The
armed forces of the United Kingdom
, known as His/Her Majesty's Armed
Forces or sometimes the British Armed
Forces, and sometimes legally the Armed Forces of
the Crown, encompasses a navy,
an army, and an air force. The British Armed Forces
are a purely professional and volunteer force with a reported
personnel strength of 429,500 in 2009 (195,900 regular force,
193,300 regular reserve, and 42,300 volunteer reserve), HM Armed
Forces constitutes one of the largest militaries in
Europe, though only the 26th largest in the world by
number of troops.
The British Armed Forces however has the
fourth
highest declared expenditure of any military in the world,
behind the United
States
, the People's Republic of China
, and France
.
The United
Kingdom has the largest air force and navy in the European Union and the second largest in
NATO
, is one of only five recognised nuclear powers, and is deemed
to have the second highest power
projection capability behind the United States. In terms
of gross tonnage the Royal Navy is the second largest navy in NATO.
It possesses an array of ships, such as
ballistic missile submarines,
aircraft carriers,
amphibious assault ships,
guided missile destroyers and
nuclear powered
submarines. Apart from the
United States Navy, it is the
only navy in the process of acquiring
supercarriers. The UK also possesses a large
air force which has—and is in the process of procuring—some of the
most advanced aircraft in the world, such as the
Eurofighter Typhoon and
F-35 Lightning II multirole combat aircraft, and
C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft.The
British Army has amongst some of the best
trained troops and the most advanced equipment, such as
Challenger II main
battle tanks and
Apache
Longbow attack
helicopters.
The
Commander-in-Chief of the
British Armed Forces is the
British
monarch, HM
Queen Elizabeth
II, to whom members of the forces swear allegiance. Under
British constitutional law, the armed forces are subordinate to the
crown but can only be maintained in peace time by parliament's
continuing consent. As a result, parliament still approves the
continued existence of the
standing armed
forces on an annual basis. Consistent with longstanding
constitutional convention, however, the
Prime Minister holds
de facto authority over the armed forces. The armed forces
are managed by the
Defence Council of the
Ministry of
Defence.
The British Armed Forces are charged with protecting the United
Kingdom and its
overseas
territories, promoting
Britain's wider security interests, and
supporting international peacekeeping efforts.
They are active and
regular participants in NATO
and other
coalition operations. The UK is also party to the
Five Power Defence
Arrangements.
Recent operations have included wars in
Afghanistan and
Iraq, the 2000 intervention in Sierra Leone, and ongoing peacekeeping
responsibilities in the Balkans and Cyprus
.
Overseas
garrisons and facilities are maintained at Ascension
Island
, Belize
, Brunei
, Canada
, Diego Garcia
, the Falkland Islands
, Germany
, Gibraltar
, Kenya
, Qatar
, the
Sovereign Base Areas (Cyprus
).
History
Origin
The
military history
of the United Kingdom has been greatly influential in World
history, beginning in 1707 with the merging of the armed forces of
England and Scotland to become the armed forces of the Kingdom of
Great Britain
. Important conflicts in which the British
took part later on in history include the
Seven Years' War and the
Napoleonic Wars of the 18th century/early
19th century, the
Crimean War of the mid
19th Century, and the
First and
Second World Wars of the 20th
century. The
British Empire, which
reached its apogee in the 1920s, was the largest empire in history;
almost a third of the World's population were subjects of the
British Crown and it controlled a
quarter of the World's total land area (and arguably all its
seas).
The current structure of defence management in the United Kingdom
was set in place in 1964 when the modern day
Ministry of Defence
(MoD) was created (an earlier form had existed since 1940).
The MoD
assumed the roles of the Admiralty, the
War
Office
and the Air
Ministry.
Cold War
Post-
World War II economic and
political decline, as well as changing attitudes in British society
and government, was reflected by the Armed Forces' contracting
global role. Britain's protracted decline was dramatically
epitomised by its political defeat during the
Suez War of 1956. The
1957 Defence White Paper decided to
abolish conscription and reduce the size of the Armed Forces from
690,000 to 375,000 by 1962. Seeking an inexpensive alternative to
maintaining a large conventional military, the government pursued a
doctrine of
nuclear deterrence.
This initially consisted of free-fall bombs operated by the RAF,
but these were eventually superseded by the submarine-launched
Polaris ballistic missile.
While assurances had been made to the United States that Britain
would maintain a presence "
East of
Suez", a process of gradual withdrawal from its eastern
commitments was undertaken in the 1960s, primarily for economic
reasons.
By the mid-1970s, Britain had withdrawn
permanently deployed forces from Aden
, Bahrain
, Malaysia
, Mauritius
, Oman
, Sharjah
, and Singapore
. Agreements with Malta (expired 1979) and
South Africa (terminated 1975) also ended.
With a permanent presence east of Suez effectively reduced to
Hong Kong (up to
1997) and
Brunei,
the Armed Forces reconfigured to focus on the responsibilities
allocated to the services during the
Cold
War. Substantial forces thus became committed to NATO in Europe
and elsewhere; by 1985, 72,929 personnel were stationed in
Continental Europe. The
British Army of the Rhine and
RAF Germany consequently represented the
largest and most important overseas commitments that the British
Armed Forces had during this period.
The Royal Navy's
fleet developed an anti-submarine
warfare specialisation, with a particular focus on countering
Soviet submarines in the Eastern Atlantic and North Sea
. In the process of this transition and due
to economic constraints, four conventional aircraft carriers and
two "commando" carriers decommissioned between 1967 and 1984. With
the cancellation of the
CVA-01 project, three
Invincible-class
STOVL aircraft
carriers, originally designed as "Through-Deck Cruisers",
became their ultimate replacements.
While
this focus on NATO obligations increased in prominence during the
1970s, low-intensity conflicts in Northern Ireland
and Oman emerged as the primary operational
concerns of the British Armed Forces. These conflicts had
followed a spate of insurgencies against British colonial
occupation in Aden, Cyprus, Kenya, and Malaysia. An
undeclared war with Indonesia had also occurred
in Borneo during the 1960s, and recurring civil unrest in the
declining number of British colonies often required military
assistance.
Recent history
Three major reviews of the British Armed Forces have been conducted
since
the end of the Cold War.
The
Conservative government
produced the
Options for Change
review in the 1990s, seeking to benefit from a perceived post-Cold
War "
peace dividend". All three
services experienced considerable reductions in manpower,
equipment, and infrastructure. Though the Soviet Union had
disintegrated, a presence in Germany was retained, albeit in the
reduced form of
British Forces
Germany.
Experiences during the First Gulf War prompted renewed efforts to
enhance joint operational cohesion and efficiency among the
services by establishing a Permanent Joint Headquarters
in 1996.
An increasingly international role for the British Armed Forces has
been pursued since the Cold War's end.
This has entailed the
Armed Forces often constituting a major component in peacekeeping missions under the auspices of the
United Nations or NATO
, and other
multinational operations. Consistent under-manning and the
reduced size of the Armed Forces has, however, highlighted the
problem of "overstretch" in recent years. This has reportedly
contributed to personnel retention difficulties and challenged the
military's ability to sustain its overseas commitments.
The
Strategic Defence
Review (SDR)—described as "foreign-policy-led"—was published in
1998. Expeditionary warfare and tri-service integration were
central to the review, which sought to improve efficiency and
reduce expenditure by consolidating resources. Most of the Armed
Forces' helicopters were collected under a
single command and a
Joint Force Harrier was established in
2000, containing the Navy and RAF's fleet of
Harrier Jump Jets. A
Joint Rapid Reaction Force was
formed in 1999, with significant tri-service resources at its
disposal.
The first major post-
11
September restructuring was announced in the 2004
Delivering Security in a
Changing World: Future Capabilities review, continuing a vision
of "mobility" and "expeditionary warfare" articulated in the SDR.
Future equipment projects reflecting this direction featured in the
review, including the procurement of two large aircraft carriers
and a series of
medium-sized
vehicles for the Army. Reductions in manpower, equipment, and
infrastructure were also announced. The decision to reduce the
Army's regular infantry to 36 battalions (from 40) and amalgamate
the remaining single-battalion regiments was controversial,
especially in Scotland and among former soldiers. Envisaging a
rebalanced composition of more rapidly deployable light and medium
forces, the review announced that a regiment of
Challenger 2 main
battle tanks and a regiment of
AS-90
self-propelled artillery would be converted to lighter roles.
Current strength
The UK has the fourth largest declared military expenditure in the
world, after the United States, China, and France. It is also the
second largest spender on military science, engineering and
technology. Despite Britain's wide ranging capabilities, recent
defence policy has a stated assumption that any large operation
would be undertaken as part of a coalition. Bosnia, Kosovo,
Afghanistan (
Herrick),
Iraq (
Granby,
Desert Fox and
Telic) may all be taken as
precedent—indeed the last large scale military action in which the
British armed forces fought alone wasthe
Falklands War of 1982, in which it was
victorious.
The Royal
Navy is the second-largest navy of the NATO
alliance, in
terms of the combined displacement of its fleet, after the United States Navy, with 88 commissioned ships. The
Naval Service (which comprises the
Royal Navy and
Royal Marines) had a
strength of 35,470 in July 2006 and is charged with custody of the
United Kingdom's
strategic nuclear
deterrent consisting of four
Trident missile submarines, while
the Royal Marines provide commando units for amphibious assault and
for specialist reinforcement forces in and beyond the NATO area.
The
British Army had a trained strength
of 98,500 (with a total strength of 109,700), while the
Royal Air Force had a strength of 45,210.
This puts the total number of regular Armed Forces personnel at
180,690 (not including civilians), nine percent of whom were women.
This number is supported by reserve forces, including over 35,000
from the
Territorial
Army. The total number of serving personnel, including reserve
forces, is therefore in the region of 225,000 (taking into account
Navy, Marines and Air Force reserves).
Structure
Command organisation
As
head of state, the
British monarch,
Queen Elizabeth II, is
nominally the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. Longstanding
constitutional convention, however, has vested
de facto
executive authority in the office of
Prime Minister and the
Cabinet. The Queen
remains the "ultimate authority" of the military and retains the
power to prevent its unconstitutional use.
The
Ministry of
Defence is the
Government
department and highest level of military headquarters charged
with formulating and executing defence policy for the Armed Forces;
it employed 103,930 civilians in 2006 The department is controlled
by the
Secretary of State
for Defence and contains three deputy appointments:
Minister of State for the
Armed Forces, Minister for Defence Procurement, and Minister
for Veterans' Affairs.
Responsibility for the management of the forces is delegated to a
number of committees: the
Defence Council,
Chiefs of Staff Committee,
Defence Management Board,
and three single-service boards. The Defence Council, composed of
senior representatives of the services and the Ministry of Defence,
provides the "formal legal basis for the conduct of defence". The
three constituent single-service committees (
Admiralty Board,
Army
Board, and
Air Force Board) are
chaired by the Secretary of State for Defence.
The
Chief of the Defence
Staff is the professional head of the Armed Forces and is an
appointment that can be held by an
Admiral,
Air Chief Marshal, or
General. Before the practice was discontinued in the
1990s, those who were appointed to the position of CDS had been
elevated to the most senior rank in their respective service (a
5-star rank). The CDS, along with the
Permanent Under Secretary, are the principal advisers to the
departmental minister. The three services have their own respective
professional chiefs: the
First Sea
Lord, the
Chief of the General
Staff and the
Chief of the Air
Staff.
Naval Service
The
Naval Service consists of the
Royal Navy (including the
Submarine Service and
Fleet Air Arm) and the
Royal Marines. As of 21 May 2008, a
fleet of 88 vessels (including an
aircraft carrier in reserve) is maintained by the Royal Navy,
assisted by 17 vessels of the civilian
Royal Fleet Auxiliary.
Royal Navy
Referred to as the "
Senior Service"
by virtue of it being the oldest service within the British Armed
Forces, the Royal Navy had a strength of 39,440 in April, 2007. The
Navy has been structured around a single fleet since the abolition
of the
Eastern and
Western fleets in 1971.
Command of deployable assets is exercised by the
Commander-in-Chief Fleet, who also
has authority over the Royal Marines and the civilian Royal Fleet
Auxiliary. Personnel matters are the responsibility of the
Second Sea Lord/Commander-in-Chief Naval
Home Command, an appointment usually held by a vice-admiral.
The United Kingdom's nuclear deterrent is carried aboard the navy's
Vanguard-class of
four nuclear ballistic-missile submarines. The surface fleet
consists of
carriers,
destroyers,
frigates,
amphibious assault ships,
patrol ships,
mine-countermeasures, and miscellaneous
vessels.
A
submarine service has
existed within the Royal Navy for over 100-years. The service
possessed a combined fleet of diesel-electric and nuclear-powered
submarines until the early 1990s. Following the Options for Change
defence review, the Upholder class diesel-electric submarines were
withdrawn and the attack submarine flotilla is now exclusively
nuclear-powered.
Royal Marines
The infantry component of the Naval Service is the Corps of Royal
Marines, which had a reported strength of approximately 7,400 in
2006.
Consisting of a single manoeuvre brigade
(3
Commando
) and various independent units, the Royal Marines
specialise in amphibious,
arctic, and mountain warfare.
Contained within 3 Commando Brigade are three attached army units;
1st Battalion,
The Rifles, an infantry
battalion based at Beachley Barracks, Chepstow (from April 2008),
29 Commando
Regiment Royal Artillery, an
artillery regiment based in Plymouth, and
24 Commando Regiment
Royal Engineers. The
Commando Logistic Regiment
consists of personnel from the Army, Royal Marines, and Royal
Navy.
British Army
The regular
British Army had a trained
strength of 98,500 and total strength of 109,700 in October 2008,
while its reserve component, the
Territorial Army, numbered
38,500. The British Army is undergoing a restructuring programme
envisaged in the 2003 defence white paper,
Delivering Security in a
Changing World, and the subsequent announcement of the Future
Army Structure (FAS).
The army
consists of three TLBs (Top Level Budget): United Kingdom Land Command, HQ Adjutant-General, and HQ Northern
Ireland
. Deployable combat formations consist of two
divisions (
1st
Armoured and
3rd Mechanised) and
eight brigades.
Within the United Kingdom, operational and
non-deployable units are administered by three regionally-defined
"regenerative" divisions (2nd, 4th, and 5th) and London
District
.
The core element of the Army is the 50 battalions (36 regular and
14 territorial) of
regular and
territorial infantry, organised into 17 regiments. The majority
of infantry regiments contains multiple regular and territorial
battalions. Modern infantry have diverse capabilities and this is
reflected in the varied roles assigned to them. There are four
operational roles that infantry battalions can fulfil:
air assault,
armoured infantry,
mechanised infantry, and
light role infantry.
Regiments and battalions exist within every corps of the Army,
functioning as administrative or tactical formations. Armoured
regiments are equivalent to an infantry battalion. There are 11
armoured regiments within the regular army, of which five are
designated as "
Armoured" and five as "
Formation Reconnaissance".
The
1st Royal Tank Regiment
uniquely forms a component of the
Joint Chemical, Biological, Radiation and
Nuclear Regiment.
With the exception of the
Household
Cavalry, armoured regiments and their Territorial counterparts
are grouped under the
Royal
Armoured Corps. Arms and support units are also formed into
similar collectives organised around specific purposes, such as the
Corps of Royal Engineers,
Army Air Corps and
Royal Army Medical Corps.
Royal Air Force
Consisting of both fixed-wing and rotary aircraft, the
Royal Air Force has a large operational
fleet that fulfils various roles. According to a House of Commons
written answer made by Armed Forces Minister
Adam Ingram, the RAF had in
its inventory an estimated 1,046 aircraft of all types in March
2006. In 2008, the figure was revised to nearer 850. A personnel
strength of 45,360 was recorded in April 2007, though the RAF
underwent a programme of reduction that gave it a trained strength
of 41,440 by April 2008.
Frontline aircraft are controlled by
Air
Command, which is organised into three
groups defined by function:
1 Group (Air Combat),
2 Group (Air Support) and
22 Group (training aircraft and ground
facilities). Deployable formations consist of Expeditionary Air
Wings and
squadrons—the basic unit of the Air Force.
Independent
flights are
deployed to facilities in Afghanistan, the Falkland Islands, Iraq,
and the United States.
The Royal Air Forces operates multi-role and single-role fighters,
reconnaissance and patrol aircraft, tankers, transports,
helicopters,
unmanned aerial
vehicles, and various types of training aircraft. Ground units
are also maintained by the Royal Air Force, most prominently the
RAF Police and
RAF Regiment. The Royal Air Force Regiment
essentially functions as the "ground fighting force" of the RAF.
Roled principally as ground defence for RAF facilities, the
regiment contains nine regular squadrons, supported by five
squadrons of the
Royal
Auxiliary Air Force Regiment. By March 2008, the three
remaining "Air Defence" squadrons had disbanded or re-roled and
their responsibilities transferred to the British Army's
Royal Artillery.
Civilian Agencies of the MoD
The British Armed Forces are supported by civilian agencies owned
by the MoD. Although they are civilian, they play a vital role in
supporting Armed Forces operations, and in certain circumstances
are under military discipline.
Naval Auxiliaries
The MoD owns two civilian naval agencies which are not part of the
military
Naval Service.
Police
Personnel
Size
| Service |
1951 |
1975 |
1985 |
1993 |
1997 |
2005/2006 |
2009 |
| 489,600 |
338,400 |
326,200 |
274,800 |
210,800 |
195,900 |
240,000 |
| 131,000 |
76,200 |
70,400 |
59,400 |
45,100 |
39,400 |
N/A |
| 209,700 |
167,100 |
162,400 |
134,600 |
108,800 |
107,700 |
N/A |
| 148,900 |
95,000 |
93,400 |
80,900 |
56,900 |
48,700 |
N/A |
| National
Service |
| 319,600 |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
| 7,200 |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
| 223,500 |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
| 88,900 |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
| N/K |
N/K |
205,700 |
258,300 |
259,300 |
222,300 |
210,500 |
| N/K |
N/K |
25,700 |
22,000 |
24,100 |
23,200 |
N/A |
| N/K |
N/K |
150,200 |
190,200 |
190,100 |
160,200 |
N/A |
| N/K |
N/K |
29,800 |
46,100 |
45,400 |
35,000 |
N/A |
| 123,500 |
N/K |
88,600 |
76,100 |
62,500 |
42,300 |
N/A |
| 10,100 |
N/K |
6,300 |
5,600 |
4,600 |
3,600 |
N/A |
| 95,300 |
N/K |
81,000 |
68,700 |
57,600 |
37,300 |
N/A |
| 18,100 |
N/K |
1,200 |
1,800 |
1,400 |
1,400 |
N/A |
Recruitment
The Armed Forces mainly recruits within the United Kingdom, and
normally has an annual recruitment target of around 24,000. The
minimum recruitment age is 15.9 years (although personnel may not
serve on operations below 18 years); the maximum recruitment age is
32-years. The normal term of engagement is 22 years, however the
minimum service required before resignation is 4 years. Low
unemployment in Britain has resulted in the Army having difficulty
in meeting its target, and in the early years of the 21st century
there has been a marked increase in the number of recruits from
other (predominantly
Commonwealth) countries.
Citizens
of Commonwealth countries,
the Republic of
Ireland
, and dual-nationals are eligible to join the
British Armed Forces. In 2005, the proportion of foreign
nationals in the Armed Forces rose from a 2004 figure of 7.5 to
almost 10 percent. While the Army has been the destination for the
majority of recruits, large contingents exist in the Navy and Air
Force. Excluding the
Brigade of
Gurkhas and the
Royal Irish Regiment, 7,155 personnel were recorded as being of
foreign nationality in 2005.
The largest tri-service national groups recorded in 2005 were
Fijian (2,040), Jamaican (1,030), South African (710), Zimbabwean
(590), Ghanaian (590), and Irish (335). Smaller contingents were
drawn from countries such as Australia (110) and Canada (105), and
island nations with relatively small populations. A Grenadian,
Lance Corporal
Johnson Beharry, was
awarded the
Victoria Cross in 2005
for actions in Iraq.
Specific initiatives to develop female and ethnic minority
representation in the Armed Forces has yielded percentage increases
of 3.4 and 4.5 since 1997. In 1997, there were 14,830 (5.7%) women
and 2.184 (1.0%) personnel who identified as an ethnic minority.
This had increased to 17,870 (9.1%) and 10,180 (5.5%) in 2006. A
higher percentage of personnel have attained higher-rank since
2000. Notably included among these officers are Rear-Admiral
Amjad Hussain, Air Commodore
David Case, Commodore
Carolyn Stait, and Squadron Leader
Nicky Smith.
Women have been fully integrated into the British Armed Forces
since the early 1990s; however, they remain excluded from primarily
combat units in the Army, Royal Marines,
Royal Air Force Regiment, and the
submarine service.Since 2000, sexual orientation has not been a
factor considered in recruitment, and homosexuals can serve openly
in the armed forces, unlike in the
United States armed forces for
example. All branches of the forces have actively recruited at
Gay Pride events. The forces keep no
formal figures concerning the number of gay and lesbian serving
soldiers, saying that the sexual orientation of personnel is
considered irrelevant and not monitored.
Current operations

Map of countries with whom the United
Kingdom has defence treaties or arrangements

Countries with British Armed Forces
garrisons, facilities, and deployments
There were over 30,000 members of the British Armed Forces deployed
abroad in January 2007, serving in various capacities.
Peacekeeping, humanitarian aid, and disaster relief tasks have
increased in recent years, many under the auspices of the United
Nations and NATO.
The Armed Forces most recently contributed
to the international humanitarian and reconstruction efforts that
occurred in the aftermath of the 2004
tsunami
and 2005
earthquake in Pakistan
.
Within the United Kingdom, there were approximately 140,000
personnel stationed in England, 13,200 in Scotland, 7,000 in
Northern Ireland, and 6,200 in Wales. The
conflict in Northern Ireland has required the
Armed Forces to provide "
Military Aid to the Civil
Power" since 1969, with a presence that peaked at over 20,000
regular personnel in 1972. Sectarian and paramilitary violence has
subsided since the
Good Friday
Agreement was signed in 1998. and the IRA declared an end to
its campaign in 2005. Operational support for the
Police Service of Northern
Ireland, known as
Operation
Banner, officially ended on 1 August 2007, resulting in the
reduction of the military presence to the size of a peacetime
garrison.
Personnel are based in a number of
overseas territories, though internal
security for the majority is provided solely by small police
forces. Garrisons and facilities exist in Ascension Island, Diego
Garcia, the Falkland Islands, Gibraltar, and the Sovereign Base
Areas in Cyprus. These deployments accounted for over 5,000
personnel in 2006.
Locally-raised units are maintained in
Bermuda
(The Bermuda
Regiment), the Falkland Islands (Falkland Islands Defence
Force), and Gibraltar (Royal Gibraltar Regiment
). Though their primary mission is "home
defence", individuals have volunteered for operational duties. The
Royal Gibraltar Regiment has recently mobilised section-sized units
for attachment to regiments deployed to Iraq.
Recent Defence Reviews
See also
Notes
- Armed Forces Act 1976, Arrangement of Sections,
raf.mod.uk
- UK Armed Forces: Full Time Strengths and
Requirements at 1 October 2008, dasa.mod.uk
- Strength of UK Regular Forces by Service and whether
trained or untrained at 1 April each year, dasa.mod.uk
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/6914788.stm
- United Kingdom (05/06), state.gov
- The Mission of the Armed Forces,
armedforces.co.uk
- Permanent Joint Operating Bases, northwood.mod.uk
- House of Commons Hansard,
publications.parliament.uk
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), p343
- Colman (2005), A 'Special Relationship'?: Harold Wilson,
Lyndon B. Johnson, and Anglo-American Relations' at the Summit’,
1964-68, p77
- Focus on Europe, raf.mod.uk
- Johnman & Gorst (1997), The Suez Crisis, p166
- Lider (1985), British Military Thought After World War
II, p525
- Lee (1996), Aspects of British Political History
1914-1995, 273
- Pierre (1972), Nuclear Politics: the British experience
with an independent strategic force: 1939-1970, p100
- Hack (2000), Defence and Decolonisation in South-East Asia:
Britain, Malaya, Singapore, 1941-1968, p285
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), p345
- Vanguard to Trident 1945-2000,
royal-navy.mod.uk
- Kennedy (2004), British Naval Strategy East of Suez,
1900-2000: Influence and Actions, p193
- Focus on Europe, raf.mod.uk, p15-16
- 1998 Publication, dasa.mod.uk
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), p421
- Kennedy (2004), British Naval Strategy East of Suez,
1900-2000: Influence and Actions, p246
- Harding (2005), The Royal Navy 1930-2000: innovation and
defence, p220
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), pp350-351
- Hollowell (2003), Britain Since 1945, p16
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), p358
- Strachan (2006), Big Wars And Small Wars: The British Army
And the Lessons of War in the Twentieth Century, p158
- Frantzen (2005), Nato And Peace Support Operations,
1991-1999: Policies And Doctrines, p104
- Frantzen (2005), NATO and Peace Support Operations,
1991-1999: policies and doctrines, p95
- Dorman (2005), Overstretch: Modern Army's weakness,
news.bbc.co.uk
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), p434
- BBC (2007), Military 'faces retention crisis', news.bbc.co.uk
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), P418
- Kennedy, British Naval Strategy East of Suez, 1900-2000:
Influence and Actions, p261
- Hansard (1998), House of Commons,
publications.parliament.uk
- Chandler & Beckett (2003), p418
- Permanent Joint Headquarters,
armedforces.co.uk
- BBC (2004), The armed forces of the future,
news.bbc.co.uk
- Delivering Security in a Changing World Future
Capabilities, mod.uk
- BBC News (2004), Hoon confirms super-regiment plan, news.bbc.co.uk
- Future Army Structure, armedforces.co.uk
- Tim Radford Military dominates UK science, says report The
Guardian 20-1-2005
- UK armed forces 'below strength' bbc.co.uk
3-10-2006
- Queen and Armed Forces, royal.gov.uk
- Civilian personnel by budgetary area and grade
equivalence, at 1 April each year, dasa.mod.uk
- Defence Organisation, mod.uk
- Defence Council and Chief of the Defence Staff,
armedforces.co.uk
- Hansard (1998), House of Commons Written Answers,
publications.parliament.uk
- UKDS 2005 - Glossary & Abbreviations: N
- Personnel Support Brief - Summer 2006,
rncom.mod.uk
- Fleet Today, royal-navy.mod.uk
- RFA Fleet Today, royal-navy.mod.uk
- Number of vessels in the Royal Navy and Royal Fleet
Auxiliary, and squadrons in the Fleet Air Arm at 1 April each
year, dasa.mod.uk
- Hampshire (1975), The Royal Navy Since 1945: its transition
to the nuclear age, p248
- Fleet Command and Organisation,
armedforces.co.uk
- https://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/static/content/209.html
- BBC News (2002), UK's
mountain warfare elite, news.bbc.co.uk
- The Commando Role for 1 RIFLER,
army.mod.uk
- Commando Logistic Regiment,
royalnavy.mod.uk
- Strength of the Reserve Forces at 1 April each
year, dasa.mod.uk
- Defence Organisation, mod.uk
- Divisions and Brigades, army.mod.uk
- Number of Regiments, Infantry battalions & Major
Headquarters, in the Regular & Territorial Army at 1 April each
year, dasa.mod.uk
- HQ Land Command, armedforces.co.uk/
- The Mercian Regiment was formed in August 2007,
to become the final regiment created as a result of the infantry
amalgamations under FAS
- Arms and Services, army.mod.uk
- Hansard House of Commons,
publications.parliament.uk
- House of Commons Hansard,
publications.parliament.uk
- RAF
- Structure, raf.mod.uk
- Transforming the Royal Air
Force,raf.mod.uk
- Royal Air Force Squadrons, raf.mod.uk
- Aircraft Order of Battle, scramble.nl
- Royal
Air Force - Equipment, .raf.mod.uk
- The Royal Air Force Regiment, raf.mod.uk
- RAF Regiment, armedforces.co.uk
- Ministry of Defence, Statement on Defence 1952, HMSO,
1952
- Hansard House of Commons,
publications.parliament.uk
- BBC News (2007), Recruitment Age for Army Raised, news.bbc.co.uk
- Evans (2005), How British Army is fast becoming foreign
legion, timesonline.co.uk
- Wilson (2006), One in 10 soldiers is recruited overseas,
telegraph.co.uk
- Hansard House of Commons,
publications.parliament.uk/
- Hansard House of Commons,
publications.parliament.uk
- Strength of UK Regular Forces by sex and Service at
1 April each year, dasa.mod.uk
- Strength of UK Regular Forces by ethnic origin and
rank at 1 April each year, dasa.mod.uk
- Naval base appoints female chief, news.bbc.co.uk
- Honour for high-flying woman,
news.bbc.co.uk
- Women in the Armed Forces, .mod.uk
- House of Commons Hansard,
publications.parliament.uk
- Where are British troops and why?, news.bbc.co.uk
- Ministry of Defence Policy Paper No.2 -
Multinational Defence Co-operation, mod.uk
- Operation Garron, operations.mod.uk
- Pakistan Earthquake Relief Operations: Chronology
of Events, operations.mod.uk
- Numbers of UK armed forces committed to Northern
Ireland, dasa.mod.uk
- Jackson, Ireland, 1798-1998: Politics and War,
p404
- BBC News, Good Friday Agreement, news.bbc.co.uk
- BBC News (2006), Troop withdrawal plan published, news.bbc.co.uk
- The Royal Gibraltar Regiment, 1rg.gi
- More soldiers from Royal Gibraltar Regiment in
overseas duties in regiment's history, www.panorama.gi
References
External links