UK Defence
Author
Discussion

bad company

Original Poster:

21,733 posts

292 months

Yesterday (08:21)
quotequote all
What do we have? I’m a natural right wing, conservative voter but our defence has been neglected by both governments.

Very worrying imo.


Monkeylegend

28,747 posts

257 months

Yesterday (08:27)
quotequote all
Probably far to late, the enemy is already here and we invited them in.

Kwackersaki

1,702 posts

254 months

Yesterday (08:41)
quotequote all
Monkeylegend said:
Probably far to late, the enemy is already here and we invited them in.
Yep and it’s only going to get worse.

Earthdweller

18,760 posts

152 months

Yesterday (08:44)
quotequote all
bad company said:
What do we have? I m a natural right wing, conservative voter but our defence has been neglected by both governments.

Very worrying imo.

[[/url]
Capt Mainwaring and the Walmington on Sea Home guard

Fred Smith

1,573 posts

26 months

Yesterday (08:48)
quotequote all
I think the only good news we have in terms of defence is that it looks like drone warfare is going to be a huge part of the future, and it's advancing so rapidly that the only way we can have a genuinely first class military is to have lots of the drones that were designed in the last 6 months. Perhaps the best option is to stockpile money so we can build new tech when needed. Spending billions on drones today, and then finding ourselves in a war in two years time when they're all out of date would be nuts.

We need to focus on working with and copying what Ukraine have done, including the diverse nature of the drone industry there.

We need to build planes and ships and recruit based entirely on MITE - Merit Intelligence Talent and Excellence - no DEI anywhere in sight - ASAP.

SS427 Camaro

8,248 posts

196 months

Yesterday (09:07)
quotequote all
Earthdweller said:
Capt Mainwaring and the Walmington on Sea Home guard
Well think ourselves lucky that Pike has the Thompson plus 100 rounds of .45


Edited by SS427 Camaro on Wednesday 17th June 10:35

Earthdweller

18,760 posts

152 months

Yesterday (09:24)
quotequote all
SS427 Camaro said:
Earthdweller said:
Capt Mainwaring and the Walmington on Sea Home guard
Well think ourselves lucky that Pike has the Thompson plus 100 rounds of .45
And all off to war in Jones's van

thumbup

BigMon

6,176 posts

155 months

Yesterday (09:34)
quotequote all
It's an utter embarrassment and all the governments from the Falklands on should hang their heads in shame.

We decimated our armed forces under the foolish decision America would always have our backs and now we're shafted and are having to start from an exceptionally poor point.

Mrr T

15,106 posts

291 months

Yesterday (10:09)
quotequote all
BigMon said:
It's an utter embarrassment and all the governments from the Falklands on should hang their heads in shame.

We decimated our armed forces under the foolish decision America would always have our backs and now we're shafted and are having to start from an exceptionally poor point.
I disagree. Yes, governments of all colours under spent. However, by complete luck that was the right decision. If we had spent more money we would have more tanks, troop carriers, SPG, air defence, aircraft, etc. All of which in the world of drones would be scrap metal. Now is the time all of NATO, excluding the US, should be working with Ukraine to develop and build a modern defence force.

What's more Ukraine has show it does not take 20 years and numerous planning committees, to build a creditable force.

Edited by Mrr T on Wednesday 17th June 10:11

Electronicpants

3,048 posts

214 months

Yesterday (10:13)
quotequote all
Kwackersaki said:
Monkeylegend said:
Probably far to late, the enemy is already here and we invited them in.
Yep and it s only going to get worse.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c8r2l352z2do

FFS, stop being Putin's lackey.

Wills2

28,898 posts

201 months

Yesterday (10:18)
quotequote all
Mrr T said:
What's more Ukraine has show it does not take 20 years and numerous planning committees, to build a creditable force.
Just a war instead...

Fred Smith

1,573 posts

26 months

Yesterday (10:19)
quotequote all
Electronicpants said:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c8r2l352z2do

FFS, stop being Putin's lackey.
Is it possible that two things are both true -

(1) Immigration (numbers and some of the people themselves) is a massive issue which needs resolving in the interests of many things including national unity?

and

(2) Putin is using immigration to the UK to cause division in the UK?


s1962a

7,558 posts

188 months

Yesterday (10:20)
quotequote all
Monkeylegend said:
Probably far to late, the enemy is already here and we invited them in.
Russians?

JoshSm

4,140 posts

63 months

Yesterday (10:23)
quotequote all
Wills2 said:
Mrr T said:
What's more Ukraine has show it does not take 20 years and numerous planning committees, to build a creditable force.
Just a war instead...
Though on the downside they're in a grinding old style war, including a lot of trench warfare, that's burning through personnel. Drones are handy but it's hardly the sort of future warfare you want to get into.

Drones are a solution but not at the expense of all else. If they were Ukraine wouldn't be requesting and using all the other kit too.

Murph7355

41,560 posts

282 months

Yesterday (10:25)
quotequote all
Mrr T said:
I disagree. Yes, governments of all colours under spent. However, by complete luck that was the right decision. If we had spent more money we would have more tanks, troop carriers, SPG, air defence, aircraft, etc. All of which in the world of drones would be scrap metal. Now is the time all of NATO, excluding the US, should be working with Ukraine to develop and build a modern defence force.

What's more Ukraine has show it does not take 20 years and numerous planning committees, to build a creditable force.
I very much doubt "drones" are all that are needed.

Those same tanks and troop carriers and aircraft are needed if the intent is to take/take back ground.

But it does all need to be a very rounded approach...cyber, unmanned, manned. I think this was Al Cairns main beef...that the DIP was targeting the wrong things?

Earthdweller

18,760 posts

152 months

Yesterday (10:25)
quotequote all
Wills2 said:
Mrr T said:
What's more Ukraine has show it does not take 20 years and numerous planning committees, to build a creditable force.
Just a war instead...
Absolutely look at all the advances in WW2 in tech, medicine etc etc

War is the ultimate driver of invention and innovation

aeropilot

40,085 posts

253 months

Yesterday (10:25)
quotequote all
Fred Smith said:
I think the only good news we have in terms of defence is that it looks like drone warfare is going to be a huge part of the future, and it's advancing so rapidly that the only way we can have a genuinely first class military is to have lots of the drones that were designed in the last 6 months. Perhaps the best option is to stockpile money so we can build new tech when needed. Spending billions on drones today, and then finding ourselves in a war in two years time when they're all out of date would be nuts.

We need to focus on working with and copying what Ukraine have done, including the diverse nature of the drone industry there.
But Ukraine has been in a war for 4 years, they have to think fast and on their feet, and a lot of the stuff they'll do or try won't work, but, its try this, try that.....see what works and what doesn't, plus they can try it live on a battlefield.
Russia is also on a war economy and is slowly learning an adapting as well.
UK and USA learnt the same thing WW2 after it started, but not leading up to it in peacetime, although unlike our present politicians they could see what was coming and started to spend in the couple of years before it kicked off.
Peace time military and Govt's and industry can never adopt to the sort of rapid development that actually fighting a war creates.

Magikarp

1,663 posts

74 months

Yesterday (10:28)
quotequote all
Earthdweller said:
Absolutely look at all the advances in WW2 in tech, medicine etc etc

War is the ultimate driver of invention and innovation
JOHN 11:35

JoshSm

4,140 posts

63 months

Yesterday (10:30)
quotequote all
Big issue with UK defence right now is that there were lots of promises of extra money 'soon', at the same time as promising/donating a lot of kit, and now it turns out the money isn't there now or in the future.

And having been caught in the lie the response is basically 'so what?' and doing nothing about it.

Plenty of money appears apparently from thin air for some things but this one gets the floor sweepings. Guess it reflects the politics of those involved, they either don't understand or they're actively hostile to defence.

Timothy Bucktu

16,847 posts

226 months

Yesterday (10:30)
quotequote all
The thing is, which items will you cut in order to boost defense spending. Defense is a bit like house insurance. You don't really need it day to day and it's a bit pointless. Nobody in your house would notice if you stopped paying for it...All good - right up until you need it!
We need defense now probably more than we have needed it in the last 30 years or so? So you can see why it's been neglected.

The top ten functional areas of UK government spending are (from Copilot):
1. Social Protection (£340B £380B+): Includes state pensions, Universal Credit, disability/sickness benefits, and housing support.
2. Health (£225B £277B): NHS hospital trusts, GP surgeries, mental health services, and social care.
3. General Public Services (£150B £175B): Primarily consists of net debt interest payments and central government administrative costs.
4. Education (£115B £146B): Funding for primary/secondary schools, higher education, and apprenticeships.
5. Economic Affairs (£95B £130B): Subsidies for business, science/innovation, agriculture, and transport infrastructure.
6. Defence (£58B £60B): Military defence, armed forces operations, and Single Intelligence Account.
7. Public Order and Safety (£46B £48B): Police forces, the prison system, and the court and justice systems.
8. Housing and Community Amenities (£18B £20B): Subsidies for housing developments, community projects, and local amenities.
9. Recreation, Culture, and Religion (£15B): Funding for arts, museums, heritage sites, sports, and broadcasting.
10. Environmental Protection (£15B): Waste management, pollution reduction, and environmental/climate protection.