Shaun from Scotland
Muse
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2002
- Messages
- 864
Shaun from Scotland said:
" The other four battalions of the so-called super-regiment would be the Black Watch, the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, the Royal Highland Fusiliers and the Highlanders.
The Don said:I presume the alternative would be to maintain precisely the same regiments and structures indefinitely. Let's get rid of all that troublesome modern weaponry and stick to horses and pikes in the interests of tradition.
The Don said:Would the additional spending on the army be at the expense of the other services ? If not, how much additional spending do you recommend ? Which budget(s) would you cut ?
Please don't use "by reducing waste" as the way of funding, waste is inherent in any large organisation.
By all means get rid of the southern regiments as well. Why IS it important to have regiments tied to specific parts of the country ?
Are you suggesting that our servicemen are so unprofessional that they would be less brave, effective or committed if they were in a regiment with a different name ?
Hutch said:...snip....
And while I would agree that the regiments were known by numbers (the Iron Brigade was technically the 1st Brigade of the First Division of the First Corps of the Army of the Potomac), they were also informally known by those names.
I'm with the Scots on this one...Hoon could have found a better way without rubbing military tradition and history in the dirt.
Darat said:I (probably because I have no military background what-so-ever) don’t understand this need to keep a name, as for the problem of local recruitment are that many of the recruits “local†to the historic “home†of the regiment these days?
Darat said:Just been reading up a bit more on the proposals and this is exactly what they are proposing to do. The names will be retained however rather then being a complete separate battalion they will become part of a bigger unit. So there will still be a "Black Watch", (see:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4102013.stm).
And reading further into these claims of 300 year histories it appears that many of the regiments with this long history have already gone through many re-organisations, renaming and merging during those 300 years.
The only difference with the latest proposals appears to be one of scale (number of changes) happening over a relatively short period.
Shaun from Scotland said:Famous regiments like the cameronians have come and gone. But this is by far the most drastic shake-up ever. And it will lead to further recruitment problems. The Highlanders for example, incorporate the regiments names that formed them, but they struggle to attract recruits because they lack local identity in Sutherland/ Inverness area. No local identity means recruitment shortfalls, paricularly in Scotland, where regional identity has always been important.
The Army also has more than recruitment problems. It has retention problems, mainly because the soldiers are over-deployed. Putting them into faceless units is not going to help this
...snip...
The inherent re-roling was inefficient and costly in terms of time, hard-won capability and money. It also adversely affected family stability – always a compromise in a mobile profession such as ours, but an area that we, for the sake of our soldiers and their families, have to improve. In simple terms, the Arms Plot rendered some 7 to 8 battalions unavailable at any one time: we did not have, therefore, 40 battalions in the effective Order of Battle, but rather some 32. In the future, the 36 battalions will all be available. By fixing infantry battalions by role and largely by location, we will have a new Infantry structure that will involve individual postings rather than unit moves – an approach that is already widely used across the Army to good effect and will provide challenge, variety and experience whilst improving continuity of role, operational capability and family stability.
...snip...
"But in this reorganisation, each battalion has retained strong links to its local community, to specific items of uniform, and most importantly it has provided the link between the past, present and future.
"I am particularly pleased that our famous battalion names and traditions will live on because that is what I have been fighting for."
richardm said:From the original link:
So while I would agree that the loss of a whole bunch of history and tradition would be a real loss indeed, is that what is actually being proposed? From what I can see the shakeup seems largely an administrative change, and not a fundamental rooting out as has been suggested.
Jon_in_london said:SHAUN:
However- Scotland was quite lucky to only lose one battlion in all. Given that the Scottish regiments and the most under-recruited in a massively under-recruited army.......