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Keir Starmer finally publishes army tech plan -

Express Published Jun 30, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is nearly 10 months behind schedule.
10 months · Defence Investment Plan (DIP) schedule delay
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The Defence Investment Plan allocates £14.5 billion to UK military preparedness.
14500000000 GBP · funding for UK military preparedness
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James Cartlidge described the DIP as not 'worth the paper it's written on'.
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Sir Keir Starmer described the investment as a 'game-changing investment'.
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£5 billion is being allocated to drones in the Defence Investment Plan.
5000000000 GBP · funding for drones
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Dan Jarvis, the new Defence Secretary, spent two weeks in the job 'refocusing' the DIP.
2 weeks · Dan Jarvis's time spent refocusing the DIP
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Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge said the funding was 'barely more money than John Healey and Al Carns resigned over'.
2 · resignations (John Healey and Alun Cairns)
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James Cartlidge called for the next Prime Minister (widely expected to be Andy Burnham) to cut welfare and increase armed forces funding.
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Keir Starmer's long-delayed plan to modernise the armed forces is to be published amid growing anger that the Government is leaving the country defenceless. Nearly 10 months behind schedule, the Defence investment plan (Dip) held back amid wrangling within the Government over the amount of cash needed to fund the military.

A long-running dispute around the Cabinet table ended in the resignation of former defence secretary John Healey, who quit in protest at a lack of funding. His replacement, Dan Jarvis, has approved a new plan that will see billions poured into drones, with £ 5billion being splashed on the tech. But the Dip will only see £14.5 billion funnel into the UK's military preparedness, several billion short of the £28 billion officials previously said was needed.

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Critics rounded on the announcement, warning it was "too little, too late" with the Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge saying the funding did not go far enough.

"It is barely more money than John Healey and Al Carns resigned over when they said Britain would be "less safe"," he told the Daily Express.

Mr Cartlidge added that the Dip was not "worth the paper it's written on" as he warned the outgoing Prime Minister was in charge "in name only".

He repeated his call for the next Prime Minister, who is widely expected to be Andy Burnham, to "cut welfare and give our armed forces the funding they need to keep Britain safe."

Mr Burnham has left open the possibility that it could revisit the Dip, should he either win a contest or be anointed as Labour leader and the next prime minister.

But the Tories warned that "it doesn't matter who is in charge, all Labour MPs want are more benefits, Labour are now the welfare party."

Speaking ahead of the plans' launch, Sir Keir said it was a "game-changing investment" that would ensure the military had the resources it needed to "deter evolving threats and keep the British people safe."

Mr Jarvis, the new Defence Secretary, has spent his two weeks in the job “refocusing” the Dip, Downing Street said, so that it will get the "latest kit" into the hands of the armed forces.

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