@ Rob C:
I have not seen the terms of reference for the Defence Review and seeing the people who make up the review team and the complete lack of any military experience in the team
the terms of reference for the DPR are here (
link). The members of the review panel are listed in this article (
link)
Don't know what you're on about there, sorry. One of the members of the panel is former Chief of Army Dave Gawn. Of the other members - Roche has been doing the recent MoD procurement systems reviews, McKinnon at least brings decades of diplomatic experience, Capie is a professor of International Relations and head of the Centre for Strategic Studies at Victoria University. That's not too bad. Stevenson is currently CEO of Customs & former CEO of Corrections (so should at least be an expert on government bureaucracy). IMHO, the only 'patsy' is Pania Tyson-Nathan (CEO of Maori Tourism, ???), whose only relevant experience for this position would seem to be that she is Maori and a woman. Ideally, I would prefer to see someone with manufacturing/infrastructure industry experience (ie. someone with logistics and long-term planning skills) on the team instead. God knows, infrastructure is major problem that needs to be sorted out (base accommodations, dry-dock etc). But retaining people is the biggest problem at the moment
@ Ngati: well, you'll have to wait a bit longer. The DPR is already 6 months behind schedule (the first item on the agenda - a simple 'draft defence policy and strategy statement' was due out in October, now March 2023). The second item, a 'force structure design principle statement' is now due June 2023.
To my mind this entire DPR process is just a time-wasting exercise, to justify total inaction at ministerial & cabinet level. It is totally unnecessary.
Henare has been in the Minister's job two years and hasn't progressed one major new project through cabinet yet. I think the only projects approved since Ron Mark left are the very minor comms upgrade for the frigates, some new RHIBs, and maybe some new utility vehicles (Unimog & Pinzgauer replacements) for the Army. Several major projects that were in the pipeline are now deferred (ie SOPV), or otherwise 'status unknown' (eg. EMAC). The clock is ticking, we can't afford to waste an entire term of office. Look what needs to be replaced in the next decade (frigates, maritime helicopters, LAVs, possibly the entire Project Protector fleet).