Permanent Under-Secretary of State for Defence

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Permanent Under-Secretary for Defence
Royal Arms as used by His Majesty's Government
since April 2021
Ministry of Defence
StylePermanent Secretary
Member ofDefence Council
Defence Board
Defence Audit and Risk Assurance Committee
People Committee
Investment Approvals Committee
Executive Committee
Reports toSecretary of State for Defence
Cabinet Secretary
SeatMinistry of Defence, London
AppointerPrime Minister
Inaugural holderHenry Hardman
Formation1963
DeputySecond Permanent Secretary
SalarySCS Pay Band 4

The permanent under-secretary of state for defence,[1][2] also called the permanent secretary to the Ministry of Defence,[3][4] is the permanent secretary at the Ministry of Defence. The office holder is the government's principal civilian adviser on Defence matters.[5] The office holder is a member of the Defence Council and the Defence Board.[6] They are the MOD principal accounting officer,[5] and are called to give evidence to the Defence Select Committee.[7]

The position has existed in its current format since the formation of the modern Ministry of Defence in 1964.[1] It was preceded by the permanent secretary at the earlier Ministry of Defence (1947–1964), and by the permanent secretaries at the government departments that were absorbed into the Ministry of Defence in 1964: the permanent secretary to the Admiralty, the permanent under-secretary of state for war, and the permanent secretary to the Air Ministry.

The current permanent secretary to the MOD is David Williams.[4]

Responsibilities

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  • Leading defence (with CDS);
  • Setting strategy for defence, including corporate strategy (subject to ministers’ direction, and together with CDS);
  • Heading the Department of State and the MOD Civil Service;
  • Providing policy advice to ministers and leading the relationship with other government departments;
  • The overall organisation, management and staffing of defence;
  • Performing the full range of Accounting Officer responsibilities, including the delegation of financial and other authority and accountability to senior colleagues, with personal accountability to Parliament for the economic, efficient and effective use of defence resources. [8]

Permanent secretaries to the Ministry of Defence

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1947–1964

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The permanent secretaries at the earlier Ministry of Defence (1947–1964):[9]

1964–present

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References

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  9. ^ David Butler and Gareth Butler, Twentieth Century British Political Facts 1900–2000, eighth edition, Macmillan, 2000, p. 302
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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