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Non-Subscriber Extract

UK must cut investment to tackle 'black hole' in budget, report says

By Gerrard Cowan

01 July 2009

The UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) must consider abandoning GBP24 billion (USD40 billion)-worth of investment in the Trident nuclear deterrent replacement and a range of other programmes to address "a black hole in the defence budget", according to a think-tank.

The report by the Institute for Public Policy Research, entitled 'Shared Responsibilities: A National Security Strategy for the United Kingdom', stated that London should conduct a 'Strategic Review of Security', of which the armed forces would form just one component. This review would involve a fundamental reappraisal of the value of the Trident system, although the report conceded that a minimum UK deterrent was still necessary.

The report – which was spearheaded by Lord George Robertson, a former UK defence secretary and NATO secretary general, and Lord Paddy Ashdown, a previous leader of the Liberal Democrats and high representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina – said that a new review should consider the best and most cost-effective way to provide this deterrent, including whether existing plans to replace Trident should be maintained, or Trident extended, or a new deterrent pursued.

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Copyright © IHS (Global) Limited, 2009

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