Former NATO chief targets PM Starmer, warning UK's security in 'peril'


FILE PHOTO: Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer (L) listens to Member of the House of Lords George Robertson (R) during a joint meeting with Britain's Defence Secretary John Healey (unseen) at 10 Downing Street, in London, on July 16, 2024. BENJAMIN CREMEL/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) - Britain's national security ⁠is "in peril" because of political complacency and under-investment in defence, former NATO chief George Robertson will ⁠say on Tuesday, in a rare public rebuke of Prime Minister Keir Starmer's handling ‌of military spending.

Robertson, who helped draft a Strategic Defence Review commissioned by Starmer when he came to power in 2024, is expected to say in a lecture that Britain has become increasingly exposed to external threats.

Robertson, who served in the 1990s as defence ​secretary from Starmer's Labour Party, told the Financial Times there was ⁠a gap between the prime minister's rhetoric ⁠and action on defence, and Starmer was "not willing to make the necessary investment".

In his lecture, to be ⁠delivered ‌later on Tuesday in Salisbury, southern England, he is expected to call out finance minister Rachel Reeves for devoting "only 40 words" to defence in a budget speech last autumn and not mentioning ⁠it at all in an update last month, the FT said.

"Britain's ​national security and safety is in ‌peril," he is due to say, according to an excerpt reported by the FT and ⁠the BBC. "We are under-prepared. ​We are under-insured. We are under attack. We are not safe."

'CORROSIVE COMPLACENCY'

Robertson's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. There was no immediate response from Starmer's office.

Starmer has blamed under-investment in the military on 14 years ⁠of rule by the rival Conservative Party, and has promised ​the largest sustained rise in defence spending since the Cold War, to reach 3% of national output in the next parliament.

The government has said it would publish a 10-year defence investment plan soon, aimed at meeting the ⁠ambitions set out in the 2024 review co-written by Robertson, which called for a shift towards drones, digital warfare and data-driven combat systems reflecting lessons drawn from the war in Ukraine.

Starmer said last week that the war in Iran must be a turning point for Britain, pledging to strengthen the economy and military ​to cope with a more "volatile and dangerous" world.

But Robertson will accuse Britain's ⁠political leadership of a "corrosive complacency" towards defence and describe decisions made by "non-military experts in the Treasury" as "vandalism".

"We cannot ​defend Britain with an ever-expanding welfare budget," he is expected to ‌say.

He will say the security outlook has deteriorated sharply ​following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and heightened tensions in the Middle East, calling it one of the most dangerous periods in decades.

(Reporting by Sam TabahritiEditing by Elizabeth Piper and Peter Graff)

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