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British Military Current Events

No more defence cuts, says David Cameron

Defence spending will rise again to avert the threat of fresh cuts to the Armed Forces, David Cameron has promised.

The Prime Minister has moved to reassure Armed Forces chiefs by pledging that the Treasury will increase defence spending above inflation from 2015, even as it cuts other Whitehall departments’ budgets.

Mr Cameron’s commitment emerged during a trip to north Africa to discuss the fight against al-Qaeda, which this week saw him deploy more than 300 British troops to the region.

Senior government sources said that Mr Cameron will stand by a pledge he made to increase defence spending in real terms in the second half of this decade, in order to offset deep cuts made in the Coalition’s defence review.

The renewed promise came after The Daily Telegraph highlighted commanders’ fears that more defence cuts in 2015-16 could threaten military capabilities, including special forces like the SAS.

In talks in Algiers last night, Mr Cameron offered to deploy SAS troops to support Algerian security forces in tackling Islamic terrorists.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9838305/No-more-defence-cuts-says-David-Cameron.html



 
Lucky guy. I assume they let him go as a message to others. I doubt it was Russians though, unless the IRA contracted them in some way:

Missing Irish tycoon reappears after eight months — with ‘thief’ carved on forehead — claiming torture by Russian mafia

An Irish property developer, who went missing for eight months, has told police he was kidnapped and tortured by the Russian mafia.

Kevin McGeever, 68, was found wandering, lost and emaciated on a remote country road near the border with Northern Ireland, apparently with the word “thief” carved across his forehead.
He was barefoot and covered in a plastic bag, but was carrying a cellphone and a flashlight.

http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/02/01/missing-irish-tycoon-reappears-after-eight-months-with-thief-carved-on-forehead-claiming-torture-by-russian-mafia/
 
People who abuse troops must face tougher punishments, Labour says

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9841788/People-who-abuse-troops-must-face-tougher-punishments-Labour-says.html

Abusing members of the Armed Forces should be treated as a hate crime, Labour MPs will say in the Commons today.

Thomas Docherty. Labour MP for Dunfermline and West Fife, has a private members bill which aims to increase the punishments given to anyone who commits a crime against service personnel.

It would put members of the Armed Forces in the same bracket as disabled, gay, transgender and ethnic minority crime victims.

Mr Docherty’s amendment to the Criminal Justice Act would mean that offences committed towards serving troops, their families, veterans members of the reserve forces would be treated as “aggravated”.

Jim Murphy, the shadow defence secretary, said it was “unacceptable” that members of the Armed Forces face abuse in the UK.

He said that the Government “should protect” troops.

A poll of troops last year found that nearly one in 20 members of the Armed Forces said they had experienced violence or threats of violence.

Of the troops polled, around per cent also said that members of the public had shouted abuse at them while they were wearing their uniform.

Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, last year conceded that there was “still more we can do” to ensure that troops are treated “with the dignity they deserve”.

Another survey carried out last year found that almost one in five military personnel has been refused service in pubs, hotels and shops because they were in uniform.

In one case highlighted by the report, a member of the Royal Navy was told by his son’s head teacher to stop wearing his uniform on the school run because it “upset the parents”.

A female RAF recruiter said that on more than one occasion members of the public have screamed “baby killer” at her as she walked to work in her uniform.

The study also disclosed how servicemen and women face discrimination such as being refused mortgages and even mobile phone contracts as a result of being in the Armed Forces.
 
Mini helicopter drone for UK troops in Afghanistan

British soldiers in Afghanistan have become the first to use miniature surveillance helicopters in frontline operations.

The drones can fly around corners and obstacles to identify potential hidden dangers, the Ministry of Defence said.

The Norwegian-designed Black Hornet Nano features a tiny camera and relays video and still images to a handheld control terminal.

It measures about 10cm by 2.5cm (4in by 1in) and weighs 16g (0.6oz).
The MoD, which also operates more than 300 larger-sized unmanned air vehicles in Afghanistan, said the Black Hornet is carried easily on patrol and works in harsh environments and windy conditions.

They have been in use in Afghanistan since 2012, a spokeswoman confirmed.
Surrey-based Marlborough Communications has a £20m contract with the military to supply and maintain 160 of the drones, which were originally developed by Prox Dynamics for search and rescue operations.

Mini drones can be piloted directly or programmed to follow co-ordinates using GPS.
Powered by battery, the Black Hornet is reported to have a range of about half a mile (800m), a top speed of 22mph (35kph) and can fly for up to 30 minutes.

They can help soldiers on the ground pinpoint hidden Taliban fighters and explosives.
Sgt Christopher Petherbridge, of the Brigade Reconnaissance Force in Afghanistan, said: "We used it to look for insurgent firing points and check out exposed areas of the ground before crossing, which is a real asset.

"It is very easy to operate and offers amazing capability to the guys on the ground."
Defence minister Philip Dunne said intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems were a "key component" of the MoD's investment in new equipment over the next 10 years.
Spending outlined last month also includes almost £36bn for a new generation of nuclear-powered submarines, almost £19bn for combat aircraft, and around £17bn for Royal Navy warships.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21313323

 
Rise in post-traumatic stress disorder rates among British troops

New diagnoses of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in British service personnel have increased, official figures show.

A total of 94 members of the armed forces were newly registered as suffering the disorder between July and September last year, nearly four times the 25 diagnoses recorded in the same period in 2008.

There were 305 new cases of PTSD among UK troops in the 12 months to September last year, double the 153 logged in 2007 to 2008, according to statistics released by the Defence Analytical Services and Advice.

Rates of mental disorders were found to be significantly higher in personnel who had served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Women, soldiers, RAF personnel and non-officer ranks were also more likely to suffer mental health problems.

PTSD is an anxiety disorder caused by stressful or frightening events. Its symptoms include flashbacks and insomnia, and it can develop many years on.

A spokesman for Combat Stress, a mental health charity for military veterans, told The Sun: "The nation is facing huge numbers of soldiers who will need help overcoming things they've experienced serving their country."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9849097/Rise-in-post-traumatic-stress-disorder-rates-among-British-troops.html
 
Row over renaming of Sandhurst hall after Bahrain donation

A Sandhurst tribute to the fallen of a First World War battle has been abandoned so a donation from the King of Bahrain can be honoured.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9875995/Row-over-renaming-of-Sandhurst-hall-after-Bahrain-donation.html


Meh, the Sultan of Brunei paid for the gymnasium. Maybe it will encourage some rich British folks to finally kick in! (Hellooooooo BP).

 
This is sheer brilliance...

David Cameron gives green light for aid cash to go on military

Hundreds of millions of pounds may be diverted to peacekeeping defence operations in bid to placate backbenchers

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2013/feb/21/david-cameron-aid-military

Hundreds of millions of pounds from Britain's aid budget are expected to be diverted to peacekeeping defence operations as the government moves to build up support on the Tory benches for overseas development.

Amid deep unease among Conservative MPs at the size of the £10bn aid budget, which has increased while defence spending has been cut, David Cameron said on Wednesday that he was "very open" to the idea of pooling more resources.

Speaking in Amritsar on the final leg of his Indian trip, the prime minister said difficult decisions would have to be taken by the chancellor, George Osborne, when he outlines the government's spending review for the first year after the 2015 general election.

"These spending rounds are always difficult," Cameron said as he praised the Treasury chief secretary, Danny Alexander, for criticising the "fiscal nimbyism" of some ministers who call for overall restraint while fighting to preserve their own budgets. He added: "I am sure the coalition will step up to the plate and make them."

No 10 said the aid budget could only be used to fund military spending in three areas – security, demobilisation and peacekeeping. The new funds would not be used for combat operations or combat equipment.
 
US and British plans to seize Syria's chemical weapons

British and American military commanders have drawn up plans to seize or destroy Syria’s chemical weapons if the country slides into further chaos.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/9889961/US-and-British-plans-to-seize-Syrias-chemical-weapons.html

 
Why this incessant need to advertise what you are going to do.....?  Just do it and tell me about after.
 
GAP said:
Why this incessant need to advertise what you are going to do.....?  Just do it and tell me about after.

Because our current crop of leaders think its "unfair" if we just go and do it, then tell.

Or it's disinformation to get Syria to hand it over......
 
GAP said:
Why this incessant need to advertise what you are going to do.....?  Just do it and tell me about after.

"A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."

Churchill
 
John Kerry refuses to back Britain in battle over Falklands as new US Secretary of State kickstarts first global tour in London | Mail Online

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2284215/John-Kerry-refuses-Britain-battle-Falklands-new-US-Secretary-State-kickstarts-global-tour-London.html
 
daftandbarmy said:
John Kerry refuses to back Britain in battle over Falklands as new US Secretary of State kickstarts first global tour in London | Mail Online

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2284215/John-Kerry-refuses-Britain-battle-Falklands-new-US-Secretary-State-kickstarts-global-tour-London.html


So much for the "special relationship."
 
E.R. Campbell said:
So much for the "special relationship."

Yes indeed. We'll see how well any future US led 'Coalition of the Willing' works without the British jumping on the bandwagon first....

Two 'opes mate: Bob and Envel
 
daftandbarmy said:
Yes indeed. We'll see how well any future US led 'Coalition of the Willing' works without the British jumping on the bandwagon first....

Two 'opes mate: Bob and Envel

Unfortunately, the British Lion has been the US' lap kitty for too long to let this interfere with stepping up when told asked to.
 
Philip Hammond: cut welfare not troops

The Defence Secretary today warns that the Armed Forces cannot sustain further cuts and demands that the welfare bill is reduced to reflect rising levels of employment instead.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9903911/Philip-Hammond-cut-welfare-not-troops.html
 
Revealed: nearly half of Special Forces could go in deepest cuts in 50 years

Full details of the biggest cuts programme to Britain’s Special Forces in almost half a century can be disclosed.

The elite units could be cut by up to 40 per cent, with two famous Territorial SAS regiments being “demoted” to serving with the regular Army, The Sunday Telegraph has learnt.

The restructuring programme is designed to return the Special Forces to their pre-Iraq War footing as a smaller, less expensive, but highly capable covert organisation.

The proposals will be presented by the director of Special Forces – the officer in control of the Special Air Service (SAS), the Special Boat Service (SBS) and other units – to Gen Sir David Richards, the Chief of the Defence Staff, in the next few weeks.

The plan includes:

* Reducing the SBS from four to three squadrons, but leaving the SAS intact;


* Taking the 21 and 23 SAS territorial units out of the Special Forces command and making them part of the regular Army Reserves;

* Major cuts to the Special Forces Support Group, which provides logistics, communications and other support to the SAS and SBS;

* Ending the independent role of the Special Reconnaissance Regiment (SRR), which was only set up in 2005.

The changes involve the loss of hundreds of posts, and come after a warning on Saturday from Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, that further defence budget cuts cannot be sustained.

The restructuring is part of existing savings, but Mr Hammond said that going further would mean “expensively trained troops may not be able to be exercised and trained as regularly as they need to be”. His intervention came before the June spending review and as he pushed for welfare cuts, which George Osborne, the Chancellor, has privately suggested must be the focus.

It is understood that an initial review of the future of the Special Forces Group was produced last year by senior officers in the Ministry of Defence, listing a series of recommendations now being enacted by a team in the headquarters of the Directorate of Special Forces.

The proposals, which would be carried out after Britain’s withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014, have divided opinion, with many seasoned soldiers describing them as “madness”. But senior commanders have ruled that the Special Forces must “share in the pain” of cuts. The current Special Forces Group stands at around 3,500 soldiers and marines, but the cuts could result in a reduction to between 1,750 and 2,000.

Of all the proposals, the reduction in the size of the SBS and the loss of the two territorial SAS units from the Special Forces Group are the most controversial. The MoD is likely to face strong resistance and will be under pressure to withdraw the plans.

The SBS, formed during the Second World War, has fought in every major conflict in the past 70 years. It expanded in 2004 to meet the extra requirement for covert missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Keeping the unit at full strength has been a constant problem, partly because its recruiting base, the Royal Marines, is relatively small.

Equally controversial is the removal of 21 (Artists) and 23 SAS, both territorial units, from the Special Forces Group and their placement within the regular Army.

The relationship between the regular and territorial SAS has become strained in recent years with the TA units seen as the “poor relation” in terms of expertise and equipment.

Although the TA units have not supported their regular colleagues on covert operations in Afghanistan, they play a vital role in intelligence gathering and mentoring Afghan police. Three members of 21 SAS were awarded Military Crosses in 2009.

The SRR, which recruits from all three services, will also have its role diminished in what has been described as a “loss of independence”.

It was created from a covert intelligence gathering detachment called 14 Intelligence Company, which operated almost exclusively in Northern Ireland, and has operated primarily in Iraq and Afghanistan. After 2014, it will reduce in size and support the SAS and SBS rather than conducting independent operations.

The Special Forces Support Group, which is composed of members of the Parachute Regiment with additional troops from the Royal Marines and the RAF, was created in 2006 and has operated primarily in Iraq and Afghanistan supporting the SAS and SBS. After 2014 its strength could be cut by two thirds to about 200 troops.

A senior source with knowledge of the proposals said: “There is still a need for both the SRR and the SFSG, just not in the numbers required. Every unit has to justify its existence and the Special Forces are no different.

“They are not so special that they are immune from defence cuts. The Special Forces Group will still be larger than it was before 2001, just not as big as it is today.”

The plan ends the longest period of sustained growth for the Special Forces since the Second World War. The increases began with the response to the September 11 terror attacks.

Initially the expansion was greeted with scepticism, with many senior SAS troops saying the move would lead to a “dilution of quality” required for special operations. But those claims were refuted by a series of combat successes in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as praise from US commanders.

Until recently, the received opinion within the Armed Forces was that the SAS and the SBS, which have notched up an unbroken period of almost 12 years of combat operations, were immune from the defence cuts.

In Iraq, the SAS and the SBS formed part of Task Force Black, the US and British covert antiterrorist unit specifically aimed at al-Qaeda, and played a direct role in the killing of Abu Musab al Zarqawi, the group’s leader.

In Afghanistan, they have captured and killed hundreds of middle-ranking and senior members of the Taliban and al-Qaeda. British Special Forces have also taken part in, and advised on, hostage rescue operations involving UK and US nationals and helped train Afghan special forces.

An MoD spokesman insisted that the Government recognised the “strategic value and long term importance” of the Special Forces.

He added: “Furthermore, the Prime Minister has committed to significantly increase investment to ensure this elite group retain their cutting edge operational capability.

“As we draw down in Afghanistan, we will review the supporting infrastructure to ensure those front-line units have the support they require.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9904772/Revealed-nearly-half-of-Special-Forces-could-go-in-deepest-cuts-in-50-years.html
 
I think they are going to regret that decision.....
 
From Sir Humphrey at  Thin Pinstriped Line:

"...
The sheer cost of acquiring and running a conventional carrier and airwing is now simply too great for all but the largest spending nations – even the RN has probably sacrificed its pre-eminence to afford the Queen Elizabeth class and JSF. It is perhaps telling that reading the SDSR and other documents one finds plenty of discussion about the use of CVF in roles other than fixed wing carrier, and it seems unlikely that it will be many years, if not decades before CVF sees more than 12 JSF operating from its decks. So, if the RN cannot afford to run carriers, then there is little hope for smaller European navies. While it is perhaps tempting to talk in terms of shared acquisition for a future carrier programme for the Spanish and Italian Navies, which could enable a shared airgroup, the reality is such a deal is unlikely to come to pass. Both nations have different requirements, and are unlikely to be able to afford the cost of a fixed wing carrier and airgroup. Indeed, when one realises that the Charles De Gaulle is now approaching middle age, and with no sign of a second hull under construction, or replacement for the Rafale under way, it is perhaps worth considering if the French themselves may be forced to bow out of the carrier game in the next 15-20 years?

It is perhaps less surprising that the RN will only routinely operate 12 F35 from a CVF, and we should be more impressed that fund will be found to get 12 onto a carrier in the first place. The sheer cost of carrier capable aircraft means that for most nations, even 12 airframes is going to be unaffordable. While it is easy to mock the RN for having large platforms and small airwings, this is perhaps little different from the 1960s, when despite our fond memories, the reality was that the average RN airwing was barely 20 aircraft including helos. Even then, the CVF airwing will be able to put more airpower to sea than almost any other country – its easy to be despondent that the UK will deploy small numbers of aircraft, but perhaps we should be more positive about the fact that we remain one of the very few nations able to afford to invest in such a capability in the first place..."
http://thinpinstripedline.blogspot.ca/2013/03/is-end-of-aircraft-carrer-nigh-rapid.html

Mark
Ottawa
 
A "twofer" Mark?

It wasn't enough to post this on the F35 thread?
 
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