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Dáil Éireann debate -
Thursday, 18 Oct 2001

Vol. 542 No. 4

Written Answers. - White Paper on Defence.

Jan O'Sullivan

Question:

34 Ms O'Sullivan asked the Minister for Defence the progress made to date regarding implementation of the White Paper on Defence; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [24497/01]

My overall objective as Minister for Defence is to ensure the country has the Defence Forces it needs to meet the roles laid down by Government and that the Defence Forces continues to be an organisation in which people are proud to serve. That is the overall objective of the White Paper and I can assure the House that implementation is moving ahead quickly and positively.

The chief of staff is currently preparing a plan to restructure the PDF in accordance with the Government's decision on overall numbers. That plan will help us to achieve the following broad goals: to provide a light infantry based force with an appropriate level of all-arms capability; to provide sufficient forces and capabilities to meet needs at home and to make a significant contribution abroad; to put in place a more cohesive and better equipped force than exists at present; and to provide significant additional resources for equipment and infrastructure broadly within the existing level of financial allocation.

It is important that we put the new organisation in place and move ahead with the modernisation of the Defence Forces. It is equally important that the new organisation offers rewarding and challenging careers to Defence Forces personnel.

The White Paper recognises the importance of the career dimension and provides for the prep aration of an updated and very comprehensive Defence Forces integrated personnel management plan to address this and related issues. The chief of staff is currently drafting that plan and the process is well advanced. A key feature of the plan will be a continuation of the policy of regular recruitment which is now in place in order to achieve an improved age profile in the Permanent Defence Force.
Arising from the special study of the Air Corps and the Naval Service undertaken by PricewaterhouseCoopers consultants, and reflecting the policy parameters laid down in the White Paper, implementation plans for both services are now in place, including new organisation structures.
The White Paper provides that the overall strategy for the development of the Reserve Defence Force will be based on the report of the special steering group which reported in 1999. I am pleased that the various recommendations contained in the report have been broadly accepted as providing a general foundation on which the future development of the reserve can be built.
Given the dependence of the reserve on voluntary service, I was anxious that there should be an ongoing process of consultation before proposals are finalised. To facilitate this, I published the report of the steering group last year and launched a consultative process to seek the views of members of the reserve in advance of the drawing up of an implementation plan. That process continues and I envisage that the implementation of change will take place over a period of approximately six years.
I was particularly pleased last year to announce an unprecedented additional £250 million investment programme in new equipment and infrastructure for the Army, Air Corps and the Naval Service. I have given the House the details of the programme which is being funded from payroll savings and from the sales of surplus property.
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