Labour matches Tory’s £3bn-a-year Ukraine spending pledge

Ukrainians fire a mortar on front line
Ukrainians fire a mortar on front line - ANADOLU
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Labour is ready to spend at least £15 billion on military support for Ukraine, the shadow defence secretary has announced during a trip to Kyiv.

John Healey said he “fully backs” Rishi Sunak’s commitment to maintain the current level of lethal aid until at least the end of the decade.

But he failed to say how his party would pay for the pledge, given that it opposes Tory plans to fund the extra assistance by cutting the Civil Service.

Last month the Prime Minister announced that he would guarantee at least £3 billion a year in military support for Ukraine until the end of the decade.

He said the “cast-iron commitment” gave Kyiv certainty and demonstrated that the UK would keep up weapons supplies “for as long as it is needed”.

Labour’s support for the pledge was in doubt after it refused to match Mr Sunak’s plan to boost defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP by 2030.

On the front line at Chasiv Yar
On the front line at Chasiv Yar - ANADOLU

Mr Healey finally confirmed it would honour the policy if it won the next election as he visited the Ukrainian capital with David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary.

The pair held talks with Rustem Umerov, the Ukrainian defence minister, and senior officials but did not meet President Volodymyr Zelensky.

In a joint statement afterwards they said: “As [Vladimir] Putin seeks to divide the West, we visited Kyiv together to send a clear message that a change in government in the UK would mean no change in our military, diplomatic, financial and political support to Ukraine.

“Moscow’s deepened cooperation with Beijing, Tehran and Pyongyang requires us to deepen our cooperation with Britain’s allies to demonstrate that our commitment to Ukraine will outlast Vladmir Putin’s imperial invasion.

“The next Labour government’s commitment to Ukraine will be ironclad and European security will be our first foreign and defence priority.

Shadow defence secretary John Healey on an earlier visit with Sir Keir Starmer
Shadow defence secretary John Healey on an earlier visit with Sir Keir Starmer - STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA

“Labour’s action plan lays out a wide-ranging approach to stand with Ukraine, confront Russian aggression and pursue Putin for his war crimes. We will stand with Ukraine until it wins.”

During the trip they set out Labour’s plans to bolster support for Kyiv, including by “fast-tracking military support” and targeting Russia diplomatically.

The pair also pledged to use future Nato summits to press the case for Ukrainian membership of the military alliance if their party wins power.

It came as the Prime Minister used a speech to attack Sir Keir over his refusal to back Tory plans to ramp up spending on defence.

The Labour leader has said that he wants to increase the military budget to 2.5 per cent of GDP but that he will not commit to doing so by the end of the decade.

His allies have also dismissed Tory plans to fund the increase by cutting 70,000 civil service jobs, saying they would not replicate the move in power.

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