
“Real progress” has been made this week over the long-delayed defence investment plan but work within Government is ongoing to “get it right” in the coming days, Dan Jarvis has said.
In a sign that the blueprint for future-proofing the armed forces could be in line for a funding boost, the Defence Secretary indicated talks with the Treasury had moved forward in recent days.
The defence investment plan (Dip) was originally due last year but has been held back amid wrangling within Government over the amount of money required to finance the military.
Mr Jarvis’ predecessor John Healey quit his Cabinet post earlier this month because the Dip was only due to provide £13.5 billion extra investment in defence, which he said fell “well short” of what was needed.

Asked whether the plan was ready, the Defence Secretary told the Press Association: “I’ve been working very hard since I was appointed to satisfy myself that we’ve got the right resource and the right mix of capabilities.
“The Prime Minister has been clear that we will publish the defence investment plan before the Nato summit. That’s what we’re going to do.
“I have a responsibility to make sure I get it right and that is what I’m working to achieve.”
He added: “I pay tribute to my predecessor, he did a great job for defence, but the responsibility is now mine to deliver that plan, and what I need to do is satisfy myself that I’ve got the right level of resource and the right mix of capabilities.
“That is a process across Government. We’ve made real progress with it over the last week or so. I’m determined to get that right and I’m determined to do it before the Nato summit.”
Outgoing Prime Sir Keir Starmer is set to press ahead with publishing the Dip before the July 7 Nato summit, despite major policy and spending commitments being paused across Government more widely in preparation for the transition of power in the coming weeks.
The move could potentially cause friction with his likely successor, Andy Burnham, who may want to have the final say on future funding for the military.
Reports suggest a further £1 billion has been added to the Dip since Mr Healey quit over the £13.5 billion he was offered.

Mr Jarvis said: “There will always be a strong case, not least given the circumstances that we’re operating in, to spend more on defence, but people will understand that there has to be a balance that is struck, and I have to work very closely with colleagues in the Treasury.
“It’s my job to secure the best deal for defence.”
He added defence should be the UK’s “number one spending priority” and that the Prime Minister had made clear he was focused on this.
He joined other Cabinet ministers including Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and Chancellor Rachel Reeves – who faces losing her job under a Burnham government – in publicly backing the newly-elected Makerfield MP for the leadership.
Mr Jarvis, who served as mayor of Sheffield City Region while Mr Burnham was Greater Manchester mayor, said: “I’ve worked very closely with Andy Burnham.
“He was an exceptional mayor of Greater Manchester and I think he will be an excellent prime minister, he understands the importance of national security and making sure that we’ve got the right amount of resource to invest in our armed forces.
“That is a process that is absolutely under way, but it is on the back of a commitment already to historic levels of defence funding.
“Yes, we want to do more, and the Dip will deliver that, and, yes, we want to go further, the other side of the Dip.
“That is well understood by Andy Burnham. It’s well understood by the current Prime Minister. It’s my job to deliver for defence and that’s what I’m working hard to do.”
Ms Reeves defended her record on defence spending in the Treasury and said the defence investment plan will be published “imminently” as she spoke to reporters on a visit to Ukraine.
“The defence investment plan hasn’t yet been published, and what I can tell people is that plan will involve more money,” she said.
“I’m already the Chancellor that’s overseen the biggest uplift in defence spending since the end of the Cold War, but recognising the scale of the challenge we face today, we need to increase that amount further.
“We’ll be doing so in setting that out imminently, and certainly ahead of the Nato summit in Ankara, but the new prime minister, who is almost certainly going to be Andy Burnham, will absolutely stand by Ukraine as the UK has done both as a Government and as a people ever since Russia’s invasion.”
She added that the plan would be “a detailed account of how we’re going to spend that additional money to meet the scale of the challenges we face today, and crucially, the defence investment plan will be about the wars of tomorrow and today, not of the past”.
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