Sunday, December 10, 2006

British armed forces poorly treated by their own government

This is another one where I just can't understand what our government is up to. I suspect Keegan is right that there is "an anti-military clique in the Treasury".

God help our poor bloody soldiers
The Sunday Times
December 10, 2006
Minette Marrin

...

The newly retired General Sir Mike Jackson emerged from years of discretion to say on Wednesday in his Dimbleby lecture that our armed forces are underpaid, under-equipped and poorly housed; they are shabbily treated and absurdly overstretched, attempting impossible tasks with inadequate means. We do not offer enough of our treasure for their blood.

Many people think he should have said this while he was still in charge of the army ... One could argue that despite his duty of discretion he should in extreme circumstances have spoken out, as has Sir Richard Dannatt, his brave successor. For these are extreme circumstances. Even though this country is involved in two difficult wars, there seems to be a cultural agreement in Whitehall that our troops can be fobbed off with second or third best. According to John Keegan, the military historian, there is an anti-military clique in the Treasury.

Gordon Brown must answer for this; it was the chancellor who personally took part in cutting the army’s infantry battalions at a time when infantry was urgently needed to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. But generally, too, there seems to be a remarkable lack of understanding or sympathy for the armed forces.

If the government had deliberately set out to demoralise them and undermine recruitment it could hardly have done a better job. Only a couple of weeks ago the Ministry of Defence (MoD) had to admit that it had supplied British soldiers in Afghanistan with duff ammo. Shortly after our charming prime minister had been out to schmooze the troops fighting the Taliban, it emerged that they had been sent cheap and defective machinegun bullets made in Pakistan or the Czech Republic instead of the usual more expensive stuff. These cheap bullets kept jamming their machineguns during heavy fighting. British soldiers had to scrounge rounds from the Canadians and Americans. It was only when the Paras kicked up a fuss that anything was done.

Then there was the body armour scandal of 2003. The government sent troops into Iraq without enough enhanced body armour, having ignored requests from the army for two months. Sergeant Steven Roberts was killed by bullets on the fifth day of the invasion; he had selflessly given his own body armour to a colleague because there was not enough for everyone in his regiment. With body armour he would have survived. It has taken three years for the MoD to accept liability. Such prevarication only adds insult to bereavement.

The same goes for the delay in holding inquests into army deaths. There is, incredibly, a backlog going back to 2003, meaning that families have to wait years for an account of what happened.

One hardly knows where to begin with the substandard treatment offered to the armed forces. Dannatt has been bold enough to speak about this. So many military hospitals have been closed (largely under the Conservatives) that servicemen and women have to go into civilian wards and take their chances. One wounded paratrooper in uniform was screamed at by a Muslim visiting a patient. “You have been killing my Muslim brothers in Afghanistan,” he shrieked at a man who should have been enjoying a hero’s welcome. Another wounded soldier was told to remove his uniform for fear of “offending” anyone.

Lord Bramall, former chief of the defence staff, has reported claims that wounded soldiers face long delays on general National Health Service waiting lists and poor aftercare. This lack of respect is astonishing. If anyone has been brave enough to risk death and injury in the service of our country, the least we could do is to provide top-quality specialised hospital care in dedicated military hospitals or wards, as the Americans do. We don’t.

As for what servicemen and women are paid, it is pitiful: £1,000 a month is hardly an incentive to risk your life in Iraq. And it is pointless perhaps to compare the derisory £2,400 bonuses offered to combat troops with the £41m paid to MoD civil servants over the past four years. As for what service families live in, it can in many cases only be called slum housing — “frankly shaming” as Jackson said. Our government — and our society — cannot seriously be bothered with our armed forces.

This is not just wrong. It is decadent. For if we lack the will to defend ourselves, or rather to defend those who are there to defend us and to fight for us, then we are simply rolling over to display the soft underbelly of decadence to the world’s predators and scavengers. Those who think that our armed forces don’t matter will soon discover that other people’s do.

4 comments:

JP said...

Should it make us feel better or worse that French troops are being as disgracefully let down by their goverment as the British army is? Who'd have thought the day would come when Western armies are outgunned by insurgents...

French troops 'ran out of ammunition' in Afghanistan
Telegraph
21 Sep 2008

Ten French soldiers killed by Taliban fighters last month in Afghanistan were woefully ill-equipped, according to a report citing a classified Nato document. The "secret" file quoted by a Canadian newspaper said that the French troops ambushed on Aug 18 in a valley east of Kabul did not have enough bullets, radios and other equipment to sustain them through two days of fighting.

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According to the report cited by the Globe and Mail newspaper, the troops were forced to abandon a counter attack when the weapons on their vehicles ran out of ammunition only 90 minutes into the battle. One French platoon had just one radio, which was quickly knocked out, leaving them powerless to call for reinforcements. The dead soldiers from that platoon "showed signs of being killed at close range", the report said. By contrast, it said that the insurgents were well prepared and equipped, with expert snipers who appeared to have used incendiary bullets designed to punch holes in armour.

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"There was no Nato report," said a French army spokesman, saying such information was based on "rumours" possibly fed by "partial" accounts from soldiers questioned after the attack. He denied that the troops ran out of ammunition quickly and said that radio reception was only lost for a few minutes.

JP said...

What a disgrace.

Chinooks delay 'endangers lives'
BBC News
5 March 2009

The lives of UK troops have been put at greater risk owing to an eight-year hold-up in getting eight Chinook helicopters into service, said MPs. The transport helicopters have remained grounded since delivery in 2001 because of cockpit computer system problems. The Commons public accounts committee also said the decision to add night vision equipment to RAF Chinooks Mk2s had been linked to two crashes.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) said the MPs' report contained "nothing new".

...

THE CHINOOK MARK 3 SAGA
1. MoD orders 14 Chinooks from Boeing in 1995, including eight Mark 3s for special operations
2. On delivery in 2001, the Mark 3s - costing £259m - do not meet MoD airworthiness standards
3. Radar and software problems mean Mark 3s can only fly limited trials above 500ft in clear skies
4. Efforts to rectify problems abandoned in 2007, with standard Chinooks instead adapted for some special operations
5. Significant safety concerns raised about reduced visibility from "bolt-on" night-vision equipment added to Mark 2s
6. Mark 3s being "reverted" to standard models, expected for use in Afghanistan in 2010
8. Total procurement cost rises to more than £422m

...

"The consequences have included a shortage of helicopter support in Afghanistan, thereby heightening the risk to the lives of British troops."

more...

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The 'sorry saga' of UK's Chinooks
BBC News
4 June 2008

The Chinook is a remarkable helicopter, hugely respected for its durability and ability to operate in extreme temperatures. It is one of the most important aircraft flown by the military. But mention the Chinook Mark 3 (Mk3) to anyone in the defence community and heads are usually buried in hands.

What Edward Leigh, chairman of the Commons public accounts committee, calls "a gold standard cock-up" is a well-known and embarrassing saga of botched procurement, followed by protracted efforts to set things right. In 1995, the Ministry of Defence ordered 14 Chinook Mk2a helicopters from Boeing, eight of which were modified to the more advanced Mk3 model to meet a long-standing demand for machines suitable for special operations.

Only after the eight were delivered in 2001, at a cost of £259m, did it emerge that there were problems with the avionics software and the helicopters fell short of the UK's military airworthiness standards. As a result, they have never flown operationally.

more...

JP said...

I don't really know where I stand on this yet (I suspect - against), but it does occur to me that if modern rights & litigation culture is going to infiltrate the military sphere, we'll soon be in the realm of having to issue soldiers with blindingly obvious health warnings.

I have one for starters: "Afghanistan. Warning - may contain nuts".

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Soldiers win protection of Human Rights ActIndependent
Tuesday, 19 May 2009
Landmark ruling in case of private who died of heatstroke serving in Iraq

JP said...

Bruce Anderson: Nothing incriminates Mr Brown like his contempt for the Army
Independent
8 March 2010