CONSERVATIVE
New Forest East

DEFENCE – DIEGO GARCIA MILITARY BASE AND BRITISH INDIAN OCEAN TERRITORY BILL - 09 September 2025

DEFENCE – DIEGO GARCIA MILITARY BASE AND BRITISH INDIAN OCEAN TERRITORY BILL - 09 September 2025

Sir John Whittingdale: There are also serious strategic concerns that the Government have not yet properly addressed. As has already been mentioned, an element of the agreement involves a requirement for us to “expeditiously inform” Mauritius of any armed attack on a third state directly emanating from the base. When the Minister gave evidence to the Committee, I pressed him on whether that would require advance notification –

The Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (Stephen Doughty) indicated assent.

Sir John Whittingdale: He is nodding. He gave me a very firm assurance that that was not the case. That is of some reassurance, but it does not go far enough. The fact that we are no longer able to carry out actions from our own base without then having to notify Mauritius, and presumably take note of any objection it has, represents a limitation that could well affect decisions as to where to deploy assets.

Sir Julian Lewis rose

Sir John Whittingdale: I shall give way to my right hon. Friend, who is an expert on these matters.

Sir Julian Lewis: If this means that we do not have to inform Mauritius in advance of a direct armed attack from the base, presumably it means that we have to inform it as soon as possible after such an attack. If such an attack were an overt attack, Mauritius would presumably know about it already because everyone would have seen it, so this rather suggests that we might have to inform it if there had been some sort of covert attack that other people had not seen and that it would otherwise not know about. Is that a satisfactory situation?

Sir John Whittingdale: My right hon. Friend makes a fair point. A requirement for us to tell the Mauritians what has been happening from the base is exactly what might influence decisions as to its use for operations of the kind he describes. The Minister gave evidence to the Committee on this point just a few days, I think, after the Americans had launched their attack on Iran, which did not involve Diego Garcia. That was something I raised with the Minister.

[ ... ]

The Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (Stephen Doughty): ... I want to reiterate our commitment to expeditiously inform Mauritius of military action. Let me repeat for the record: we are not obliged to give Mauritius advance notice of any action under the treaty. No sensitive intelligence will be shared, nor operations put at risk – it is there on the face of the treaty. Our allies, especially the United States under two Administrations, have gone through it with a fine-toothed comb. They would not be supporting this deal and signing off on it if that operational autonomy was not protected. ...