In an interview with the Daily Telegraph newspaper published on Monday, Army Chief of Staff General Raymond Odierno urged Britain to maintain defence spending at the NATO agreed level of 2% of national output, warning that British forces could end up fighting inside US units rather than alongside them.
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"I would be lying to you if I did not say that I am very concerned about the GDP investment in the UK," Odierno was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Britain has cut defence spending by around 8% in real terms over the last four years to help reduce a record budget deficit, shrinking the size of the armed forces by around one sixth.
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"In the past we would have a British Army division working alongside an American division. Now it might be a British brigade inside an American division, or even a British battalion inside an American brigade," Odierno said, in reference to previous conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
As a result of the cuts following the 2010 Strategic Defence and Security Review, the British army has been cut by a fifth, the air force now has just seven combat squadrons and the navy barely has enough warships to fulfil its international duties, the Daily Telegraph reported.
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Britain's Ministry of Defence said the government was committed to spending 2% of GDP on defence, adding that decisions on spending level after the 2015/16 financial year had yet to be made.
In December, top US commander Lieutenant-General Ben Hodges voiced concern that Britain's military spending could fall below a NATO target and said the country's army did not have enough money for its needs.
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