Eliot Wilson

Eliot Wilson

Eliot Wilson was a House of Commons clerk, including on the Defence Committee and Counter-Terrorism Sub-Committee. He is a writer and commentator, and contributing editor at Defence On The Brink.

Keir Starmer must raise defence spending higher and faster

Mark Rutte, the former prime minister of the Netherlands, has been secretary general of Nato for less than nine months. Rutte knew when he decided to seek the job that it would not be easy, but even the famously phlegmatic and unflappable Dutchman cannot have foreseen the intensity of events. Even so, he has stepped

Can Richard Knighton revamp Britainโ€™s armed forces?

With the Strategic Defence Review finally concluded and published, the government has reportedly chosen its candidate to implement the recommendations and changes. Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton, currently Chief of the Air Staff, will replace Admiral Sir Tony Radakin as Chief of the Defence Staff (CDS) and professional head of the armed forces later in the year.

What was the point of the Strategic Defence Review?

This weekend has not been a masterclass in political communications by the government. Selected morsels of the Strategic Defence Review were dropped over several days, concluding with an anodyne launch by the prime minister at BAE Systems in Govan. The result: the prime minister and the defence secretary contradicting each other on defence spending, a

Is Jonathan Powell unaccountable?

For the past three months there has been an exchange of bureaucratic fire across the 600 yards that separate the Cabinet Office from parliament. Matt Western, the Labour MP who chairs the Joint Committee on the National Security Strategy (JCNSS), is engaged in epistolary warfare with the dour-but-canny Pat McFadden, Chancellor of the Duchy of

There is nothing strategic about Starmerโ€™s defence review

This Strategic Defence Review has been a long time coming. Back when he was still shadow defence secretary, John Healey had promised a โ€˜strategic defence and security reviewโ€™ as far back as May 2022. The process was then launched eleven days after the Labour government took office last July. There had been reviews in 2010,

Is Britain spending 3 per cent on defence, or not?

Your starter for ten: what is the difference between an ambition, a promise, a certainty and a commitment? If you can work it out, send a postcard to 10 Downing Street, SW1A, and you may have clarified the governmentโ€™s plans on defence spending. Today, ten months after it was launched and following a weekend of

The problem with Trumpโ€™s Golden Dome project

Donald Trump did not get to where he is today by taking no for an answer. Mark Carney, the Prime Minister of Canada, could scarcely have been clearer when he visited the White House earlier this month that the Presidentโ€™s notion of Canada becoming Americaโ€™s 51st state was not even being entertained. โ€˜Canada is not

Could the EU sideline Britain in its defence loan scheme?

The Security and Defence Partnership which the government agreed with the European Union this week has had more spin applied to it than a thousand cricket balls. The central argument in its favour, apart from vacuous reiki-like attempts to change the โ€˜moodโ€™ of relations with the EU, was that it would allow the UK defence

Can Trump get Britain to up defence spending faster?

When Sir Keir Starmer was elected leader of the Labour party five years ago, it must have been a feat of imagination to picture himself as prime minister. It would surely have gone beyond his strangest fever dreams to think he would be dealing more or less weekly with defence policy. That he would be

Labourโ€™s defence review is anything but strategic

Fans of the classic British sitcom will feel a warm glow, as details of the forthcoming strategic defence review (SDR) were revealed this weekend. It leads with a proposal for a โ€˜home guardโ€™ of civilian volunteers to protect the UKโ€™s critical national infrastructure of power plants, airports, telecommunications networks and subsea connectors. Predictably, this cued

How to get Gen Z to fight for Britain

It is easy to despair of young people as self-absorbed, isolated from reality and unwilling to take on the hard tasks that previous generations had to face. I have done it myself, and I suspect humans have been doing it since Adam and Eve worried that Cain seemed to lack dedication and work ethic. It

What exactly is the point of Starmerโ€™s EU defence pact?

Sir Keir Starmerโ€™s cherished agreement on defence with the European Union seems to have been high on the diplomatic agenda for a very long time without ever quite reaching its top. The Labour partyโ€™s manifesto for last yearโ€™s general election promised an โ€˜ambitious new UK-EU security pact to strengthen cooperation on the threats we faceโ€™.

Should Canada join the Joint Expeditionary Force?

The narrow victory of Mark Carneyโ€™s Liberal party in last monthโ€™s federal elections in Canada was an extraordinary reversal of fortune. Before the former governor of the Bank of England became Canadaโ€™s 24th prime minister, the opposition Conservative party had regularly enjoyed double-digit leads in the opinion polls. Carney, by placing a defiant and punchy

Why Britain must prepare for war with Russia

Iโ€™m old enough to remember the last years of the Cold War. There were definite signs of a thaw by the time of my childhood โ€“ there were weary sighs when I wrote about the Reykjavรญk Summit for my prep school magazine โ€“ but the threat of genuine conflict still hovered over West and East,

Mike Waltzโ€™s fall from grace will change little

Oh what a circus, oh what a show. It began on Thursday morning, with stories circulating that the US national security advisor, Michael Waltz, was about to be dropped. This seemed to be confirmed when President Trump spoke at an event for the National Day of Prayer, and reeled off praise for his top team,

Trump should be allowed to address Parliament

Labour MPs have been busy this week. No, not running the country โ€“ but voicing their opposition to Donald Trumpโ€™s state visit. Diane Abbott, Nadia Whittome and Clive Lewis are among 17 parliamentarians campaigning to ensure the US President isnโ€™t allowed to address the Houses of Parliament. Their Early Day Motion rehearses various criticisms of the President

British fishermen could pay the price for an EU defence deal

Youโ€™re being ridiculous, they kept saying. Why do you keep talking about fish? The Brussels lobby could scarcely conceal its disdain when rumours emerged that the price of Britain concluding a defence agreement with the EU at next monthโ€™s London summit might be concessions on fishing rights. Defence secretary John Healey chided Labourโ€™s critics for

J.D. Vanceโ€™s disdain for Europe has never been clearer

Being vice president of the United States is a strange role. John Nance Garner, Franklin Rooseveltโ€™s understudy for his first two terms, dismissed the office as โ€˜not worth a bucket of warm pissโ€™, but it was the first incumbent, John Adams, who put his finger on its one transcendent quality. โ€˜I am vice president. In

Why is the army fixing Birminghamโ€™s bin crisis?

โ€˜Join the Army and see the worldโ€™ used to be the War Officeโ€™s boast. In those inter-war years it meant Egypt, Malta, Jamaica and Hong Kong, but for a lucky few recipients of the Kingโ€™s shilling their next deployment will be to organise rubbish collections in Birmingham. The government has announced that a โ€˜small number