- Reaction score
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On the lighter side, an interesting photo shared via Twitter by a Brit sig in Suffield ....
daftandbarmy said:That's so the blood from the Craphats you're bashing doesn't splash in your eyes ;D
daftandbarmy said:And here's another kind of British 'probing' that won't turn out so well either:
Tortured: Young Army recruit tells how he went AWOL after becoming a victim of brutal bullying
Distressing image exposes culture of bullying inside decorated regiment
A TEENAGE soldier is pinned to a bed with his trousers pulled down – as comrades torture him for refusing to go out drinking.
These distressing images – printed with the permission of the victim – today expose an alleged culture of brutal bullying inside one of Britain’s most decorated regiments.
Taken at the German headquarters of the famous Rifles infantry division, they show the recruit – fresh out of basic training – being stripped half naked, tied up and subjected to humiliating physical abuse by soldiers in the same unit.
His hands and feet are bound together with tape as four soldiers pin him to the floor.
In one image, an attacker is shown targeting his genitals. In another, he is held face-down as he desperately tries to protect his bare backside with his bound hands.
The victim, 18, whose identity we are protecting, has returned to the UK after going absent without leave and faces time in a military jail.
He said of the abuse he has suffered: “You learn to take it. If you complain, it just gets worse, so you keep your mouth shut.”
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tortured-young-army-recruit-tells-2259512#ixzz2eLrRNQ4Y
Prince William will leave his full-time armed forces job, ending more than seven and a half years with the British military to focus on his royal duties and charity work, Kensington Palace announced Thursday.
The Duke of Cambridge is “currently considering a number of options for public service,” the palace said in a statement about Flight Lt. Wales, as he is known to his Royal Air Force comrades.
Prince William, 31, has worked as a search-and-rescue helicopter pilot since 2009, resulting in the rescue of 149 individuals, the palace said.
The move was not an unexpected one for the prince, who is third in line to the British throne. Still, leaving the military will be a tough change for William, said royal watcher Robert Jobson, author of “The New Royal Family — Prince George, William and Kate, The Next Generation.”
“He loved it,” Jobson told TODAY’s Michelle Kosinski. “He’s going to have to serve queen and country in a very different way. He’s going to be king one day, so he needs to knuckle down and get on with it.”
......
Today.com
Tory MPs revolt over Army cuts
Ministers are facing a revolt by Conservative MPs over plans to cut the size of the regular Army by 20,000 while boosting the numbers of part-time soldiers.
By Patrick Hennessy, Political editor
14 Sep 2013
Some 25 backbenchers have written to Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, asking him to halt the proposals to disband regular infantry battalions.
The rebels tell the Coalition that it needs to make a choice on its financial priorities —“ensuring the defence of the realm or funding white elephants such as HS2 [the rail line]”.
However, in a sign of the political heat surrounding the cutbacks, a source close to Mr Hammond accused critics of “sniping from the sidelines” and “talking down” the abilities of Britain’s reservists.
Mr Hammond revealed last year that he wanted to double the size of the Territorial Army from 15,000 to 30,000 to plug the gap opened up by moves to cut the strength of the regular Army from 102,000 to 82,000.
Many of the cutbacks have gone through, but at least one more round of redundancies is expected to be announced in the next few months.
However, in a serious blow for the Defence Secretary, the backbenchers warn that the proposals will not deliver the expected cost savings.
They say the plans are “clearly born of financial necessity and not strategic design” and are “high-risk in this increasingly uncertain world”.
The group, led by John Baron, the Tory MP for Basildon and Billericay and a former Army captain, says Mr Hammond’s move will lead to a “capability gap” for Britain’s forces, which will lose 20,000 “experienced and battle-hardened regular troops”.
These will be replaced by “untested reservist personnel”, the MPs add.
Mr Baron claims the plans were motivated by cost and not by an awareness of the challenges troops will face in the future.
The Defence Reform Bill, which contains the detailed plans for boosting the numbers of reserve troops, will be voted on in the Commons in the next few months. A substantial revolt could see the Government risking an embarrassing defeat.
Mr Baron, who says his fellow signatories include former ministers, claims there are “reliable reports of the Ministry of Defence’s failure to meet its reserve recruitment targets”, despite a recruitment drive including television advertisements with the aim of hitting 30,000 by 2018. The MPs say in their letter that serving ministers have failed to give them “comprehensive answers” and have called for full details of planned cost savings.
Critics of the plan to boost reserve numbers have also claimed they are flawed as many employers — in particular those running smaller firms — will not want to lose staff for several months while they are deployed overseas.
The MPs are calling for the regular Army cutbacks to be halted “at the very least ... until we are sure that the Army Reserve plans will work”.
They add: “We suggest that the Government’s reservist plans are already having a distorting effect on the ground. Well-recruited battalions are being disbanded whilst more poorly recruited, and therefore expensive, battalions are being preserved. Such a policy simply reinforces failure.”
Ministers have admitted the plans to increase the Territorial Army are a “challenge” and say they have found an extra £1.8 billion to boost training, support and equipment in the reserves over the next decade.
An MoD source said last night: “The restructuring of the Army is well under way to make sure we tailor our forces to the budget available following the financial mess Labour left.
“Instead of the larger, ill-equipped forces of the past we are creating smaller but better-equipped forces for the future.
“Instead of sniping from the sidelines about decisions taken nearly three years ago, people with vested interests need to get behind our reserves rather than talking them down.”
Other signatories to the letter include James Clappison (Hertsmere), Jack Lopresti (Filton & Bradley Stoke), Philip Hollobone (Kettering), Richard Drax (South Dorset), Philip Davies (Shipley) and Julian Lewis (New Forest East). Mr Clappison said: “I am a traditional Conservative who believes that defence should be our highest priority. We cannot take any risks with it.”
The Government embarked on a round of cutbacks following the 2010 Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR), which provided for an eight per cent spending reduction for the MoD over four years. David Cameron admitted then that it would be a “step change in the way we protect this country’s security interests”.
As well as the reductions in personnel, HMS Ark Royal, the aircraft carrier, was decommissioned four years early, while the RAF’s Harrier jump jets were axed, and planned Nimrod reconnaissance planes were cancelled.
There were reductions in the number of tanks and heavy artillery, while the total number of frigates and destroyers was planned to drop from 23 to 19 by 2020.
The next SDSR is slated for 2015 and the Prime Minister has warned there may have to be further defence cuts after that. Mr Baron says in an online commentary for telegraph.co.uk: “Plans to replace 20,000 regular troops with 30,000 reservists will prove a cut too far.
“It will not produce the cost savings envisaged, but will create unacceptable capability gaps which may yet cost us dear. Our future forces will need to be even more professional and flexible – shortcuts will be a high-risk strategy. It is quite clear the Government’s proposals are decisions borne of financial necessity and not strategic design. Once again, it comes down to financial priorities, but here the stakes could not be higher — funding white elephants, such as HS2, or ensuring the defence of the realm.”
An MoD spokesman said: “Tough decisions had to be taken to tackle the multi-billion-pound deficit left behind in defence by the previous government. We are reshaping our Armed Forces to ensure they are properly equipped and more adaptable to future challenges and threats.
“To bring us better into line with our closest allies, who make much more use of reserve forces, we are investing £1.8 billion in more modern equipment, increased training and incentives, as we build a fully integrated Army with regulars and reserves training and operating alongside each other.
“The Army is confident of its ability to increase the Army Reserve from a trained strength of 19,000 to 30,000.”
E.R. Campbell said:A backbench revolt appears to be brewing according to this article which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from The Telegraph:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/10310013/John-Baron-defence-cuts-army-regulars-reserve.html
See this for a look at what the Tory backbenchers find so objectionable.
I sympathize with their discontent but I cannot see a"better""easier"place to cut than defence ~ almost everything else, everything big enough to matter, anyway, is either a) critical to economic recovery, or b) politically untouchable.
Kirkhill said:Perhaps that is what you intended sir.
E.R. Campbell said:I agree cutting defence is easy but, as I have said many times: except in extremis, defence spending is counter-productive, for pretty much everyone except the USA and, maybe, China ~ not just unproductive, it is, really, counterproductive, so cutting defence spending is, economically, a "good" thing. And a good choice, compared to several less good ones, is "better," no?