
03/06/2025
At long last, the Strategic Defence Review has been released. Soon to accompany it will be the UK Defence Industrial Strategy. This will tell us whether Rachel Reeves was serious in her aim to make the UK a ‘defence industrial superpower’.
This strategic pivot towards ramping up our defence capabilities is an welcome one. In an age of heightened geopolitical tensions, the UK needs to be war ready. However, after decades of industrial contraction, achieving superpower status will be a herculean task. Car production is down – as is chemical production. Steel is on the brink. When a country doesn’t make enough during peacetime, it’s hard to make tanks, planes and other things that go boom during war.
There is historical precedent for this. As James Holland has eruditely revealed, despite common perceptions of tactical brilliance and the motorised onslaught of Blitzkrieg, Germany’s war machine in the years before and during the Second World War was built on shaky industrial grounds. Its motor industry lagged behind those of the UK and France, and far behind that of the United States. Thus, at the outbreak of war, Germany had fewer tanks than Britain and France. And though it had limited access to natural resources, many German weapons platforms were over-engineered and expensive.
Take the MG34: a fearsome and impressive infantry weapon, it nonetheless required 100 individual parts and 150 man-hours to make, at a cost of $1,300 in 1938 ($29,695 in today’s prices). The British equivalent, the Bren, could be assembled within 50 man-hours – a ratio of three-to-one.
Then there was the resource-heavy Tiger Tank, which took 300,000 man-hours, a vast labour when compared to the American Sherman which required 48,000 and the Soviet T-34 which took 3,200. Though it outgunned its Allied counterparts, the Germans could only produce 1,347 Tigers, compared to 49,000 Shermans and 84,000 T-34s. Despite Germany’s impressive engineering capabilities, it simply couldn’t outproduce the Allies.
Scale wins wars, and nowhere is this more apparent now than in Ukraine.
✍️Sean Ridley
At long last, the Strategic Defence Review has been released. Soon to accompany it will be the UK Defence Industrial Strategy. This will tell us whether Rachel Reeves was serious in her aim to make the UK a ‘defence industrial superpower’. This strategic pivot towards ramping up our defence capa...