Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : Immediate action to overhaul HMP Bedford [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Immediate action to overhaul HMP Bedford [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 15 December 2023.

    Extra staff have been deployed to HMP Bedford to reduce violence and self-harm as part of a package of urgent measures to improve conditions at the prison.

    • extra staff deployed to improve safety
    • new dedicated Violence Reduction and Safety senior leaders appointed
    • completion of new Segregation Unit by spring 2024

    The changes follow on from a critical review by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP) in November which identified serious concerns resulting in an Urgent Notification.

    As part of the Urgent Notification process Ministers have 28 days to respond to the notice and set out the immediate actions needed to bring about long-term change.

    Two senior leaders have been brought in solely to help deal with the complex causes of violence and self-harm at the prison. They will use their extensive experience to help staff tackle these issues and mandatory drug testing will also be reintroduced to cut drug-related violence.

    Improvements to living conditions are already underway with more cleanliness and pest control checks and a new Segregation Unit is being constructed to open in Spring 2024.

    Prisons Minister Edward Argar said:

    I was deeply concerned about the Inspectorate’s findings at HMP Bedford and the actions I am setting out today will address the issues highlighted by the Chief Inspector.

    The experienced staff we have brought in will help reduce violence and improve safety, following the improvements to the prison’s living conditions we’ve already made.

    Other areas where immediate action is being taken include:

    • Recruiting two new Diversity and Inclusion Leads to ensure prisoners can raise concerns over accusations of racism and that they are addressed immediately.
    • A weekly Use of Force scrutiny review panel has begun and reviews all incidents where force is used against prisoners.
    • An independent review of prisoner induction will be carried out to ensure all prisoners receive a full induction that meets their needs on arrival.
    • To improve access to purposeful activity the prison’s education provider will deliver maths and English teaching to 50% more prisoners from April 2024.

    The government introduced the Urgent Notification process in 2017 to ensure immediate, urgent action was taken when necessary to address serious concerns identified by inspectors.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Over 434,000 people have arrived in South Sudan since the outbreak of the Sudanese conflict – UK statement at the UN Security Council [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Over 434,000 people have arrived in South Sudan since the outbreak of the Sudanese conflict – UK statement at the UN Security Council [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 December 2023.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UN Security Council meeting on Sudan and South Sudan.

    Thank you President. I thank SRSG Haysom and Ambassador Biang for their updates, and I welcome the presence of South Sudan at this meeting.

    President, as we’ve just heard, South Sudan is due to hold elections in just 12 months. Yet few of the basic building blocks for a credible process are in place.

    The United Kingdom welcomes the passing of the Elections Act, and the reconstitution of the Electoral and Political Parties Commissions. Such laws, however, need to be implemented and the institutions they create well resourced. This requires genuine political will.

    There are fundamental questions for South Sudan to urgently address including on how the South Sudanese casts their votes and how many levels of government they are voting for.

    For elections to be free and fair, we urge the South Sudanese authorities to ensure the necessary political and civic space so political parties, civil society and voters can freely express views without fear of reprisal.

    The South Sudanese population should feel safe during and after elections.  We call on South Sudan to finalise the deployment of a single, unified national army and to ensure they are adequately paid and provided for.

    As we’ve heard, the fighting in Sudan is having a severe impact on South Sudan. Over 434,000 people have now arrived since the outbreak of conflict.

    The UK recognises the South Sudanese Government’s provision of transportation to refugees, and the important work of the UN system and humanitarian partners in their response to the crisis.

    We repeat our call on the government to create a more enabling environment for humanitarian action, and ensure the safety of aid workers.

    President, in closing, we call upon the Government to demonstrate its willingness to put aside individual ambitions and differences. Without this, a credible, safe, and inclusive process next year will not be possible.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government delivers on promise to ban keeping of primates [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government delivers on promise to ban keeping of primates [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 14 December 2023.

    New legislation on primates as pets introduced today.

    • Under changes, only private keepers who can provide the highest welfare standards will be able to keep primates
    • Legislation fulfils a manifesto commitment and Action Plan for Animal Welfare pledge
    • Move will improve the welfare of up to 5,000 primates kept as pets in the UK

    Keeping primates as pets will be banned under new legislation introduced by the Government today (14 December), improving the welfare of thousands of animals.

    The legislation brings in a licensing scheme setting strict rules to ensure that only private keepers who can provide the highest welfare standards will be able to keep primates.

    It is estimated that up to 5,000 primates are kept as pets in the UK. These wild animals have complex welfare and social needs and, according to most experts, cannot be properly cared for in a domestic setting.

    Under the changes, introduced via secondary legislation under the Animal Welfare Act 2006, it will no longer be possible to keep primates in domestic settings as household pets in environments that fail to provide for their needs.

    Licensing is expected to come into force in 2026, subject to parliamentary processes, with existing keepers having two years from the SI being approved to reach compliance with the licensing conditions.

    The new laws deliver on a manifesto commitment and builds on the recent primate consultation. It is already an offence to keep a primate while not providing for their welfare needs, or to cause them unnecessary suffering. Today’s announcement tightens these rules further – and all private primate keepers will be required to hold a licence, issued by their local authority. Failure to comply with the law could result in an unlimited fine or removal of the primate.

    Primates are highly intelligent and require open spaces, varied diets, social contact and stimulation.

    Animal Welfare Minister Douglas-Miller said:

    “Primates are intelligent and curious animals and we’re delivering on our pledge to ban the keeping of these inquisitive creatures as pets.

    “It is already an offence under the Animal Welfare Act to keep a primate while not providing for their welfare needs or to cause them unnecessary suffering, and these plans will tighten the rules further.

    “We have consistently led the world in raising the bar for animal welfare standards and this legislation is yet another step.”

    Licences will be valid for a maximum of three years, with at least one inspection per licensing period. Licence holders must undergo re-assessment to renew their permission to keep these animals.

    Guidance will be provided to local authorities on how to measure the new standards at inspection to ensure the highest level of welfare is being maintained.

    Dr Ros Clubb, head of the RSPCA’s Wildlife Department said:

    “We warmly welcome this UK Government commitment to end the keeping of primates as pets.

    “The RSPCA has been calling for a complete ban on the keeping and trade of primates as pets for many years as these animals are intelligent, sentient and highly social – with complex needs that simply cannot be met in a domestic environment.

    “Our inspectors and rescuers regularly see primates that have been kept as pets with behaviour problems and very poor health, especially Metabolic Bone Disease (rickets in humans), as a result of totally inappropriate care. We hope this will put an end to the shocking situations we have seen – with monkeys cooped up in bird cages, fed fast food, sugary drinks or even Class A drugs, deprived of companions of their own kind, living in dirt and squalor and suffering from disease.

    “We look forward to working with the UK Government to ensure that the proposed licensing system can be adequately enforced, and will be robust enough to effectively protect the welfare of primates that remain with private keepers until the end of their natural lives.”

    The UK was the first country in the world to introduce animal cruelty offences and are the highest ranked G7 nation according to World Animal Protection’s Index.  Our flagship Action Plan for Animal Welfare committed us to going even further to protect animals, including banning primates as pets and banning the export of live animals .

    The Animal Welfare (Livestock Exports) Bill – which is only possible now we have left the European Union – which was introduced in Parliament last week and will put an end to the export of live animals for slaughter and fattening from Great Britain, stopping animals enduring unnecessary stress, exhaustion and injury on long journeys.

    Since publishing the Action Plan for Animal Welfare in 2021, we have brought in new laws to recognise animals sentience introduced tougher penalties for animal cruelty offences; extended the ivory ban to cover other ivory bearing species; and supported legislation to ban glue traps, the import of detached shark fins and measures to ban the advertising and offering for sale of low welfare activities abroad.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The first UK-EU Cyber Dialogue takes place in Brussels [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The first UK-EU Cyber Dialogue takes place in Brussels [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 December 2023.

    The inaugural UK-EU Cyber Dialogue took place in Brussels on 14 December 2023, the first one held under the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement.

    On 14 December 2023, the inaugural UK-EU Cyber Dialogue took place in Brussels. It was the first dialogue held under the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement. The Cyber Dialogue was a welcome opportunity for the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom (UK) to discuss a wide range of cyber issues including international security, emerging technologies, internet governance, cybersecurity, cyber defence and cybercrime.

    Officials exchanged views on policies for secure technology, digital identity and cyber resilience, as well as deterrence strategies against cyber threats, cyber sanctions, and capacity building. The 2 sides also spoke about global cyber governance, responsible behaviour in cyberspace, and international cooperation in multilateral fora including the United Nations’ Programme of Action to Advance Responsible State Behaviour in Cyberspace and Cybercrime Treaty negotiations and agreed to continue their exchanges.

    The UK delegation was co-chaired by Will Middleton, Cyber Director in the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), and Andrew Elliot, Deputy Director for Cyber Security, in the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT). Officials from the Home Office, DSIT, FCDO and the UK Mission to the European Union also participated. On the EU side, which also included observers from EU member states, the Dialogue was co-chaired by Joanneke Balfoort, Director for Security and Defence Policy, of the European External Action Service (EEAS) and Lorena Biox Alonso, Director for Digital Society, Trust and Cybersecurity of the European Commission’s Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology (DG Connect).

    Both sides agreed to hold the next UK-EU Cyber Dialogue in London in 2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Review to increase fairness in the fresh produce supply chain [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Review to increase fairness in the fresh produce supply chain [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 14 December 2023.

    The Review delivers on a key commitment made at the Farm to Fork Summit and will support farmers and growers to receive a fair price for their products.

    A review to improve fairness in the fresh produce supply chain was launched by the Government today (14 December), supporting British farmers and growers to receive a fair price for their products and ensuring customers have access to high-quality fresh British products.

    The Fresh Produce Supply Chain Review delivers on a key commitment made by the Prime Minister at the Farm to Fork Summit in May and will seek the views of industry on issues including the fairness of contracts between producers and purchasers in the sector, and how supply chain data can be used to support transparency in the negotiation process.

    The horticulture industry is a vital part of the UK’s food supply chain, contributing £3.3 billion to the British economy in 2022 and growing more than 3 million tonnes of over 300 different fruit and vegetable crops domestically.

    Production of fruit and vegetables often occurs in rural areas and provides valuable income and jobs to these rural communities. Supporting the growth of this sector is a key component of the Prime Minister’s priority of growing the economy.

    The sector has faced a number of challenges in recent years including increased energy, fuel and labour costs which have raised concerns about the fairness of the UK supply chain.

    Today’s review is the first step in addressing these concerns, providing support for fruit and vegetable growers across the UK and helping meet the government’s target to keep producing 60% of the food we consume here in the UK.

    It builds upon a series of reviews that have taken place, or are currently underway, to improve fairness in the pork, dairy and egg supply chains.

    Environment Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    I’m committed to backing British farmers and growers, and it’s only right that producers should be paid a fair price.

    This review will help ensure that is the case, as well as delivering on our commitments from the Farm to Fork Summit to provide greater stability and resilience for the fresh produce sector.

    The review will gather evidence about how contractual arrangements in the fresh produce sector currently function, whether there is a need for further legislation to oversee the relationship between producers and purchasers, and whether the supply chain can be made more transparent.

    This is an open consultation, meaning that responses from all stakeholders with a link to the fresh produce sector will be welcomed. The review will open today (14 December) and will run for 10 weeks until 22 February.

    Today’s announcement builds on a number of actions the Government has delivered since the Farm to Fork Summit in May. This includes investing £168 million in grants and competitions this year alone to support farmers foster innovation, boost productivity and improve animal welfare; boosting food and drink exports by hiring five new agricultural attaches to tackle barriers to markets; and backing industry-led action to support customers to “Buy British” when shopping online.

    We have also announced that 45,000 visas will be available in both 2023 and 2024 to support the horticulture sector and will be providing financial support to the Controlled Environment Horticulture (CEH) by opening access to the Phase 3 Industrial Energy Transformation (IETF) Fund launching in January 2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : It is right to remain focused on Russia’s unprovoked, full-scale and illegal invasion of Ukraine – UK Statement to the OSCE [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : It is right to remain focused on Russia’s unprovoked, full-scale and illegal invasion of Ukraine – UK Statement to the OSCE [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 December 2023.

    Ambassador Neil Holland thanks Canada for chairing the Forum for Security Cooperation professionally, despite Russia’s unacceptable behaviour.

    Thank you, Madam Chair. Thank you for your professional and dignified stewardship of this Forum over the past trimester.  Thank you to you and your team for ensuring that this Forum has remained relevant and able to fulfil its mandate – which is particularly important during these difficult times.

    You have been right to keep this Forum focused on Russia’s unprovoked, full-scale and illegal invasion of Ukraine.  An invasion which challenges the foundations of European security.  Which violates the UN Charter. And which flagrantly disregards the Helsinki Final Act’s core principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and the non-use of force.  Under your leadership, we have shown that these principles and this Forum continue to matter.  And that we will keep on defending both.

    Madam Chair, the Security Dialogues this trimester focused different thematic lenses on Ukraine. On issues including Mine Action; International Humanitarian Law; and Women, Peace, and Security. It is essential that we continue to champion women’s full, equal, meaningful, and safe participation in political and peace processes. You also tabled, for the first time, timely FSC discussions on Mental Health and Information Integrity. Our discussions demonstrated why these are particularly pressing in light of Russia’s war.

    Since 24 February last year, we have seen the extraordinary determination of the Ukrainian people as they have defended their homeland. And we have seen a frustrated Russian military unleash unconscionable amounts of violence on civilians and critical national infrastructure. Despite the disinformation perpetrated by our Russian colleagues, it is clear to all that Putin made a grave miscalculation when he chose to invade a sovereign neighbour. Russia thinks it can wait this war out, and that the West will eventually turn its attention elsewhere. This could not be further from the truth.

    Sadly, Russia’s destructive behaviour in Ukraine has been mirrored in the OSCE. We condemn Russia’s ongoing disregard for the Euro-Atlantic security architecture and the principles of arms control. Including through its formal withdrawal from the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe. The Russian delegation blocked consensus on holding formal FSC Security Dialogues on International Humanitarian Law and Information Integrity. And most absurdly, it also blocked a discussion only on General Statements – another unwelcome first for the OSCE. The behaviour of the Russian delegation in this Forum – which I note has once again left the room today – has too-often breached diplomatic norms. And the Russian delegation can throw up as much chaff as they like about the work of the FSC and other countries interactions with this forum. But there is one simple fact that lies behind any dysfunction in the FSC. And that is that one participating State, Russia, has invaded another and in doing so trampled over the principles of this organisation. Everything is subordinate to and derivative from that act of brutality. Thank you again, Madam Chair, for standing up to unacceptable behaviour.

    I wish to conclude by thanking Bulgaria as it leaves the FSC Troika, and to welcome Croatia. As the incoming Chair, Cyprus can count on the UK’s full, continued support next trimester. As can Ukraine – which will remain at the forefront of our minds over the winter and into next year. The UK and our partners will continue to support Ukraine and its people for as long as it takes for them to achieve victory. Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Digital Trustee appointed to the Imperial War Museum [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Digital Trustee appointed to the Imperial War Museum [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport on 14 December 2023.

    The Prime Minister has appointed Rachel Smith as Digital Trustee of the Imperial War Museum for a term of 4 years.

    Rachel Smith

    Appointed for a four year term commencing 1 November 2023.

    Rachel is UK & Middle East Managing Director at SQLI Digital Experience, a digital and commerce agency, part of SQLI Group; she advises on digital, customer experience and transformation strategies. Rachel has a breadth of digital & tech expertise across multiple sectors, with a record of delivering growth, decreasing operational costs, and improving financial bottom line.

    An expert at cross functional advisory, building effective teams and stakeholder engagement in multiple geographies, Rachel is known for her ability to combine multiple lenses (business, experience & tech) to drive solutions and growth. Prior to 2010, she has experience in the museums and cultural sector in digital, marketing, fundraising and communications.

    Rachel was an advisory board member of Youth Dance England (now One Dance UK).

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    Trustees of the Imperial War Museum are not remunerated. This appointment has been made in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Rachel Smith has not declared any significant political activity.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Russia’s war of choice has resulted in unacceptable Ukrainian civilian deaths – UK statement to the OSCE [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Russia’s war of choice has resulted in unacceptable Ukrainian civilian deaths – UK statement to the OSCE [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 December 2023.

    Ambassador Neil Holland notes Russia’s continued, remorseless war of aggression against Ukraine and emphasises the UK’s unwavering support for Ukraine.

    Thank you, Mr Chair. As we look forward to the end of 2023 and the holiday season, the people of Ukraine are marking over 650 days since Russia’s illegal full-scale invasion.

    During this year, Ukraine’s critical national infrastructure has been attacked remorselessly by Russia, resulting in unacceptable civilian deaths and injuries. The UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) figures show over 27,000 civilian casualties since the invasion: 9,701 killed and 17,748 injured. In addition, reports detail countless horrific human rights violations, including conflict related sexual violence against women and girls, not to mention against civilian detainees and prisoners of war, including a rise in cases against males.

    And this is not just a violation of human rights on a massive scale. Russia’s aggression has had a wide impact across all three dimensions, as we will no doubt hear shortly from the three Chairs.

    The destruction of the Kakhovka dam was an environmental catastrophe. And the damage has not been restricted to just Ukraine: Russia’s war of choice has had severe environmental impacts that stretch beyond Ukraine’s sovereign borders, affecting other participating States in the OSCE region. Furthermore, Russia’s withdrawal from Black Sea Grain Initiative has impacted the global stability of food supply.

    The UK has been, and is proud to support Ukraine, through the OSCE, bilaterally and through other multilateral channels:

    • This year the Ukraine Recovery Conference raised more than $60 billion for reconstruction and post-conflict recovery. We look forward to Germany’s 2024 conference.
    • The UK has contributed £4.1 billion in fiscal support for Ukraine, and over £640 million in bilateral assistance. The UK’s total military, humanitarian and economic support for Ukraine now amounts to £9.3 billion. We know we are in good company, with friends and allies around this table also giving significant support.
    • We have also moved quickly to ensure that those who have fled persecution in Ukraine can find safety in the UK through the Ukraine Family Scheme and Homes for Ukraine – with 247,000 visas now issued in total in the UK

    And we  continue to hold Russia to account in the OSCE for its actions:

    • Every week, we come to this forum to state for the record our condemnation of Russia’s actions and counter misinformation.  And we were glad that the Ministerial Council showed that a vast majority of us condemn Russia’s actions.
    • This year’s Moscow Mechanism Report – the third concerning Russian actions since February 2022 – on the deportation or transfer of children, further exposed the harrowing experience of Ukrainian children and families, at the hands of Russian leadership.
    • And while we regret that the full-scale conferences were not able to take place, the Chair’s ASRC in the summer and the Warsaw Human Dimension Conference in October enabled us to discuss accountability in the first and third dimensions.  Overcoming Russian obstruction across the OSCE agenda has been a significant achievement and we thank the CiO in particular for making this possible.

    Mr Chair, this has been another year of brutality endured by our friends in Ukraine. And we have not forgotten our colleagues, the three OSCE staff members of the Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) who have been detained by Russia for over 500 days. The UK again calls for their immediate release. There is absolutely no justification for their detention.

    We condemn Russia’s ongoing aggression. We call on Russia to withdraw their troops from Ukraine and stop the killing.  And we pledge that in 2024 the UK will be there again, alongside Ukraine with moral and substantial support for as long as it takes.  The UK’s support for you will not falter.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Presentations by OSCE Committee chairs: UK response [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Presentations by OSCE Committee chairs: UK response [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 December 2023.

    Ambassador Neil Holland thanks the three OSCE Committee chairs for their focus on Russia’s unprovoked and illegal invasion of Ukraine this year.

    Thank you to the Chairs of the three Committees for presenting to the Permanent Council today. Irina, Florian, Anne-Marie and of course Stelian, we have been grateful to you and to our Chair-in-Office for your strong leadership over the past year. We are also grateful to your dedicated teams. Russia’s unprovoked and illegal invasion of Ukraine has struck at the very core of the obligations we have all freely signed up to as members of this organisation. Under your stewardship, and guided by our CiO, OSCE Committees have been determined to uphold collectively these principles because they form the foundation of the security of every State represented in this room.

    Irina, we have seen in the Security Committee that the repercussions of conflict are wide-ranging and relevant to our work on transnational threats. We supported your approach to a flexible workplan to respond to the live context, and appreciated your inclusion of topics we have not covered before. Our meetings this year have highlighted how organised crime actors systematically exploit conflict-affected areas for their own ends. We heard how Ukrainian police turned from non-combatants to standing together with the armed forces defending Mariupol, clearing Bucha and liberating Kherson. We heard how Ukraine and other countries work to counter Russian cyber-attacks and disinformation campaigns. We saw how the OSCE Heritage Crime Task Force is working to tackle the risk of Ukraine’s cultural heritage being looted and trafficked. And our meeting on border management showed not just the challenges dealt with by the State Border Guard of Ukraine and neighbouring countries, but also how the situation in Afghanistan is leading to spill-over threats into Central Asia – and further into Europe.

    Florian, thank you for your work this year. We welcome your efforts to keep Russia’s war and the incredible damage it is wreaking on the Ukrainian economy and environment on the agenda. It was right that we discussed pertinent issues such as food security and energy infrastructure – two issues terribly affected by Russia’s war. And we supported your decision to hold a special session on the Kakhovka dam – a truly catastrophic event, caused by Russia’s war, the effects of which will be felt for generations to come.

    Anne-Marie, thank you for your adept and professional leadership of the Human Dimension Committee.  As Russia’s full-scale invasion illustrated so starkly, when fundamental freedoms are violated, our collective security is put in jeopardy.  And as Moscow Mechanism reports clearly show, internal repression enables external aggression. We have particularly appreciated the Committee’s focus on the consequences of Russia’s invasion as well as your consistent inclusion of strong voices from civil society across the OSCE.  At a time when some participating States seek to challenge the OSCE’s principles and commitments on human rights and democracy, we thank you for your resolute stance in defence of the OSCE’s vital work to safeguard fundamental freedoms.

    My Foreign Secretary said at the Ministerial Council, “the UK is clear in our support for the OSCE”. Our shared OSCE principles and commitments sit at the heart of Euro-Atlantic security, and we will continue to work in the three Committees, with our Maltese CiO, and with the Secretariat, institutions, and field missions – to uphold them. Not just for Ukraine, but for all of us in this room.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Sir Tony Radakin RUSI Lecture [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Sir Tony Radakin RUSI Lecture [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 14 December 2023.

    Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Sir Tony Radakin gave his annual RUSI Lecture on 13 December 2023.

    Last year I spoke of an extraordinarily dangerous moment, with the return of war in Europe alongside unfolding great power competition in the Indo-Pacific.

    And here we are again: at the end of another year and another set of equally profound developments.  Some are startling and horrific, like the barbaric attacks in Israel; others so frustratingly familiar that the world barely stops to notice.  This summer’s coup in Niger – the ninth in Africa since the turn of the decade – is an obvious case in point.

    As the year draws to a close, the security outlook feels even more dangerous than was the case 12 months ago. And that’s coming from me – someone known for their optimism…

    People often ask me what keeps me awake at night.  The honest answer is that I sleep well.  Mostly because I am tired.  And because I’m blessed with a supportive family.  And I also sleep well because of the Armed Forces, the Civil Service and our Intelligence Agencies who always seem to pull out the stops when required.  Our evacuation from Sudan in the spring – the largest of any Western nation – reminds us of what we can achieve at scale, at reach, and at speed.

    But how well I sleep might not be an accurate barometer to assess the defence and security of the nation…

    I think most people now recognise that we’ve entered an era of renewed great power and state on state competition, and that was the theme of my first lecture to RUSI two years ago.

    But I’m less sure we’ve really assimilated the scale or the volatility or the pace of the security challenges we’ve seen over the past couple of years and what this means for the future.

    So tonight, I’d like to set the scene by offering three perspectives.

    First, continued recognition of this turning point in global security, in which the war in Ukraine and the conflict in Gaza both have the potential to further destabilise an already febrile and agitated world, but are part of a broader backdrop.

    Second is to say that we are responding.  We are witnessing the return of statecraft and the staples of alliances, technology and investment to manage these dangers.  The increasing trajectory of defence spending in this country, the collective strength of NATO, our network of international partners, and the technological transformation of the Armed Forces, all offer much to reassure.

    But is it enough?  For the final part of my speech, I want to consider how we calibrate ourselves to meet the demands of an openly contested and volatile world; not just for the next 5 years but over the next one or two decades.

    Let me start with a few words about October’s cruel attacks by Hamas and after visiting Israel last week with the Defence Secretary.

    Those of us watching on in horror cannot underestimate the sense within Israel that this is an existential threat.  Or the vulnerability felt by Jewish people worldwide, including here in the United Kingdom.

    The Government has been clear in its view that Israel is entitled to bring the perpetrators of such hideous acts to justice, and to defeat the threat posed by Hamas.

    Inevitably fighting in such densely packed urban areas risks causing immense harm to civilians, which is why we have urged restraint and we continue to work with our partners in the region to identify options to deliver aid.

    The attacks of October 7 have served to heighten the simmering tensions and dire conditions in Gaza. Tensions which resonate so strongly on the Arab street and risk inflaming an arc of instability stretching from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Gulf of Oman.

    That is why the UK deployed air and naval assets to the region: to be ready for contingencies, contribute to relief operations, and to safeguard wider regional stability.

    The level of uncertainty and degree of potential volatility for the whole of the Middle East is worrying.  We assess Iran doesn’t want a direct war.  And the presence of two US carrier strike groups sent an unmistakable message to Tehran.  But Iran is comfortable with the way events have unfolded.  The dilemmas for Israel.  The threat posed by Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis.  Militia groups exploiting this crisis to challenge America’s role in the region. Hence the multiple attacks on international shipping in the southern Red Sea, and over 80 attacks on US and coalition forces in Iraq and Syria.

    America has shown commendable restraint.  But there are multiple scenarios in which this crisis could escalate.  Our Gulf partners are nervous.  They point to a perceived lack of engagement more generally by the West and more specifically in the two-state solution over many years.

    All of this is sufficiently serious to warrant the attention of responsible nations everywhere.  But the instability that flowed from October 7 does not occur in isolation.  The backdrop includes a broader challenge to the world order.

    It occurs alongside rising tension in the Western Balkans.  Increased confrontation in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea.  Ever more bellicose rhetoric from Pyongyang.  Continued instability in Africa.  The re-emergence of long running territorial disputes, most recently between Venezuela and Guyana.

    And then there is Russia’s continuing war in Ukraine.  After two years of bitter sacrifice, it should be clear to Putin that the Ukrainian people will never permit their country to return to Moscow’s orbit.

    And yet President Putin pushes on regardless of the continuing cost: to international stability, to Ukraine and to his own people.

    Yes, Ukraine’s counter-offensive gained less ground than was hoped.  Russian defences proved stronger than expected.  And Ukraine is fighting with a citizen Army.  Men in their 30s and 40s with families back home.  Ukraine is cautious with their lives.  We would be too.  And it speaks volumes about the contrasting approaches of Russian and Ukrainian leaders.

    But territory is not the only measure of how this war progresses.  And talk of ‘stalemate’ or the advantages to Russia of settling for a long war are far too superficial.  Not enough is made of Russia’s predicament.  Not enough is made of Ukraine’s success.  And Putin is no grand master of strategy.

    He sought to weaponize Russia’s energy exports.  But European countries responded by reducing their dependence.

    He sought to withhold global food supplies.  But the world responded with the Black Sea Grain Initiative.

    He sought to coerce the West with reckless nuclear threats.  But that elicited global condemnation, including from  China, India and Saudi Arabia.

    And now he’s wanted by the International Criminal Court.  He’s suffered the shock and humiliation of an attempted coup.  Crimea is no longer safe.  The Black Sea Fleet has scattered. He has to keep 400 thousand troops in Ukraine to hold on to what he has taken.  And he cannot order a general mobilisation – at least not ahead of next year’s election – for fear of how his own people will respond.  Abroad he is a Potemkin-like figure, unable to rely on international support because Russia has few real friends in the world.

    Increasingly he resembles a prisoner of his own making.  But, if his first catastrophic mistake was invading Ukraine, he is now making his second calamitous blunder – the Russian economy is being twisted even more out of shape.  Nearly 40% of all Russian public expenditure is being spent on defence.  That is more than the aggregate of health and education.  And the last time we saw these levels was at the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    This is disastrous for Russia and its people.  And it is in contrast to President Zelensky who speaks of a ‘new’ Ukraine: a country fit for its heroes.  A country on the path to NATO and EU membership.  A country that represents everything that Russia is not: confident, dynamic, democratic, innovative, and open to the world.  A country that is respected and embraced by the community of nations.  A country with a future.

    This leads me to my second point: the return of statecraft, as countries shift and align in support of common interests across the world and seek to use all the instruments of power.

    Witness how the United States, and others, are seeking to engage India to counterbalance China; or how President Biden hosted the leaders of Japan and South Korea at Camp David.

    Or consider how European nations were willing to commit some 500 billion euros to subsidise their citizens through last winter’s energy crisis, weening themselves from Russian gas and thus denying Putin the leverage he sought.

    The UK is also re-learning the art of statecraft. This includes: the Hiroshima Accord with Japan, the Downing Street Accord with South Korea, the Atlantic Declaration with the US, the extension of security guarantees to Sweden and Finland on their journey to NATO; our leadership of the Joint Expeditionary Force; and the hosting of the AI Summit at Bletchley Park.

    Russia’s aggression continues to provoke an extraordinary response.

    Across Europe defence spending is up.  In 2022 the figure reached nearly £280 billion, 30% higher than it was a decade ago.  Finland is up 36%, Sweden 12%, Poland 11%.

    And NATO is stronger.  This year’s summit in Vilnius saw the biggest transformation of NATO’s readiness since the Cold War.  And the UK is right at the heart of this: offering 25% of NATO’s maritime forces and more than 10% of land and air.

    When we stand with NATO we draw on the economic, diplomatic, demographic, as well as industrial and technological heft of 31 nations, soon to become 32.  Our combined GDP becomes 20 times greater than Russia’s.  Our regular armed forces of 140,000 becomes part of a force of 3 million men and women, and with even greater numbers in reserve. It is absurd to entertain the notion that Russia is in anyway a match for NATO. If we stick together, and stick with it, Russia will lose and Ukraine will prevail.

    And if we step back, what we see in each of these examples is a community of nations that is confident using its collective strengths to buttress global security.  This is how we should respond to a more contested world.

    And if we zoom in on the military instrument, we see a British Armed Forces becoming even more lethal and effective, relative to both Russia and to the wider threats we face.

    A £40 billion land investment programme means we can reorientate the Army to the challenges of state-on-state competition.  With 80% of the deployable force now aligned to NATO, 16,000 troops deploying to Europe next year. Ajax and Boxer are entering service. 1300 armoured vehicles are on contract. Upgrades to Apache are underway.  The contract for the Archer medium range artillery system was signed and sealed within two months.  We have plans for substantial investment in Long Range Precision Fires, Ground Based Air Defence and Electronic Warfare.

    The Royal Air Force is transforming from a fourth-generation to a fifth-generation air force; and is reaching and leading us all into space. With the arrival of A400M, it now has greater lift capacity than at any time since the Second World War; and the combination of P8 Poseidon, E7 Wedgetail and Protector offers a 30% increase in ISTAR airframes.

    The Royal Navy is a carrier Navy once again, with both HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales at sea this autumn.  The Royal Marines are coming back to their Commando roots, globally deployed and ready to respond.  There are 22 ships and submarines on order or under construction; the past year saw our new Seabed Warfare Vessel enter service, alongside the first support ship for uncrewed mine hunting systems.  With more to follow.

    And binding this together is Strategic Command: the custodian of the Crown Jewels of Defence: intelligence, cyber, special forces and our network of overseas experts and bases; generating the concepts and doctrines that underpin how we think and fight; and overseeing the biggest transformation of all. Moving from standalone operations to enduring campaigns.  From three domains to five.  And from forces that are merely joint to forces that are integrated.

    We’re also bringing in better support for our people.  Wrap Around Childcare.  Extending Forces Help to Buy.  A better than expected pay settlement for the Armed Forces.  Zero tolerance for unacceptable behaviours.

    In all these areas – people, operations, equipment – we have achieved much over the past year, and through the Defence Command Paper Refresh we have a plan to do even more over the coming years.

    But this brings me to my third and final theme – is it all enough?

    These are extraordinarily dangerous times. We are responding by playing our part to uphold and strengthen the global system, and by the commitment and professionalism of our people.

    But it is not just the hideous violence or the competition over territory that should worry us.

    It is also the backdrop of ideological struggles and creaking pains of tense democracies which are putting the international system under intense strain.

    And what is particularly concerning is the slow dismantling of the security architecture that has been with us since the fall of the Berlin Wall.  It is a backdrop that my generation may have taken for granted.  But it is collapsing.

    This year Russia withdrew from or suspended the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty and the last remaining nuclear arms control treaty between Russia and the United States, known as New START.

    And Russia’s aggression towards Ukraine has resulted in expulsion from the Council of Europe; withdrawal from the Barents Sea Council and the suspension of cooperation with the Arctic Council.

    And then if we head east, the corresponding frameworks that might govern great power competition in the Indo-Pacific are absent altogether.

    When you take the emerging great power competition, and the absent or decaying security architectures and add to that… the pace of technological change… the advent of AI…the impact of climate change…competition for natural resources, migration, health insecurity… as well as deep seated regional inequalities…

    …This all represents a profound challenge to global stability, to our physical and economic security, and to our way of life.

    It is 77 years since the American diplomat George Kennan wrote his famous Long Telegram from Moscow. He warned of the expansionist threat posed by the Soviet Union and advocated the policy of containment.  But it took years before the institutions and frameworks were in place to make that policy a success.

    It feels like we’re in a similar place.  Our diagnosis – like Kennan’s – is the correct one.  The era of state-on-state competition has returned and will remain with us for decades to come.

    We’re spending more on Defence.  We’re transforming the Armed Forces.  We’re becoming more integrated.  But is the machinery and thinking deep within the British state truly calibrated to the scale of what is unfolding? In short: Does it all stack up?  The resilience of our nation, and the ability to draw deep on our defence industry or our reserves?  The ability of our extraordinary intelligence agencies to encompass the vast range of new and global threats?

    These are big questions.  And to be clear this is not a discussion about the next spending review.

    All the Chiefs are conscious that we are the custodians of huge sums of public money.  And in the here-and-now, our task is to offer maximum return on the investment we currently receive; indeed – ministers and politicians rightly demand more from us.

    And we should recognise the enormity already of the Government’s defence investment programme and its ambition for the next decade.

    A decade which will see us recapitalise the Army. Put right infrastructure that has been neglected and better support our people.

    A decade in which we will respond to the lessons from Ukraine and consider whether we need Integrated Air and Missile Defence for the UK.

    A decade which will see us develop a 6th generation fighter as part of an alliance which spans Europe and Asia. Developing a new nuclear submarine with Australia and America; and follow on AUKUS projects spanning cyber, artificial intelligence, electronic warfare, quantum technology and hypersonics.

    And then there is the biggest undertaking of all – the renewal of our nuclear deterrent, which includes a new warhead and a new generation of ballistic missile submarines.

    It represents the next chapter in Britain’s nuclear story – a story that began with Clement Attlee and the transformative post war years; that found expression in the Cold War partnerships of Reagan and Thatcher, and in the concept of peace through strength that was so fundamental to the triumph of democratic freedoms and the fall of communism.

    We should be proud to be a responsible nuclear power. And I want to publicly recognise the commitment of those who are ready to spend months at a stretch in a steel tube somewhere in the Atlantic, with no means to communicate with their loved ones back home.

    That is a very human example of what it means to provide the Prime Minister and the Nation with the assurance that we have the ability to respond to the most existential of threats.

    But binding all of these commitments and programmes together is even more than people or money.

    It’s about strategic literacy. It’s about sharper statecraft. It’s about trade and technology. It’s about the strength and resilience of our industrial base and winning the war for talent. It’s about the re-imagining of alliances, the need for new security architectures, and for modern institutions that are configured for the challenges of our time.

    Our Integrated Review and Defence Command Paper in 2021 was a first step. This year’s refreshed versions matured our thinking. But these documents are not an end in themselves. We must evolve, adapt and accelerate to match the challenges and opportunities as they emerge.

    In sum: A host of long simmering conflicts are coming to the boil. The world is responding.  We are on the right path. But when we think a little further ahead we need to check whether our collective response matches the urgency and gravity of the threats.