask three simple questions.<br />

First, the Government have previously told us that they<br />

“always finance our military commitments overseas out of the<br />

reserve.”—[Official Report, 5 February 2009; Vol. 487, c. 1083.]<br />

Then the Secretary of State said last week:<br />

“We are adjusting the core defence budget to reprioritise<br />

Afghanistan”.—[Official Report, 15 October 2009; Vol. 497,<br />

c. 469.]<br />

Some of us are surprised that it was not already the No.1<br />

priority, but if it is fully funded from the reserve, as the<br />

Government say, why are they cutting the core TA budget<br />

by £43 million?<br />

Secondly, we know that, due to the recession and the<br />

major recruitment drive in the past year, there are more<br />

recruits in the regular Army than there is money to<br />

train them, and the Government have now demanded<br />

savings from other parts of the Army. Why did the<br />

Government not plan to fund their own target numbers<br />

for recruitment, especially in the middle of a war?<br />

Thirdly, do the Government really understand the<br />

ethos of volunteering or the effect their plans could<br />

have on future available numbers? For many, the TA is a<br />

habit; break the habit, break the TA. Pre-deployment<br />

training is only of use if we have the numbers to start<br />

with. Is it not the case that pre-deployment training is<br />

meant to augment, not supplant, routine TA training,<br />

so routine training is just as important as pre-deployment<br />

training? Whether or not an individual is deploying on<br />

operations, regular and routine training is required to<br />

ensure medium and long-term readiness in the TA for<br />

any future deployments to Afghanistan, or elsewhere.<br />

These proposals are a shambles. They must be reversed.<br />

Bill Rammell: The hon. Gentleman knows full well<br />

how the reserve operates. Most of the cost of operations<br />

is met from the Treasury reserve, but the defence budget<br />

still meets some of the cost. Where activity would take<br />

place regardless of operations, the defence budget meets<br />

the cost even if the activity directly supports operational<br />

capability. That was the case under the last Government,<br />

and it is the case under this Government.<br />

The reality is that we face increased pressures this<br />

year, including due to increased numbers coming into<br />

the Army, which we welcome, as well as less income<br />

from estates disposal and as a result of exchange rate<br />

fluctuations. Reading between the lines of the hon.<br />

Gentleman’s contribution, I think that he actually welcomes<br />

the minor adjustment we have announced today. It is<br />

one that has been called for from those on the Opposition<br />

Benches. I also have to say that it ill behoves the<br />

Opposition—whom, let us remember, are not proposing<br />

one additional penny of expenditure within the defence<br />

budget—to urge us to prioritise efforts in Afghanistan<br />

and then to cry foul as soon as that leads to difficult<br />

decisions. That is dishonest and disingenuous, and it ill<br />

serves our TA. [Interruption.]<br />

Mr. Speaker: Order. I do not require any advice or<br />

help from the hon. Member for Wellingborough (Mr. Bone).<br />

I am sure the Minister will want to make it clear that he<br />

is not accusing anyone in this Chamber of behaving<br />

dishonestly.<br />

Bill Rammell: Absolutely, Mr. Speaker. It is the policy<br />

proposition that I believe is dishonest.

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