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Chris Keay

First Secretary Defence

Part of Shoulder to Shoulder

23rd July 2012 Washington DC, USA

British Defence and building our forces for the future

British Defence Secretary Philip Hammond was in the US last week. Nothing unusual there you might expect. British Defence Secretaries do indeed see their American counterparts pretty regularly. What struck me about this visit though was the focus on the future.

US Secretary of Defense Leon E. Panetta hands over a model of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to British Secretary of State for Defense Phillip Hammond in a symbolic gesture that marks the delivery of the first actual aircraft to British forces as they hold a press conference in the Pentagon Press Briefing Room July 18, 2012. (DoD Photo By Glenn Fawcett)

For ten years we have been the closest partners in the military operations of the post-9/11 era. This has meant an ongoing dialogue with Secretaries Rumsfeld, Gates and Panetta about how we succeed in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Of course there was more of that with Secretary Panetta in the Pentagon last Wednesday. This is a critical time for transition in Afghanistan – as evidenced by the Prime Minister’s talks with Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan.

But Mr Hammond also travelled to Patuxent River Air Station, MD to see the Joint Strike Fighter in action, before moving on to Texas to receive the UK’s first F35-B from Lockheed Martin.  This is a truly symbolic moment for the UK as we build our forces for the future. British pilots will now begin testing the aircraft to identify what we need to do to bring the JSF into service later in the decade. Secretaries Hammond and Panetta also discussed UK and US co-operation on naval aviation – which will deliver a key element of Britain’s future force. The last leg of the visit was Greenville, Texas where he saw progress on the UK Airseeker aircraft – another key piece of Future Force 2020.

Each of these stops was about looking to our security needs of the future and seeing how our Armed Forces will work with their American counterparts long after the combat role in Afghanistan is over. Mr Hammond described his views on future UK/US defence co-operation at an event organised by the Center for New American Security. There he said:

“The strength of our alliance is based on the twin pillars of common values and common interests… But it is our Defence relationship which stands out.

“Forged in the furnaces of the world wars of the 20th century; Maintained through the long watches of the Cold War; And now tempered over the last decade in the sands of Iraq and in the shadow of the Hindu Kush.

“But our Defence relationship is not a backward-looking one. We are about to enter a new phase in our long history together. As President Obama said in January “we are turning a page on a decade of war”.

“As we drawdown from this decade of continuous operations – and continuous military co-operation, the circumstances are changing.

“And so our relationship needs to evolve in response”.

You can read more about it on our website.

About Chris Keay

Chris Keay has been First Secretary Defence in the embassy’s Foreign and Security Policy Group since 2009. Chris is a 1999 graduate from St Andrews University, where he studied International…

Chris Keay has been First Secretary Defence in the embassy’s Foreign and Security Policy Group since 2009. Chris is a 1999 graduate from St Andrews University, where he studied International Relations and Modern History. He then worked as an English teacher in the Japanese public school system before joining the Ministry of Defence. Chris’ first job in MOD was overseeing bilateral defence relations with Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia as they moved toward NATO membership. He then worked in the Resources and Plans section on the 2002 government spending review before beginning a series of policy jobs on Operation TELIC – the UK operation in Iraq. These included spells in the policy branch in London (2003-2004), the British military HQ in Basra (2005) and at our operational HQ in Northwood (2006). On return from Iraq, Chris set up the MOD’s Support to Operations programme to improve the way MOD identifies, prepares and supports civil servants who deploy on operations with the military. From 2007 to 2009 he was responsible for policy on the domestic deployment of the Armed Forces, dealing with national resilience issues. In his current role Chris works closely with the Office of the Secretary of Defense and other defence policy stakeholders to improve the relationship between our two defence communities.

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