The committee was established in 1902 by
Arthur Balfour, then
British Prime Minister, following the recommendations of
St John Brodrick and
Lord Selborne, respectively
Secretary of State for War and
First Lord of the Admiralty. In 1904, on the recommendation of the
Esher Committee, it was given a
secretariat. The original concept was to create a strategic vision defining the future roles of the two military services, the
Royal Navy and the
British Army, after the military reductions in the wake of the Boer War. However, no arrangements were made for it to formally pass on its conclusions to those with the ability to translate them into actions. This lack soon became obvious enough that a Secretariat was appointed, under
Sir George Clarke. In addition to acting as a communicator, Clarke was tasked with making sure that the policies agreed to by the committee were implemented. With the fall of the Balfour Government in December 1905, and with the military services determined to control their own futures, these plans fell through, and with no support from the incoming Prime Minister, he resigned in 1907. A small Secretariat became permanent and provided communication between members outside of Committee meetings, and with other
civil servants. Under the guidance of
Maurice Hankey, the Committee slowly gained in importance. Hankey was appointed Naval Assistant Secretary to the Committee in 1908, and became Secretary to the Committee in 1912; he would hold that position for the next twenty-six years. By 1914, the Committee had begun to act as a defence planning agency for the whole British Empire, consequently providing advice to the
Dominions on occasion. It continued to perform such a role into the 1920s. It was effectively a peacetime defence planning system, one which only provided advice; formal authority remained with Ministers and service chiefs, which helped ensure the Committee's acceptability to the existing
bureaucracy. Chaired by the Prime Minister, members were usually cabinet ministers, the heads of the military services, and key civil servants;
Prime Ministers from Dominion countries were
de facto members of the Committee in peacetime as well. The Committee became the Defence Committee in 1947. == See also ==