
The latest defence review looks tough on paper. In reality, it's all spin and no steel. Britain's Armed Forces are being hollowed out. The Army is shrinking. The Navy's short of sailors. The can't train enough pilots. Across all three services, the biggest crisis isn't equipment - it's people. And no amount of flashy tech will fix that.
Ministers have been dazzled by drones, cyber, and artificial intelligence. But here's the truth: you can't fight a war with a laptop. You still need boots on the ground, crews in the air, and ships that sail with full complements. The Government says it will spend 2.5% of on defence. But that figure was plucked out of thin air.
You don't build strategy backwards from a budget. First, you identify the threats. Then, you work out what's needed to face them. Only then do you look at the cost.
Right now, we're designing a fire engine to fit in a parking space - and hoping it still puts out fires. Promotion in the military is too slow and too top-heavy. There are too many senior officers doing paperwork, not enough junior ranks to do the actual fighting. If we want to keep talent and save money, we need a proper shake-up.
And don't get me started on procurement. From Ajax tanks to aircraft carriers without enough jets, the UK's track record is embarrassing. We spend billions on gear that doesn't work, arrives late, or becomes obsolete before it's delivered.
Take tanks. We're ordering just 148 new Challenger 3s. It sounds impressive, but a credible force would need over 500. At that level, it's a token - not a real capability.
Some things we simply can't afford to do anymore. Better to admit it and invest where we can still make a difference, rather than pretend we can do it all.
Labour's talk of hitting 3% of GDP by the 2030s is just as hollow. No government plans 10 years ahead. It's political theatre - not policy.
Britain doesn't need more slogans. It needs honesty. We're not ready for the threats we face. And unless we act fast, we won't be able to fight the next war - let alone win it.
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