U.K. Budget Crisis Ends Para Training For Now
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U.K. Budget Crisis Ends Para Training For Now Expand / Collapse
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Posted 12/17/2006 8:42 AM


Strong Like Bull, Smart As Rock

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From the Telegraph (U.K.) website:

No jumps for Paras as MoD cuts £1bn


By Sean Rayment and Rob Watts, Sunday Telegraph

Last Updated: 1:28am GMT 17/12/2006

Parachute training in the Army is set to be halted for four years as part of a £1 billion cost-cutting programme by the Ministry of Defence (MoD).

 

The proposals mean that Britain will be without a parachute-trained force for the first time since the Second World War when the Parachute Regiment was created on the orders of Winston Churchill.

Documents leaked to The Sunday Telegraph reveal that no new recruits or even serving members of the Parachute Regiment or airborne forces will be trained in military parachuting from next year until 2011. It will then take a year to get the Army's 2,500 paratroopers up to scratch.

The cost-cutting programme is being launched after defence chiefs warned that spiralling costs of complex equipment and the demands of military operations would create a financial "black hole" in the MoD of £868 million by the end of the next year.

The severity of the crisis prompted one of the Government's most senior civil servants to describe the situation as "an extremely difficult position with no clear way forward".

The crisis has placed the MoD on a collision course with Gordon Brown and the Treasury, and has raised fears that multi-billion pound projects could be postponed or even cancelled.

The planned cuts to be imposed on 16 Air Assault Brigade, which the MoD admits would be a public-relations disaster, can be

revealed just days after 77 members of the unit received awards, including a Victoria Cross and a George Cross, for their actions in Afghanistan.

The document states that if the cuts were imposed "the Parachute Regiment and other airborne units would be undermined with implications for morale, recruiting and retention. It would take until March 31, 2012, to retrain all aircrews, dispatchers, planers and parachute-trained units".

It adds: "This measure would also have implications for special forces' recruiting and selection." The Parachute Regiment provides more than half of the special forces' intake.

Senior officers were aghast last night at the latest round of cuts. One said: "It is extraordinary that at a time when the Armed Forces are fighting two wars and are stretched to the very limit, defence spending is being pared back in this way."

The crisis has emerged two months after Tony Blair promised commanders in Afghanistan that they would get whatever they needed to beat the Taliban.

The scale of the crisis within the MoD is highlighted by another leaked document in which Ian Andrews, the 2nd permanent undersecretary of state, warns that the military is having to take "painful measures" to stay within budget. "Equipment, support, fuel and utilities costs are causing real pressures across the departments. We remain in an extremely difficult position with no clear way forward."

In an effort to stay within budget, he proposes measures including a "moratorium on recruitment" of civilian manpower and that all "existing contracts for agency or casual staff be terminated".

Instead of flying to meetings around the world, senior officers should "encourage staff to consider video conferencing, e-mail or the telephone".

 

(c) Telegraph 2006

 



Gold Class 92-03

The Warrant Officer – an officer appointed by the Secretary of the Army based on a sound level of technical and tactical competence. The Warrant Officer is a highly specialized expert and trainer who by gaining progressive levels of expertise and leadership operates, maintains, administers, and manages the Army’s equipment, support activities, or technical systems for an entire career.

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Post #222605
Posted 12/17/2006 8:54 AM


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What!?


Post #222606
Posted 12/17/2006 8:57 AM


Pnet's Thread Insurgent and Chief Muldoon

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How about start selling off those royal properties to raise the cash, I mean come on you need Aiborne Troops By God!!  Or how about this solution get rid of some of the royal family like Charles he's dead weight, sorry folks you guy's need to start trimming the fat over there not the really important things like Airborne troops.

 

I'm Surprised Panama's still sea level, after all the Push Ups I did down there.


Post #222607
Posted 12/17/2006 9:03 AM


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Exactly blackflagg!  We are still involved in a GWOT and American and British paras have been at the tip of the spear for the West.  Priorities people.


Post #222608
Posted 12/17/2006 9:15 AM


Pnet's Thread Insurgent and Chief Muldoon

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RR, remember what happened during "Operation Market Garden" to the British Paras trapped at Arhnem awaiting relief from Mountie they got slaughtered, why so he could have his tea by the side of the road; you know that wouldn't happen in the US Army if there were US Hooah's trapped in a city a General wouldn't stop at the side of the road to get some tea/coffee cause if he did he wouldn't be in good shape. 

 

I'm Surprised Panama's still sea level, after all the Push Ups I did down there.


Post #222610
Posted 12/17/2006 10:08 AM


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bf, absolutely.  The 82nd at Nijmegen, the 101st at Eindhoven, and the British and Polish paras at Arnhem made a beyond the call of duty effort to keep the tanks from the Brit Guards Armoured Division [XXX Corps] rolling past Arnhem and into Northern Germany.  The mission had one glitch though...the leg tankers did not have the same level of committment to the mission's success as the American, British, and Polish paras did.  IMO the paras had a much higher sense of urgency about the mission and the paratroopers also knew well that if one unit did not do their part along Hell's Highway some other unit down the line would pay.  Once the Guards had made it to Nijmegen they could have gone the extra mile to finally reach their British paras desperately needing some armor support at Arnhem.  They never got to them and you know what happened to the British 1st Abn Division after that.  The tankers dropped the ball at the one yard line.  AATW


Post #222613
Posted 12/18/2006 7:05 AM


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What incentive is there now for a young, motivated, British teenager to join a "parachute" unit without parachutes? 

The Royal Marines will probably get some good recruits from this move; recruits that might have gone to the Paras, if the Paras really were Paras.  

Aim small; miss small.

Post #222658