Wot's ARRSE? I'll Google it later.
Anyway, who brought Russia into this? If it wasn't for the Red Army all our grandparents would have been slaughtered 65 years ago.
OK, the cold war dragged on for a bit, but that was the aftermath of Stalinism and 'Hooverism' in the USA ... nothing to do with the modern Russia as we now know it.
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Previously on "How to squander £630 million on UK defence in one week"
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Originally posted by KimberleyChris View PostIn that case, then I owe him an apology, because I didnt know that English was not his first language.
I also received a nasty neg-rep comment from him at the same time.
Even so, the sudden 'Ignorance' jibe and 'Simple words so you can understand it' were not provoked by me, or justified. You can hardly accuse me of being one of the more 'insulting' posters, and you are free to read as far back as you want through my back-posts.
This can be a most unpleasant site at times.
Get yourself off to ARRSE, they might be soft and cuddly enough for you.
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In that case, then I owe him an apology, because I didnt know that English was not his first language.
I also received a nasty neg-rep comment from him at the same time.
Even so, the sudden 'Ignorance' jibe and 'Simple words so you can understand it' were not provoked by me, or justified. You can hardly accuse me of being one of the more 'insulting' posters, and you are free to read as far back as you want through my back-posts.
This can be a most unpleasant site at times.
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Originally posted by KimberleyChris View PostFTFY
Semi-literate drivel I'm afraid. Britain always made its fair contribution to NATO. The level of our involvement was decided at very high level, and our specialisation (ASW) was also allocated at joint Mod/USDoD level. This arrangement is still in force now, but has had its emphasis changed to reflect the changed nature of the threat. The transformation to a world-cruising blue water navy is just a symptom of the UK following the USA around like a lap-dog. If the USA politically needs our contribution in materiel, so it is not seen as acting alone, then it can help us with the cost of it.
Oh, I forgot, you were "the radio operator".
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No problem, I was just being sarky. If you read down the thread, you will see that the insults started with him, not me.
As the poster is in the second-bottom rank, only one step above Sasguru, perhaps all to be expected.
How are you this fine day, Sir.?
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Semi-literate drivel I'm afraid
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostJust when I heard radio operator, a function I'm sure is now long since obsolete.
Every ship had two Radio Ops. One (the 'tactical' op) up on the bridge to handle short-range UHF stuff between ships within a force, and me - the 'general' op - down in the bowels of the ship. We handled the long-range HF stuff between us and home.
Happy days, sometimes.
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Originally posted by KimberleyChris View Post54 with a following wind.
I can still send morse code at 25 wpm. May come in useful one day, but not today :-)
Just when I heard radio operator, a function I'm sure is now long since obsolete.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostPerhaps you should spend some time studying history before showing your ignorance?
To put it in simple terms that you can understand - The USA kept Western Europe defended against the USSR whilst it was in existence, The USA spent more money on powerful military forces than Europe was prepared to. Essentially this meant it could spend money on something else (welfare state).
Even the USA now needs to trim costs, Given that the defence of Europe should be of primary concern of Europe itself, it is only natural that European states would spend more money on their own defence.
Semi-literate drivel I'm afraid. Britain always made its fair contribution to NATO. The level of our involvement was decided at very high level, and our specialisation (ASW) was also allocated at joint Mod/USDoD level. This arrangement is still in force now, but has had its emphasis changed to reflect the changed nature of the threat. The transformation to a world-cruising blue water navy is just a symptom of the UK following the USA around like a lap-dog. If the USA politically needs our contribution in materiel, so it is not seen as acting alone, then it can help us with the cost of it.Last edited by KimberleyChris; 26 February 2012, 12:17.
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostHow old are you!?!!
I can still send morse code at 25 wpm. May come in useful one day, but not today :-)
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Originally posted by KimberleyChris View PostI can't understand why we are building them in the first place.
I was in the Navy. OK, I wasn't exactly Nelson, I was just the Radio Operator.
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Originally posted by VectraMan View PostThe greater question here is whether the public sector should be used as a job creation scheme for British workers, or should it be trying to be as efficient as possible with tax payers money. The former might sound good in the newspapers (and in Gordon Brown's head ), but that's what's short-termist thinking.
It is entirely wrong IMO to spend money on a feckless business for an overpriced, probably massive cost of ownership, vessel when the same function can be bought off the shelf in the far east for a fraction of the cost.
If manufacturing in the UK wants to succeed again it needs to be doing it better and cheaper. Look what BMW did with a great British icon, how we're we unable to do the same? Answer that answer the problem to the unemployed masses.
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Originally posted by KimberleyChris View PostI can't understand why we are building them in the first place.
To put it in simple terms that you can understand - USA kept Western Europe defended against USSR whilst it was in force, USA spent more money on powerful military force than Europe was prepared to, essentially this means it could spend money on something else (welfare state).
Even USA now need to trim costs, given that defense of Europe should be primary concern of Europe itself, it is only natural that European states would spend more money on its own defense.
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I can't understand why we are building them in the first place.
I was in the Navy. OK, I wasn't exactly Nelson, I was just the Radio Operator.
When I was in, it was mainly configured to fight the Soviet submarine threat and the airborne threat to our aircraft carriers. Once the Soviet threat faded, it could then have been re-configured in two ways.
It could have become an invincible wall to patrol our waters, defend our islands and the odd remaining dependancies.
Instead, it has been configured as a 'blue water' navy. One which straddles the world in a 'Police' role. Most of its newer ships are built for either air defence or the support of land invasion. Even the submarines are designed to rush to far-away trouble spots unseen and gather intelligence to prepare the ground for when the surface forces arrive.
Why?? Do we 'rule the waves' any more? ... No. Thanks to the EU we don't even rule our own waters. It just seems like an obscenely-expensive PR exercise, to try to make a world that regards us as 'peanuts' that we are still important, and to 'pander' to the long-dead 'special relationship' with the USA.
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Originally posted by eek View PostWe don't have anywhere big enough to builder those tankers. Plus the South Korea are building them at a fixed cost well below what the UK based quotes were and that's before the MoD remembered BAE total inability to build anything on time, to budget without finding an excuse to pass cost overrounds back to the MoD for payment.
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