You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Britain
RAF to shrink to World War One levels
2010-08-07
In the most significant changes to Britain's defences since the post-Suez review of 1957, ministers and officials plan to scrap large parts of the Armed Forces.

The Services will lose up to 16,000 personnel, hundreds of tanks, scores of fighter jets and half a dozen ships, under detailed proposals passed to The Daily Telegraph.

But the RAF will bear the brunt of the planned cuts. The Air Force will lose 7,000 airmen -- almost one sixth of its total staff -- and 295 aircraft. The cuts will leave the Force with fewer than 200 fighter planes for the first time since 1914. In addition, the Navy will lose two submarines, three amphibious ships and more than 100 senior officers, along with 2,000 sailors and marines.

The Army faces a 40 per cent cut to its fleet of 9,700 armoured vehicles and the loss of a 5,000-strong brigade of troops.

The Telegraph has also learnt that the "black hole" in MoD finances, caused by orders which have been made but cannot be paid for, is approaching £72  billion over the next decade -- double the amount previously suggested.

While the Strategic Defence and Security Review is yet to be finalised, officials have drawn up a series of likely options to meet cuts of 10 to 20 per cent demanded by the Treasury.

By the end of this month the Defence Strategy Group, comprising ministers and military chiefs, will be presented with a number of recommendations that they will refine and pass to the National Security Council, chaired by the Prime Minister, in September.

In October, after agreement with the Treasury, an announcement will be made in Parliament on precisely what cuts the Forces face as part of the comprehensive spending review of Whitehall budgets.

If implemented, the cuts will mean that Britain will almost certainly depart the world stage as a major military power and become what military chiefs call defenseless a "medium-scale player".
So long, Britain, nice knowing you. Labour, Conservative or Liberal Democrat, there's only one place to find the pocket change needed to run the NHS. Take a close look, America, this is headed our way.
Posted by:tipper

#9  Another year or two, and the Argies can take over the Falklands with a few skiffs.
Posted by: Alaska Paul at ANC   2010-08-07 17:35  

#8  The Mosquito was kind of the A10 of its day with the advantage that it was one of the fastest planes in the skies with a huge range.

I think the Hawker Hurricane was a better, tougher bird all around.
Posted by: badanov   2010-08-07 17:20  

#7  I'd have thought a Mosquito would be an ideal plane for Afghanistan/Pakistan close support.

The Mosquito was kind of the A10 of its day with the advantage that it was one of the fastest planes in the skies with a huge range.
Posted by: phil_b   2010-08-07 17:12  

#6  The Wapiti
Posted by: john frum   2010-08-07 13:54  

#5  The Westland Wapiti (a bomber/reconnaissance biplane multi-purpose aircraft) and Hawker Audax were used to bomb the NWFP Pashtuns before WW2

Arjan Singh, Marshall of the Indian Air Force remembers bombing Pashtuns hiding in caves and valleys


Posted by: john frum   2010-08-07 13:15  

#4  I'd have thought a Mosquito would be an ideal plane for Afghanistan/Pakistan close support.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2010-08-07 12:34  

#3  Will they be using actual WWI aircraft?
Posted by: tu3031   2010-08-07 12:04  

#2  RAF Flight circa 2011... bringing back the "Old RAF"
Posted by: Goodluck   2010-08-07 12:04  

#1  The British Army is next, no doubt.
Posted by: Goodluck   2010-08-07 12:01  

00:00