I move amendment No. 1:
In page 6, between lines 10 and 11, to insert the following:
“Command of the Defence Forces
6. The Principal Act is amended by the substitution of the following section for section 17:
“Command of the Defence Forces
17. Command of the Defence Forces is exercisable as follows:
(a) the supreme command of the Defence Forces vested in the President is exercisable by him or her on the advice of the Government;
(b) under the supreme command of the President and subject to the provisions of this Act, command of the Defence Forces is exercisable by the Government and, subject to such exceptions and limitations as the Government may from time to time determine, by the Minister;
(c) subject to and in accordance with paragraphs (a) and (b), the Chief of Staff shall carry on and manage and control generally the staff,administration and business of the Defence Forces;
(d) Defence Forces Headquarters, the head of which is the Chief of Staff, ceases to stand established in the Department of Defence and instead stands established within the Defence Forces;
(e) the Chief of Staff is the accounting officer in relation to the appropriation accounts of the Defence Forces for the purposes of the Comptroller and Auditor General Acts 1866 to 1998.”.”.
It is good to be in attendance today. The purpose of this amendment is to insert a new section into the principal Act. It is a fundamentally principled amendment dealing with command of the Defence Forces. Essentially, under the Defence Acts, the military, operational and administrative command of the Defence Forces of Ireland is vested in and exercised by the Minister for Defence. Defence Force headquarters, headed by the Chief of Staff, is simply the name of the military branch of the Department of Defence under section 4 of the Defence (Amendment Act) 1994.
The Department's civil servants can exercise the power of command vested in the Minister and can effectively outrank the Chief of Staff in the context of administrative and operational decisions. The amendment I propose, while maintaining the fundamental oversight of the military by civilians, seeks to vest the function of managing and controlling the administration, staff and business of the Defence Forces in the Chief of Staff, where one would assume it should be property vested. If the amendment were accepted, the Chief of Staff would become the Accounting Officer for a Defence Forces Vote. Defence Forces headquarters would no longer be part of the Department but positioned within the Defence Forces themselves.
It seems to me that the current arrangements are extraordinary and - unless the Tánaiste can tell me otherwise - fairly unique. I checked why this is the situation and was informed that these arrangements date back to the earliest days of our State when Richard Mulcahy was Minister for Defence from 1922 to 1924. As well as being Minister for Defence, he was a general in the National Army and, in fact, Chief of Staff, succeeding Michael Collins as commander-in-chief after Collins's death in August 1922.
I understand that in 1922 the former anti-Treaty IRA officers demanded an Army convention to appoint an Army executive independent of the Dáil. Mulcahy's advice to the Dáil was that the Army convention must be prohibited because he viewed it as tantamount to an attempt to establish a military dictatorship. He maintained, in a way with which we would all agree, that the Dáil was the sole body in supreme control of the Army. That is the genesis of this unique set of circumstances: in the post-Independence struggle, when the National Army was being established, to ensure that all would be controlled by the new government.
The principle of civilian primacy over military authority obviously remains important, but I suggest that those arrangements have to be practical. In that context, I am proposing a number of changes. For example, under paragraph (a) of the amendment "the supreme command of the Defence Forces [would be] vested in the President ... exercisable by him or her on the advice of the Government", as is the status quo. Under paragraph (b) it would be the case that "under the supreme command of the President and subject to the provisions of this Act, command of the Defence Forces is exercisable by the Government and, subject to such exceptions and limitations as the Government may from time to time determine, by the Minister." Under paragraph (c) I propose that "subject to and in accordance with paragraphs (a) and (b), the Chief of Staff shall carry on and manage and control generally the staff, administration and business of the Defence Forces" and under paragraph (d) "Defence Forces Headquarters, the head of which is the Chief of Staff, ceases to stand established in the Department of Defence [which is an unusual set of circumstances] and instead stands established within the Defence Forces."
My final proposition is that the Chief of Staff be the Accounting Officer with regard to the appropriation accounts of the Defence Forces for the purposes of the Comptroller and Auditor General Acts.
That in essence is my proposal. It is eminently sensible. It is a realisation of what should be the status quo that our chief of staff and Defence Forces headquarters are not a subset of the Department of Defence. They should not be cited in the Department of Defence. They should have their own standing and authority and be subject to the Comptroller and Auditor General in the normal way with the chief of staff as the Accounting Officer.