1 LT GEN SIR ROBERT FULTON: Yes, I think I would, because2 I think also it was designed to be the customer, or to3 represent the customer, customer one in the jargon of4 the day, but to be the central customer for the Capital5 Equipment Programme. So not the totality of equipment6 in the field. Therefore as the customer, to own the7 requirement to the extent that you have done the8 balancing between competing requirements and also, in9 the context of constructing the ten-year equipment plan,10 understanding what money was available to meet that11 requirement and then to balance it out.12 I think it is a balance and we might perhaps come13 later to what those balances are, because clearly there14 is not a single requirement. There are many competing15 requirements, and if I were to describe in rather more16 colloquial terms what the job is, it is actually17 balancing out the competition, what I would describe as18 a finite budget, infinite demand and a changing world.19 SIR JOHN CHILCOT: Yes. Thank you. General Figgures, do20 you agree with that?21 LT GEN ADREW FIGGURES: I would agree with that and with the22 advent of the Defence Acquisition Change Programme and23 through Life Capability Management the responsibility24 developed to take into account the support for equipment25 in-service and the oversight of the defence lines of3
Leave a Comment