This row between No 10, the Treasury, and the military has been going on for monthspublished at 13:48 BST 11 June
Jack Fenwick
Political correspondent
This is the latest and most dramatic twist in a saga about defence spending that has been going on for months.
Last June the government published its strategic defence review – a document which set out how to ensure the UK was ready for war.
Another document – the defence investment plan – was supposed to follow last autumn. It would lay out how the government would buy the necessary equipment to make its defence ambitions a reality – and crucially how much money would be involved.
But that document has never seen the light of day – largely because of a huge row involving the Ministry of Defence, the Treasury and Number 10 over how much extra cash the country could afford.
The prime minister told MPs in March that the investment plan was on his desk – a clear insinuation that its publication was imminent.
But since then, there’ve been further delays, as the government has attempted to figure out where it could cut money in other areas to fund defence.
And the nature of the arguments with the Ministry of Defence have become increasingly bitter.
The arguments spilled out into the public realm for the first time in April, when Lord Robertson – a Labour peer, former Nato boss and author of the government’s defence review – launched a scathing attack on ministers and called for a cut to welfare to fund the increase.
Number 10 hoped that it had reached something of a compromise when it presented John Healey with a plan on Monday – but Healey decided the money involved wasn’t an offer he could accept.















