FormerDirtDart
Well-Known Member
I googled "Space vampire" because I couldn't remember the name of the movie "Lifeforce" (which was based on the novel 'The Space Vampires')I worry about your leisure time when you know where to find one of those
I googled "Space vampire" because I couldn't remember the name of the movie "Lifeforce" (which was based on the novel 'The Space Vampires')I worry about your leisure time when you know where to find one of those
I'm not going to bet the farm on it but it's looking broadly likely that we'd get an announcement post election this year about the direction to be taken.So with this whole kerfuffle with the Russians, and the likely fact that tensions will continue at a higher rate for the next few years, is MPA being talked about in smokey back rooms more often? The operation seed corn made it seem like it was just a matter of time anyway. Any realistic insight as to whether this is pushing it further up the priority list?
OSD on said Harpoons is?https://farm9.staticflickr.com/8579/16669400991_7fe2198f87_o.jpg
It's official, HMS Duncan has Her Harpoons fitted!
Ranges.OSD on said Harpoons is?
Nonsense. The UK needs the US, not the other way around. The idea that the US nuclear program is reliant on UK funding is total nonsense and reflects a lack of touch with reality and the facts.The funding provided by the UK is trivial. The US defense budget is ten times the size of the UK. Unfortunately, the reality of the UK's slide in importance in the world really hasn't hit home. It no longer has the influence or importance to the US.Or space bats could invade.
The run-on from that would finish the US diplomatically - everyone would conclude quite sensibly that if they could stitch up one of their closest partners that way, why would you ever trust them? The US is actually reliant on UK involvement with their own program as it underwrites some US costs - it's a useful relationship and not one that's going to be easily dissolved.
Nonsense. The UK needs the US, not the other way around. The idea that the US nuclear program is reliant on UK funding is total nonsense and reflects a lack of touch with reality and the facts.The funding provided by the UK is trivial. The US defense budget is ten times the size of the UK. Unfortunately, the reality of the UK's slide in importance in the world really hasn't hit home. It no longer has the influence or importance to the US.
The UK has become more and more irrelevant to the United States. When the US Army's Chief of Staff goes public and fires a warning shot across the bow, it's about time to face reality.
"it's a useful relationship and not one that's going to be easily dissolved."Nonsense. The UK needs the US, not the other way around. The idea that the US nuclear program is reliant on UK funding is total nonsense and reflects a lack of touch with reality and the facts.The funding provided by the UK is trivial. The US defense budget is ten times the size of the UK. Unfortunately, the reality of the UK's slide in importance in the world really hasn't hit home. It no longer has the influence or importance to the US.
The UK has become more and more irrelevant to the United States. When the US Army's Chief of Staff goes public and fires a warning shot across the bow, it's about time to face reality.
You are mistaken if you believe military spending cuts are solely the preserve of Cameron, it's been declining for decades. Cameron and Fox (then Hammond) had to deal with a department which was billions in the black with no plan to turn things around.Britain must adjust to the fact that the UK, under Cameron, has cut its Armed Forces to the point where it is no longer a major player standing side by side with the US, but as a very minor player whose support is nice to have but not essential.
I thought it was the diesels that were being a pig ? I thought the 21's were just expensive to buy? I wouldn't be amazed or surprised to find them swapped out for MT30's at some point in the life of the ships however, as it'd give some commonality across the fleet.*itself kind of surprising considering it's coming out how much of a maintenance hog the WR-21 is turning out to be, MT-30's anyone?
Or in the red even, I reckon they would have loved being in the black and having all those extra billions to spend.You are mistaken if you believe military spending cuts are solely the preserve of Cameron, it's been declining for decades. Cameron and Fox (then Hammond) had to deal with a department which was billions in the black with no plan to turn things around.
Can we please move back on topic and end this unproductive bickering here? This is a ROYAL NAVY thread, not a discussion on the pros and cons of strategic alliances.The US CAN NOT stand alone. They need 'assistance' from the UK & looking back over the last 50 odd years, we've been there, with both moral support & technological innovation.
Nonsense, again. George Bush told Tony Blair that if it was too costly politically for him, the US would go it alone in Iraq based on a US DOD assessment that British Forces were not needed to invade Iraq successfully. That proved to be prescient and the subsequent performance of British Forces in Iraq also was illustrative of the state of the British Armed Forces, especially its leadership.
The British Armed Forces are only a shell of what they were then and can bring so much less to bear in a modern conflict.
You totally misunderstand the thrust of the remarks of the US Army Chief of Staff. He was only saying what anyone with a modicum of knowledge about military matters knows. The Cameron cuts to the British Army will strip the British Army of the capability of operating as in independent force (integrated under Allied Command) much as the British did under SHAEF in WW2. (The same is true for the RAF and Royal Navy.) The US laments this development, not because the British Armed Forces are absolutely vital but because it weakens Allied Forces. Nowhere did he say that the US can't fight any war without British participation. And if you do believe that the US can't fight and win without the UK then you are grossly ill informed.
Britain must adjust to the fact that the UK, under Cameron, has cut its Armed Forces to the point where it is no longer a major player standing side by side with the US, but as a very minor player whose support is nice to have but not essential. That's a harsh reality, but it is reality.
Wars are not won with moral support and the days of British technological innovation like radar and the jet engine are decades in the past.
When I first read about propulsion issues it was just that, 'propulsion issues'. I presumed it to be the WR-21 as I figured diesel sets compared to the first use of that GT in an IFEP setup would've been the more likely culprit.I thought it was the diesels that were being a pig ? I thought the 21's were just expensive to buy? I wouldn't be amazed or surprised to find them swapped out for MT30's at some point in the life of the ships however, as it'd give some commonality across the fleet.
Or in the red even, I reckon they would have loved being in the black and having all those extra billions to spend.
It really sheets home the argument that commercial "style" ships should not be attempted in UK (or Australia for that matter) when the worlds best and fastest shipbuilder can squirt them out at that speed and cost.RFA Tidespring is really belting along in Korea, rapid progress!
https://twitter.com/NavyLookout/status/580013714662932480/photo/1
Keel was laid in January this year i'll add . . . .
Absolutely!! Hopefully Australia does what the UK did and not what Canada is doing (actually we haven't even started the "local Berlin build").It really sheets home the argument that commercial "style" ships should not be attempted in UK (or Australia for that matter) when the worlds best and fastest shipbuilder can squirt them out at that speed and cost.
Its a different argument, obviously, for fighting ships.