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Statement of Intent 1 July 2010 - 30 June 2013

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Managing in a changeable environment

Assessing the broader operating environment

Decisions concerning capability requirements involve large sums of money, and influence our foreign and security policy options for decades. Equally, decisions concerning the deployment of military forces involve the lives of service people, and difficult policy choices. Taking a long-term view of the broader operating environment informs our advice on these issues, ensuring that our military capabilities remain aligned with our requirements, and that the New Zealand Defence Force is deployed in ways that best support our interests.

The Defence Assessment has incorporated a thorough analysis of the conditions affecting defence over the coming years. This assessment, and the subsequent White Paper, will influence all facets of the Ministry's work.

The Assessment also presented an excellent opportunity to deliver defence policy, capabilities and operations that deliver on the Government's defence objectives while remaining affordable within the current constrained fiscal environment.

The Ministry's position within the security sector

The Ministry of Defence is a security sector agency. Our assessment of the drivers influencing defence is developed in conjunction with our partner security agencies, principally the New Zealand Defence Force, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Our partner agencies have provided a high degree of input into the Defence Assessment.

The Ministry supports efforts to achieve a whole of government approach to managing security. The challenge is to align defence policies, capabilities, and operations to the foreign policy environment and to wider government objectives. As part of this, the Ministry will support a sectoral approach to outcome achievement and reporting.

Our close relationship with the Headquarters of the New Zealand Defence Force is formalised through a series of committees and shared processes that manage capability development and other defence business. Routine informal collaboration complements the formal arrangements.

Ministry of Defence officials liaise routinely with staff from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the Treasury, and the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. We participate in central government security and crisis management arrangements.

Strategic Management

The Ministry is seeking to develop a more systematic and broadly based approach to its strategic planning. This approach will focus, in particular, on the formulation of strategic direction, outcomes and output statements, and the alignment between these and outcomes from elsewhere in the security sector. This work will lead to a clearer articulation of the Ministry's goals, sharper performance measurement, and better management of risks. As an initial step in this process, this Statement of Intent aims to provide a better description of the value the Ministry adds to the achievement of the Government's objectives.

Specific challenges facing the Ministry of Defence

Ensuring the Ministry has access to the knowledge, skills and experience necessary for it to produce its outputs

The Ministry's principal resource is its staff. In certain specialised areas – legal, financial, commercial – the Ministry has been under resourced, in part because of the difficulty in a competitive labour market of recruiting and retaining staff in a small organisation. This risk has been mitigated by contracting services from outside.

Both the finance and acquisition functions of the Ministry have been reviewed in various contexts recently. As a result, and pending further examination in the Defence Assessment, the finance team has been reshaped and the acquisition team has been strengthened with new permanent appointments. Further consideration is being given to the best way to deliver legal advice on procurement.

Ensuring Crown projects are delivered on time, within budget and according to the functional requirements specified

The most significant financial and capability risk the Ministry faces is in the delivery of individual acquisition projects to the New Zealand Defence Force. Delays in introduction and cost overruns can greatly affect the New Zealand Defence Force's ability to generate military capability. We are boosting our ability to manage risk in the acquisition area. Individual acquisition projects undergo comprehensive risk analysis, mitigation and management. The Acquisition Division maintains certification to ISO 9001 for quality management processes and outcomes. The Capability Management Framework has provided a direction for establishing mechanisms for defining the capabilities required of the New Zealand Defence Force. It also provides a means for identifying the risks and opportunities prior to any equipment procurement.

Specifically, on the three principal components:

Business continuity

The Ministry has a Business Continuity policy and plan which will continue to be tested in scenario exercises.

Disaster Recovery within the Ministry of Defence is currently focused on a localised disruption to Information Management and Technology services. This is to be extended to a regional disaster case scenario to support the critical functions of the Ministry and Government. The areas of main focus will be in protecting and maintaining access to the Ministry's core information and providing accessibility to key staff.

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