A report warns of the British military’s capability gaps in platform warfare and ammunition

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt is warned he risks making British squaddies ‘cannon fodder’ unless he invests billions more in the army, as demands from Top Brass for more tanks and planes rise.

The Treasury and the Ministry of Defence are at a stalemate over next month’s budget, The Sun reports.

Mr Hunt is prepared to refill the £2.3 billion of military equipment like tanks and guns handed to Ukraine last year to fight the invasion by Russia, insiders reportedly said.

In the budget, the chancellor might also reverse the decision to reduce the army to just 73,000 soldiers – its smallest size in 300 years – with a cash injection of £300million, which a MoD branded a ‘sticking plaster PR stunt that would produce sub-par fighters’ according to The Sun.

A Ministry of Defence source said that without ‘proper investment’ into equipment and training in addition to extra troops, there is a risk of turning British troops into ‘cannon fodder’.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace warned last week that the military has been ‘hollowed out’ and he added that if Britain hike up the current budget of £48.4billion, Downing Street risks missing a promise to the Nato to spend two per cent of the GDP on the Armed Forces each year.

A Treasury Source told the Sun: ‘The PM and Chancellor recognise the need to increase defence spending further, subject to the ongoing Integrated Review.’

Retired military commanders and MPs also called on the Government to use the ‘urgent operational requirements’ (UOR) process to speed up buying vital equipment.

Artillery regiments run out of… artillery: British Army is ‘stripped of heavy guns after defence chiefs pledged to give 30 working AS90s to Ukraine’

Their demands came after fears were raised Britain’s shrinking military will get no extra funding in next month’s Budget.

Rishi Sunak is under unprecedented pressure to announce a cash injection or risk leaving Britain ‘defenceless’, experts have warned.

The Prime Minister’s continued silence on military spending has ‘unsettled’ senior officers, the Daily Mail revealed yesterday.

Their concerns follow a warning by the head of the Army that Britain is ‘weaker’ for giving equipment to Ukraine.

Despite 25 other NATO members rebooting their spending plans following Russia’s invasion, the UK’s armed forces have yet to receive additional funding.

Last night, senior figures suggested a kit-buying process used during the Afghan conflict should be returned.

From 2007 the UOR scheme slashed waiting times for frontline troops, with vehicles and weapons acquired much faster than in peacetime.

These included the Mastiff armoured patrol vehicle, which was brought from concept to delivery in 23 weeks, after the Taliban adopted a tactic of targeting UK patrols in Helmand province with roadside bombs.

But since the end of the Afghanistan conflict the red tape surrounding major equipment purchases has returned.

Tory MP Mark Francois, a member of the Commons defence committee, said yesterday: ‘A number of key re-equipment programmes need to be pushed through as UORs.

‘We should drop the bureaucracy and get critical new kit into service as rapidly as possible.

‘With war raging on the European continent time is not on our side. While we undoubtedly need to spend more on defence, we must also use that additional money more wisely.’

Suggestions for the UOR pipeline include re-equipping 100 of Britain’s Challenger 2 tanks to make them ‘battle-worthy’.

The UK has 227 of these tanks but most are in storage and not held at high readiness. Its replacement, the more advanced Challenger 3 tank, is not expected until 2027 and only 148 are being purchased.

According to sources, if the upgraded tank was pushed through as a UOR, its delivery could be accelerated.

So would a project to replace the UK’s long-range artillery capability and expand the military’s air defence systems.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has accused previous Tory administrations of ‘hollowing out’ the armed forces.

Last night, Labour also joined calls for more urgency on military procurement.

Shadow defence secretary John Healey said it had taken the Government 287 days after the invasion of Ukraine for the UK to agree to replace the N-LAW rocket systems sent to Kyiv.

An MoD spokesman said there are ‘currently no plans to declare any of the systems as Urgent Capability Requirements’.

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