In July 2023, Wallace announced that he intended to resign as Secretary of State for Defence at the next Cabinet reshuffle, and that he would not be seeking re-election as an MP at the 2024 general election.[6] In August 2023, Wallace formally resigned as Secretary of State for Defence.[7]
In June 1998, Wallace transferred from the Active List to the Regular Army Reserve of Officers as a captain, thereby ending his active service and beginning a period of call-up liability.[20] He later explained that he had decided against seeking to become a regular officer and to continue after the age of thirty, as the part of the work he had really enjoyed was commanding soldiers, and this was likely to diminish after that point.[10]
Wallace is a member of the Royal Company of Archers, a ceremonial unit that serves as the Sovereign's bodyguard in Scotland. As such, he participated in the vigil over the Queen's coffin as she lay in state in Westminster Hall on 15 September 2022.[21]
Political career
Scottish Parliament
Wallace entered politics after leaving the army, citing as a reason for this decision the experience he had commanding men from some of the UK's most economically deprived areas, which he averred could be improved by promoting a more aspirational society.[16] Wallace became a ConservativeMember of the Scottish Parliament in 1999, as a list MSP for North East Scotland.[3][4] He did not seek re-election at the 2003 Scottish Parliament election, as he sought selection for a Westminster constituency in England.[3][4] Wallace was the Scottish Conservatives' shadow health spokesman during that time.[4]
Wallace was elected as Member of Parliament for the Lancaster and Wyre constituency at the 2005 general election. He gained the seat from Labour with 22,266 votes and a majority of 4,171 (8.0%).[22] Wallace faced local criticism after it was revealed that in 2008 he had made the fourth-highest expenses claim of any MP, claiming £175,523 on top of his £63,000 salary. However, he defended this by arguing that his constituency had an electorate that was nearly 20% larger than the average one in England.[23]
From 2005 to 2010, Wallace was a member of the Scottish Affairs Select Committee of the House of Commons.[26] From 2006 to 2010 he was also the Shadow Minister of State for Scotland and was Chairman of the British–Iran Parliamentary Group from 2006 to 2014. He was awarded Campaigner of the Year in the annual Spectator/Threadneedle Parliamentarian Awards in 2008, for his work promoting transparency of MPs' expenses.[27][28]
In May 2015, Wallace was promoted to Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State in the Northern Ireland Office. Early in 2016, with the approach of the European Union referendum, Boris Johnson was wavering between Leave and Remain, and Wallace advised him strongly to support Remain, as taking the Leave side would mean being allied with "clowns".[19] Wallace himself supported the Remain side before the referendum.[31] After it had been won by Leave, David Cameron resigned as party leader. Johnson at once launched a leadership campaign run by Wallace and Lynton Crosby. However, a week later, after Michael Gove had decided to stand as well, Johnson withdrew.[19]
On 13 October 2019, in a NATO meeting, Wallace defended the 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria. He commented, "Turkey needs to do what it sometimes has to do to defend itself". His comments were condemned by other delegates at the meeting.[39][40] On 12 January 2020, in an interview with The Sunday Times, Wallace said that the UK "must be prepared to fight wars without the US", one of the UK's key allies. He stated that the upcoming defence review "should be used to make the UK less dependent on the US in future conflicts". His comments were made in response to US President Donald Trump's "America First" isolationist policies. Wallace also said that the next defence review would be the "deepest review" of Britain's defence and foreign policies since the end of the Cold War in 1991.[41] On 15 March 2021, as part of the Integrated Review, Wallace released a command paper titled Defence in a Competitive Age, in which he detailed "a mission to seek out and to understand future threats, and to invest in the capabilities to defeat them," promising an expenditure of £188 billion on defence over the next four years.[42]
In July 2021, Wallace said that the United States had left Britain in a "very difficult position" following the withdrawal of most US troops from Afghanistan.[43] Soon after the withdrawal of US troops had started, the Taliban had launched an offensive against the Afghan government, quickly advancing in front of a collapsing Afghan Armed Forces.[44] Wallace said the UK would be ready to work with the Taliban should they come to power provided they adhere to certain international norms.[45] On 16 August 2021, during a radio interview on LBC about the withdrawal from Afghanistan, Wallace was asked by an LBC interviewer, "why do you feel it so personally, Mr Wallace?" He replied with emotion: "because I'm a soldier ... because it's sad, and the West has done what it's done and we have to do our very best to get people out and stand by our obligations".[46]
Wallace was the minister responsible for the British evacuation from Kabul, Operation Pitting. He was involved in a controversial decision to allow Pen Farthing – who ran an animal sanctuary in Kabul – to evacuate 71 people and more than 100 animals from Kabul to the UK.[47][48] Wallace said Ministry of Defence staff had suffered abuse from some of Farthing's supporters, who alleged the government had initially abandoned Farthing.[49] In December 2021, Wallace met with Saudi Arabia's Crown PrinceMohammed bin Salman to discuss cooperation in various fields, especially defence, having discussed similar matters the previous year with Saudi Arabia's vice defence minister Prince Khalid bin Salman.[50][51] In 2022, at an event to mark the 40th anniversary of the end of the Falklands War, Wallace declared Britain's determination to "stand up to bullies".[52] His words were decried as "belligerent threats" and "denigrating references" by Argentina.[53]
Wallace met Sergei Shoigu, the Russian Minister of Defence in Moscow on 11 February 2022.[54] Shoigu reiterated a denial of any Russian intentions to invade Ukraine.[6] The following day, Wallace said that a Russian invasion of Ukraine was "highly likely", and British citizens were being told by the Foreign Office to evacuate while commercial means were still available.[55] Ukraine's ambassador to the UK, Vadym Prystaiko, said Wallace's comparison of diplomatic efforts with Russia to the appeasement policies of the 1930s was unhelpful,[56] saying now is the wrong time to "offend our partners".[57] On 23 February 2022, Wallace was filmed saying that the Scots Guards "kicked the backside" of Nicholas I of Russia during the Crimean War, and could do so again. Russia invaded Ukraine the following day.[58]
On 21 March 2022, clipped footage of Wallace in a prank call by Russian pranksters Vovan and Lexus was released online. The duo (suspected by the British government to have links to Russian security services or of being Russian state actors)[59][60] impersonated the Ukrainian prime ministerDenys Shmyhal saying that Ukraine wished to promote its own nuclear deterrent to protect itself from Russia, a false claim made by the Russian government during the Russo-Ukrainian War and the invasion of Ukraine.[59][60] Wallace was believed to be on a Microsoft Teams call with the duo for ten minutes.[61] That day, Wallace announced plans to reduce the number of British Army personnel from 76,500 to 72,500.[62]
Wallace was perceived as responsible for initial British reluctance to send Challenger 2 tanks to Ukraine in March 2022, saying that the idea "wouldn't work".[63][64] Boris Johnson and his German counterpart Olaf Scholz agreed on 8 April that both European allies would withhold their Western-designed main battle tanks from the fray. Johnson instead chose to backfill the Polish Army, thus allowing them to send their obsolete T-72s to Ukraine,[63] while they waited for their order of South KoreanK2 Black Panther replacements.[65][66] Despite a planned reduction of the British tank fleet from 227 Challenger 2 tanks to 148 upgraded Challenger 3 tanks, there were no plans to send British tanks to the Ukrainians.[67] Wallace later announced that the number of Challenger 3 tanks required by the UK was under review.[5][8] In January 2023, the British position was reversed, and Challenger 2 tanks were supplied to Ukraine in March 2023.[68][69]
Boris Johnson announced his intention to resign as prime minister and leader of the Conservative Party in July 2022 following a series of mass resignations from his government. Wallace was seen as a contender to succeed him as party leader and thus prime minister, but on 10 July he ruled himself out from entering the contest. In a statement on Twitter, he said his focus was on his current job and "keeping this great country safe".[70] He later endorsed Liz Truss in the election.[71] Following the appointment of Truss as prime minister, Wallace was reappointed to his post on 6 September.[72] He retained his post when Rishi Sunak became prime minister on 25 October. On 7 November, Wallace announced that the competition to build a new national flagship yacht would be scrapped with immediate effect.[73]
On 19 January 2023 Wallace together with the defence ministers of Estonia, Poland, Latvia and Lithuania; and the representatives of Denmark, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, and Slovakia issued the Tallinn Pledge, "to reaffirm our continued determination and resolve to supporting Ukraine in their heroic resistance against the illegal and unprovoked Russian aggression."[74][75][76][77][78]
On 21 June 2023, Wallace ruled himself out of the running to become the next NATO Secretary-General after rumours spread that the US were in favour of Jens Stoltenberg staying in post.[79]
Speaking at a NATO summit in Lithuania on 11 July, Wallace said that Ukraine should offer more gratitude to Western allies of the country, following the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy's frustration at not being given a formal invitation to join the NATO alliance. Wallace also said that American and British lawmakers felt that Ukraine was demanding an Amazon-style wishlist of demands in military aid.[80][81][82]
On 15 July 2023, Wallace announced his intention to resign as Secretary of State for Defence at the next Cabinet reshuffle and confirmed that he would not be seeking re-election as an MP at the 2024 general election.[6] By length of tenure, he was the longest-serving Conservative Secretary of State for Defence on record. Wallace was also the longest-serving participant in the current UK Cabinet by continuous service; attending without interruption since his 2016 appointment as Minister of State for Security.[83] On 31 August 2023, Wallace formally resigned as Secretary of State for Defence.[7]
Return to private life
In 2024 Wallace was voluble on defence-related matters. In April 2024 after the 300-unit drone strike by Iran on Israel Wallace said the event "had dashed his own hopes that reformers would one day triumph over the hardliners."[84] He wrote an op-ed in the Daily Telegraph and advised the West to "hit back twice as hard" against Iran and Russia and "not stop until they get the message". The pair "thrive on the West’s lack of resolve, revel in sowing division, and delight in weakening." He also called on Israel to supply Ukraine with weapons in light of the Russian investment in the Iranian drone and missile programme.[85][86]
In February 2024 Wallace expressed his displeasure over German Chancellor Olaf Scholz' refusal to give Ukraine the Taurus missile.[87]
Contemporaneous to the 75th NATO Summit in July 2024 Wallace opined that Europe can and should do more to help Ukraine. "The good news story on Ukraine is that Europe has already contributed collectively more to Ukraine than the United States. So it is not entirely impossible that if America froze out Ukraine, that Europe couldn’t stand up and contribute more assistance to Ukraine."[88] In August 2024 Wallace was interviewed by Times Radio and said Ukraine "should be given the tools to finish the job" against Russia. He echoed past UKCGS Sir Patrick Sanders' exit remarks about Western nervousness over Russian nuclear sabre-rattling rhetoric.[89] In September Wallace, speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, said that the "tug of war" over long-range missiles that can strike targets in Russia, such as Storm Shadow, was repetitive nonsense and only helped Putin.[90]
Personal life
Wallace married Liza Cooke in 2001. They met when she was a researcher in the Scottish Parliament and Wallace was an MSP.[91] His wife worked as a part-time parliamentary assistant in his office until 30 April 2019.[92] They have since separated.[93] He has described the burden of his job on his private life as one of the regrets of his political career.[6] The couple have two sons and a daughter.[9] His children were divided on whether Wallace should have made a pitch for the Conservative leadership in 2022.[6]
Wallace divides his time between Lancashire and London.[94][95] Outside politics, he lists his recreations as skiing, sailing, rugby and horse racing.[96] He is a member of the Third Guards club.[9]
^ abcdeAndrew Gimson, "Profile: Ben Wallace, one of Johnson's Long Marchers, and a traditional but also irreverent Defence Secretary", ConservativeHome, 26 January 2021, accessed 8 July 2022