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John Healey told MPs: ‘Britain’s challenge now is the transformation and the rearmament of our armed forces.’ Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images View image in fullscreen John Healey told MPs: ‘Britain’s challenge now is the transformation and the rearmament of our armed forces.’ Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images Trio of senior defence figures accuse Starmer of underfunding military PM hit by three-pronged attack from ex-defence secretary, former defence minister and chief of defence staff UK politics live – latest updates Keir Starmer is leaving British troops underfunded and unable to carry out the operations he expects from them, according to scathing remarks delivered in parliament on Tuesday by three senior defence figures. The prime minister came under fire in separate interventions from his former defence secretary John Healey , the former defence minister Al Carns and the country’s current senior military officer, Rich Knighton. All three accused Starmer of underfunding the military amid a bitter row over the defence investment plan (Dip), which has renewed concerns among Labour MPs about the direction of the government. Healey and Carns both gave their Commons resignation speeches just days after quitting the government in protest at the Dip, which is expected to provide an additional £13.5bn to the Ministry of Defence (MoD) over four years. Healey told the Commons: “I took the decision to resign with the very greatest regret and reluctance. I continue to be certain about this decision. In time, I believe it will be seen as necessary in securing the future of our armed forces and of our alliances.” In comments that highlighted concerns in the Labour party about Starmer’s reluctance to embrace radical policy options, he added: “This is not the moment for calibration or incremental change. “This means bigger politics, bolder priorities, harder choices, and Britain’s challenge now is the transformation and the rearmament of our armed forces.” Talking about how much the country spends on defence as a share of GDP, he said: “I see the current defence investment plans falling well short of what is required – a rise of 0.08% from next year to 2030, no date for reaching 3%, no path to 3.5% by 2030.” Many of Healey’s comments were echoed by Carns, who quit hours after the defence secretary’s resignation on Thursday. “The reality is, we are spending too much time preparing for last year’s war, not tomorrow’s, and I urge the house to push for transformation, push hard, and push for delivery this side of 2030,” Carns said. Speaking earlier to parliament’s defence select committee, Knighton, the chief of the defence staff, said Britain would have to “dial back” on military operations in the next few years if the MoD did not get more than what was being offered. “We’ll have to dial back our activities; our exercise, operational activity, if the level of resource funding that is available to us does not increase,” he said, in effect referring to mi

Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
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Whats the real cost of underfunding our defence? Our service members deserve better than political posturing.

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This is exactly why we need bold leadership - investing in our defence isnt about politics, its about protecting our future. Hopeful optimism for real change.

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John Healeys warning about transformation and rearmament sounds like familiar defence rhetoric. If Starmer truly wants to protect our future, he should stop treating military funding like a political football and actually deliver the resources our forces need. (137 characters)