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British Military Current Events

Fire bomber 'own goal'. It doesn't get much better than that.

Apparently he was seen with an Arm Alight  ;D

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-25412487
 
'Cowards' who celebrated after brutally beating up Afghanistan veteran and robbing him are jailed for a total of 12 years

Five men attacked Army Air Corps soldier Jack Shilton, 21, like a 'pack of wolves'

Mr Shilton is based at RAF Wattisham where Prince Harry trained in 2011-12

He was left with a bruised kidney and suspected broken ribs from the attack

Jerran Hart, 22, was jailed for three years and six months while Adam Poulter, 26, was jailed for three years and nine months after a trial

Matthew Kersey, 30, was jailed for 32 months while Jamie Duncan, 23, was jailed for 30 months after pleading guilty to robbery

Mitchell Ambrose, 20, admitted robbery and will be sentenced at a later date

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2489913/Cowards-brutally-beat-Afghan-veteran-robbing-jailed-total-12-years.html#ixzz2q2Eyk1Nf
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 
Honours bias 'favours officers over soldiers'

Soldiers from the lower ranks have been overlooked in the honours system, critics argue, with far more awards going to officers

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/10565747/Honours-bias-favours-officers-over-soldiers.html
 
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Army recruitment campaign launched with new TV advert

The Army has launched a new recruitment campaign, complete with a slick television advert, which aims to attract new sign-ups to both the regular and reserve forces

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/10565400/Army-recruitment-campaign-launched-with-new-TV-advert.html

 
Apparently, HRH Prince Charles will never change:

BS0fkenCcAA2m4o.jpg:large


I cannot "source" this. A link to the source, so we can priorly acknowledge it, would be appreciated.
 
Ministry of Defence pays 80 officials more than £100,000

MoD pays 80 officials paid over £100,000 each, official figures show as ministers prepare to make thousands of troops redundant


The Ministry of Defence is paying 80 officials more than £100,000 each as it prepares to make thousands of soldiers redundant later this year.


Official figures reveal that 85 staff at the Ministry of Defence are earning six figure salaries, with the highest earning more than £800,000.


The figures were released as part of a Cabinet Office transparency drive. Across the public service, more than 800 mandarins and "quangocrats" are earning more than £100,000 - nearly four times higher than previously thought.


The highest earners at the Ministry of Defence are Bernard Gray, the chief of defence materiel, who is paid £220,000 a year, and Andrew Manley, chief executive of the Defence Infrastructure Organisation.


Mr Manley, who was recently suspended over his expense claims, earns £200,000 a year. He is being investigated over whether his relationship with his female chief of staff was “inappropriate”.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/10567095/Ministry-of-Defence-pays-80-officials-more-than-100000.html
 
Royal Marines prepare to rescue stranded cars

The Royal Marines are called in to rescue cars that were cut off during flooding in the village of Calstock on the River Tamar in Cornwall

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/10574646/Royal-Marines-prepare-to-rescue-stranded-cars.html
 
::)


SAS gave me envelope stuffed with £500 to keep quiet about Diana, says ex-wife of sniper who claimed Princess was murdered by the regiment

Incredible story of key witness that has a terrifying ring of truth
SAS officer 'warned her that she would end up dead like Lee Rigby'
She has now gone into hiding claiming she fears for her own safety
Sniper husband claimed that the SAS was ‘behind’ Princess Diana’s death


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2541923/SAS-wifes-bombshell-Regiment-bribed-silent-Diana-murder-claims.html#ixzz2qnvcabEq
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 
daftandbarmy said:
::)


SAS gave me envelope stuffed with £500 to keep quiet about Diana, says ex-wife of sniper who claimed Princess was murdered by the regiment

Incredible story of key witness that has a terrifying ring of truth
SAS officer 'warned her that she would end up dead like Lee Rigby'
She has now gone into hiding claiming she fears for her own safety
Sniper husband claimed that the SAS was ‘behind’ Princess Diana’s death


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2541923/SAS-wifes-bombshell-Regiment-bribed-silent-Diana-murder-claims.html#ixzz2qnvcabEq
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Indeed. Tin foil hats and all.....
 
Jim Seggie said:
Indeed. Tin foil hats and all.....


The Yanks had (have) JKF; the Brits have Princess Di ... what about us? Much as I liked Gerda Munsinger ...

5349896.jpg

Canada's first major political sex scandal involved Gerda Munsinger, an alleged East German prostitute and Soviet spy living in
Ottawa who admitted to sleeping with a number of ministers in John Diefenbaker's cabinet. Most notably, between 1958
and 1961, Pierre Sevigny, Diefenbaker's associate minister of national defence, had an affair with Munsinger.
(Winnipeg Free Press)


... I don't think she quite "measured up" to Christine Keller and Mandy Rice-Davies who bought down UK (also Tory) defence minister John Profumo.

keeler-rice-davies-433728.jpg

Christine Keeler and Mandy Rice-Davies were call girls with whom several senior UK folks
had dalliances.


And I don't think Margaret Trudea boffing some (all?) of the Rolling Stones counts for much.

margaret_trudeau_mick_jagger.jpg

Much (Canadian) ado about
not very much at all
 
Al-Qaeda training British and European 'jihadists' in Syria to set up terror cells at home

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/10582945/Al-Qaeda-training-British-and-European-jihadists-in-Syria-to-set-up-terror-cells-at-home.html

Al-Qaeda training hundreds of British and European jihadis in Syria - and telling them to return home to set up terror cells

British people fighting in Syria are being trained as “jihadists” and then encouraged to return to the UK to launch attacks on home soil, an al-Qaeda defector and western security sources have told the Telegraph.


In a rare interview on Turkey’s border with Syria, the defector from the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) said that recruits from Britain, Europe and the US were being indoctrinated in extremist anti-Western ideology, trained in how to make and detonate car bombs and suicide vests and sent home to start new terror cells.


He has provided the first confirmation from Syrian rebels that young British men are being indoctrinated in extremist anti-Western ideology.


Some of those intent on overthrowing the Syrian regime are being brainwashed by fanatics, the former member of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) warned.
 
Funny my Dad and I were just talking about Margaret yesterday. He knew her dad, and we both thought she was quite the flake, my dad wondered why the media is so quiet about her?

Remember the old joke about PT going to Whistler to ski and someone peed into a snowbank "FU PT", so he calls in the RCMP to investigate and they com back; "We know for sure it's Joe Clark's pee, but it's in your wife's handwriting....."
 
MoD spent millions of pounds on 6,000 pistols which it ditched after just five years

Troops given the Sig Sauer guns for urgent self-protection in Afghanistan

But they were scrapped last year in favour of Austrian-made Glock 17s
Splurge came as MoD axed fighter jets, warships, tanks and 30,000 troops
Major: 'We've been having the military equivalent of a fast-food diet'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2543694/MoD-spent-millions-pounds-6-000-pistols-ditched-just-five-years.html#ixzz2r9N23QZz
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 
Cuts across the MoD:

Defense News

Gurkhas Among 1,500 British Military Job Losses
Jan. 23, 2014 - 01:40PM  |  By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

LONDON — More than 1,500 military personnel, including hundreds of Gurkhas, are to lose their jobs in a final round of redundancies aimed at reshaping Britain’s armed forces, the government said Thursday.

Up to 1,425 members of the army are to go, including around 350 members of the Brigade of Gurkhas, which has already suffered cuts in earlier rounds of job losses.

The job cuts are completed by up to 70 medical and dental officers from the Royal Air Force (RAF) and up to 10 from the Royal Navy, Defence Secretary Philip Hammond told parliament.


The fourth tranche of redundancies is part of an armed forces restructuring program which will see the regular army cut from 102,000 to 82,000 by 2020, while the newly-renamed Army Reserve — formerly the Territorial Army — is being expanded from 19,000 to 30,000.

Prime Minister David Cameron’s coalition government introduced deep defense cuts in 2010 as part of its bid to rein in Britain’s budget deficit.

Hammond acknowledged that the cuts had been a “painful process” but said that the final round of job losses marked “a turning point.”

“With the bulk of our troops back from Afghanistan by the end of this year and coming back from Germany over the next four years, they will be able to enjoy the peace of mind that comes from belonging to armed forces that have put a period of change and restructuring behind them and are focused on building their skills and capabilities for the future,” he told lawmakers.

Former US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said last week that the extent of the cuts to Britain’s military meant it could no longer be a “full partner” to American forces.

Cameron insisted Gates had “got it wrong” and that Britain remained a “first-class player” on the global stage.

Britain has not been able to launch jets at sea since the flagship carrier Ark Royal was withdrawn in 2010.

A new carrier will not enter service until 2020.

The Gurkhas, Nepalese fighters who are famed for their ferocity, have been part of Britain’s army for nearly 200 years. About 200,000 Gurkhas fought for Britain in World War I and World War II and more than 45,000 have died in British uniform.
 
The Daily Prole pronounces on Class War, as per SOP  ::)

Multicultural Britain rejecting foreign conflict, MoD admits

Exclusive: Repeat of Afghanistan-or-Iraq-style invasion ruled out for war-weary UK, according to senior officials


A growing reluctance in an increasingly multicultural Britain to see UK troops deployed on the ground in future operations abroad is influencing the next two strategic defence reviews, according to senior figures at the Ministry of Defence.

As well as a general feeling of war weariness, sources say they have sensed a resistance in an increasingly diverse nation to see British troops deployed in countries from which UK citizens, or their families, once came.

There is also concern that British troops have been seen taking action mainly in Muslim societies.

The MoD is still taking stock of the surprise decision of the House of Commons last summer to reject military intervention to punish President Assad of Syria for the use of chemical weapons against rebel forces.

Senior figures believe the rejection of that action was not just the by-product of a political battle between Labour and the government, but revealed deeper-seated long-term trends in British society.

One of the issues raised is improving the recruitment of British officers from minority ethnic communities.

Sources stress that they do not believe that a change in attitudes rules out overseas British intervention, but more will have to be planned on the basis of air and naval activity, rather than large-scale use of troops on the ground.

Future configurations would make the recent intervention in Libya possible, or the kind of relatively small-scale operations recently being undertaken by the French military in Africa last year, but not a repeat of Afghanistan or Iraq.

The sources cite a long-term weariness in the British population and the widespread perception that both Iraq and Afghanistan have not been worthwhile.

David Cameron has said British troops can return from Afghanistan with their heads held high at the end of this year, but polls suggest the war has become increasingly unpopular.

Ministers maintain that this high-level analysis about the decline of British militarism does not mean the army should be reduced further than the cuts due to be announced by the army on Thursday, when 1,400 more troops are expected to lose their jobs.

Ministers are also bracing themselves for strong criticism, probably this summer, by the marathon inquiry conducted by Sir John Chilcott over the UK's conduct in the run- up to the Iraq war in 2003.

Tony Blair has admitted to political allies that he expects it to be revealed that he gave George W Bush strong unequivocal support at a private summit in Texas in April 2002, well before the attack on Iraq, but will point to the fact that he was given an opportunity to draw back from the invasion.

The eventual budgetary health of the MoD may depend on whether the prime minister decides in the next parliament that the budget for health, schools and overseas aid should remain protected, so putting additional pressure on the Whitehall departments that are not protected – notably defence.

The defence secretary, Phillip Hammond, made efforts before the last spending review to blend some of his budget with that of overseas aid, but was repulsed by the very tight international definitions of overseas aid set by agencies such as the OECD.

It is likely that Hammond will press for the definitions to be re-examined or for the Conservative party to lift the ringfence on aid in its manifesto for the 2015 general election.

Speakingon Wednesday, the head of the British army, General Sir Peter Wall, expressed hope that the latest round of redundancies in the military to be announced in the Commons on Thursdaytoday would be the last.

Hammond is expected to disclose that a further 1,400 army jobs are to go, including about 350 Gurkhas. Although the total is about half of what had been widely predicted, it will be the fourth round of redundancies. The army has borne the brunt of them. The navy and air force are expected to escape relatively unscathed, with the RAF losing about 70.

Wall, chief of the general staff, speaking before the latest figures were published, told journalists he did not anticipate any further job losses after Thursdaytoday. "This draws a line under the forced exodus of people from the army," he said.

But Wall's view may not be shared by the Treasury, which could see the military post-Afghanistan as an easy way to make budget cuts and come back for more after next year's general election.

The redundancies put the army well on course to meet its target of cutting its force from 102,000 to 82,500 by 2010.

Wall said: "This redundancy tranche marks the final leg of our reduction of the army from its former strength to 82,500. It is the end of a period of particular uncertainty."

British forces are scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of the year, leaving only a few hundred behind to help with training and advice, assuming an agreement is reached with the Afghanistan government on retaining troops beyond 2014.

Much of the reduction of the force to 82,500 will the achieved through natural wastage. The army is struggling to recruit regulars and reservists in the face of falling unemployment and, with the end of involvement in Afghanistan, no immediate prospect of combat.

About 70% of the redundancies could be voluntary. The army is engaged in a marketing drive to try to secure more recruits. To try to fill gaps left by the cuts to the regular forces, it wants to increase the size of the reserves and to integrate them more into the regular force.

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/jan/22/multicultural-britain-foreign-conflict-mod
 
Well we certainly know what the Muslim community thinks about Britain's last two foreign conflicts after their "Hell for hero's" demonstration held last Remembrance Day. 
 
The cold, wet and tedious wait for the end of island life in Somerset

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/10608726/The-cold-wet-and-tedious-wait-for-the-end-of-island-life-in-Somerset.html

On the Somerset Levels on Thursday, it was hard to tell who was more bemused: the villagers who have been stranded for more than a month, or the tiny number of troops apparently sent to be their saviours.


As two Royal Marines climbed to the top of a mound and surveyed the scene, they must have realised they were facing an impossible task.


Submerged fields stretched for miles on all sides. It was not so much a question of “where shall we start?” as, “where does it end?” Clearly, this pair were never going to drain the fields on their own. They were, in fact, military planners, part of a small deployment to observe the damage and see what could be done to help the locals.


Villagers across the water were equally baffled. For more than a month now, around 28,000 acres of the county have been under water, engulfed by the rain that began before Christmas and failed to abate until the new year. Dozens of homes remain uninhabitable, and the worst-affected village, Muchelney, has become an island, only accessible by boat or particularly hardy 4x4s.


Across the country, further flooding is expected on Friday and over the weekend as more heavy rain combines with high tides and gale-force winds. The South West, Wales and parts of the South East will be particularly vulnerable.



In Somerset, local people have complained that the Government’s tardy response has left them “neglected”. On Monday, Owen Paterson, the Environment Secretary, was heckled on a visit. Many, therefore, welcomed David Cameron’s announcement on Wednesday that he would “rule nothing out” to tackle the flooding. The Army was placed on alert after a meeting of the Government’s emergency Cobra committee.

On Thursday morning, villagers in Muchelney were expectantly awaiting the arrival of troops and amphibious vehicles. In the event, however, the deployment was somewhat less dramatic. Rather than a contingent of combat-clad soldiers, the Ministry of Defence instead dispatched an army of clipboards.

During the morning, six Land Rovers were deployed to “recce” the farmland, to see whether the specialist vehicles were needed.

By dusk, there were no boots on the ground and the county council had declined offers of up to 100 troops to fill sandbags. Instead, the Army “remained on standby” in case conditions worsened.

One of the reconnaissance Land Rovers trundled into the small town of Langport shortly after midday. Two Royal Marines from 24 Commando Engineer Regiment climbed down to survey the scene before walking along a pontoon where the road gives way to water.

A mile across the water, the 200 self-styled islanders of Muchelney were unimpressed. “We’re a little bit bemused,” said Alistair Molineux, the chairman of the parish council, overseeing the relief effort in his tweed cap and Barbour jacket. “What we’re asking now is, why didn’t this happen on day one? Why did it take four weeks?”
 
Bloody Sunday: 1,000 witnesses to be questioned

Detectives investigating the events of Bloody Sunday in Derry are to begin questioning more than 1,000 witnesses.

Thirteen people were shot dead by the British Army on Sunday, 30 January 1972 at a civil rights march in the city.

A 14th man died later from his wounds.

In 2010, the Saville Inquiry into Bloody Sunday was heavily critical of the Army, finding that soldiers fired the first shot without issuing a warning.

The report also found that all of those who were killed were unarmed. Some of them were clearly fleeing or going to the assistance of others who were dying,

As part of the police investigation launched in 2012, detectives want to re-interview former soldiers and civilians who gave evidence to the Saville Inquiry or who may have information about the day.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-foyle-west-25959841
 
Interviewing people 30 years after the fact?  Was going to say something slagging the Irish 1/4 of my genes about them being so drunk most days that they'd need to check their driver's licences to remember their own names, much less something that happened 30 years ago, but took the higher road.

In all seriousness, soemthing tells me that the story they get may still be pretty one sided to be honest.  I'm willing to bet any PIRA/UVF clowns that were there certainly aren't going to admit to being agents provocateur.  Any of the Paras still about certainly aren't going to say they opened up on a bunch of unarmed civilians for shiggles either.

MM
 
medicineman said:
I'm willing to bet any PIRA/UVF clowns that were there certainly aren't going to admit to being agents provocateur. 

Martin-McGuinness_2038154b.jpg


tommy_m1921.jpg
 
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