Questions MoD must answer in planning next defence review (SDSR)

27 Mar 2015 12:40 PM

It is essential that an entirely fresh National Security Strategy (NSS) is created before consideration begins on the next SDSR according to the Defence Committee's report published Wednesday 25 March 2015.

The inquiry

The Defence Committee have set out a list of questions the MoD and the NSC should ask themselves if they are to formulate a realistic Strategic Defence and Security Review that best serves the Defence requirements of this country.

The Committee decided, in 2013 that their inquiries should help to inform the next Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR). This report summarises the contribution those recent reports suggest, and raises fundamental issues that any comprehensive and integrated cross-government SDSR needs to address.

It is essential that an entirely fresh National Security Strategy (NSS) is created before consideration begins on the next SDSR. This new strategy should involve a fundamental reassessment of the UK’s role in the world, in the light of the new and unexpected threats to National Security since 2010.

Chair's comments

"Coming up with an achievable strategy for our involvement in future conflicts will be more challenging than ever before. The threats to stability around the world change and re-emerge with startling speed. Our next SDSR must state how or when we might intervene to maintain stability overseas and it must focus more rigorously on the UK’s key military alliances and partnerships."

Key questions

The Report poses a substantial number of questions to consider. Namely:

There is a significant risk that ambiguous tactics will operate below the threshold of NATO’s Article 5 'attack' pledge (That an armed attack against a member would bring about a concerted NATO response). The Committee recommends that the adjective "armed" be removed from the definition of an Article 5 attack. Perhaps there would be an advantage in redefining Article 5 to specify that any attack, not just an armed attack, would be covered by the Article 5 defence guarantee.

Chair's comments

"These are some extremely hard questions to answer but only by considering the threats we face in the light of what we can afford or be prepared to do, can we produce a review of our defences that survives first contact with the enemy."

Further information