British Army head 'quits after row at senior degree over army cuts'

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Chief of the General Staff UK Patrick Sanders (Image: Getty)

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Gen Sir Patrick Sanders is claimed to be stepping down as head of the British Army simply days after making a withering assault on cutbacks and outdated expertise.

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It follows an alleged disagreement between him and Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, the general chief of the Armed Forces. The man who served as chief of workers for round a 12 months is assumed to have made the choice to stop after a row over troop cuts and procurement priorities.

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The Army is reportedly being slashed to 73,000 troopers and faces additional reductions whereas the Royal Navy and RAF get to take care of their numbers.

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Admiral Sir Tony Radakin (Image: Getty)

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Only a number of days in the past Sir Patrick criticised the Army's ageing armoured automobiles and tanks, likening them to "rotary dial telephones in an iPhone age". Admiral Radakin was beforehand head of the Royal Navy, and Army sources have claimed that below him huge funds have gone on costly warships whereas Army assets had been being pared again.

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According to studies within the Daily Mail, Sir Patrick was additionally stated to have been angered by a comment from Sir Tony that General Gwyn Jenkins, one other senior army official, may do Sir Patrick's job.

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Gen Jenkins, who served with the Special Boat Service in Afghanistan and Iraq, was seen to have been fast-tracked by way of the ranks and jumped the queue of prime contenders when he was appointed Vice Chief of the Defence Staff, below Sir Tony, final August.

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A supply informed the Mail: "It was naïve of Sir Tony to make that remark at a senior strategy group meeting because it was always going to get back to Sir Patrick, who wouldn't be amused. There wasn't any love lost between them anyway, but this didn't help. They're in different places over what direction the UK's armed forces should go in.

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"Sir Tony is driving the so-called 'Pacific tilt' and Sir Patrick is specializing in Ukraine and defending the Army from extra cuts. He has been outspoken about the necessity to preserve a reputable power and retaining sufficient troopers. Finally he is had sufficient."

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State of British Army's heavy vehicles is 'miserable' says Ellwood

Britain's first female general, Lieutenant General Sharon Nesmith, is among those who could succeed Sir Patrick. Former SAS officer Lieutenant General Roly Walker, Lieutenant General Ralph Wooddisse and Lieutenant General Nick Borton are other candidates thought to be in the running.

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Sir Patrick's "retirement" was announced only 16 months after he was appointed Chief of the General Staff. He will leave office in 2024, ahead of the planned date in 2025.

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Tory MP Tobias Ellwood, chairman of the Commons defence select committee, suggested Sir Patrick may have paid a high price for being outspoken. He told the Mail: "Sir Patrick's departure is a big loss to the Army. He is prepared to inform political leaders what they need to hear relatively than what they'd like to listen to relating to the true state of the Army."

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Defence Secretary Ben Wallace described Sir Patrick as "a firstclass common" but added: "Senior officers come and go and that's the nature of our armed forces. The battle in opposition to Russia, by way of our assist for Ukraine, has been carried out by a spread of individuals and I do not assume that interrupting the conventional scheme of issues will make a distinction...

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The British Army's Challenger 2 tank (Image: Getty)

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"When I appointed General Patrick the condition was he would be doing two years, so there is no point listening to gossipy reporting that he's spoken out and his time will be cut short."

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Gen Sanders was one among our most skilled army leaders, holding command on the military's cyber and particular forces in its Strategic Command. But he has been identified for being outspoken and he has criticised army spending on various events.

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Earlier this week, he stated Britain ought to "never again be unprepared as our forebears were in the 1930s" — and steered the disaster in Russia could possibly be in comparison with the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi celebration. At a latest convention, he stated: "Those who believe that our geography allows us to minimise investment on land or that we can simply hide behind the armies of other Nato contributors are simply wrong."

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He additionally attacked the nation's determination to donate Challenger 2 tanks and different weapons to Ukraine, saying it left Britain "temporarily weaker as an army". And he took intention on the army's antiquated gear.

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It got here because the Ministry of Defence unveiled a £35billion funding in new equipment over the subsequent decade, which can see 35 out of 38 present Army automobiles changed, the introduction of Artificial Intelligence methods and a better emphasis on unmanned automobiles and drones.

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Defence Secretary Ben Wallace described Sir Patrick as 'a firstclass common' (Image: Getty)

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He stated: "I trained on the 432 armoured personnel carrier in the 1980s when it was already 30 years old. It is still in service today. Our armoured reconnaissance vehicle came into service in 1973, our infantry fighting vehicle Warrior in 1987 and Challenger 2 in 1998. These are rotary dial telephones in an iPhone age.

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"Our procurement report has been poor and our land industrial base has withered. Furthermore, our Army Reserve is just not as succesful and credible as we'd like it to be."

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The Army is expected to shrink considerably over the coming years, continuing a trend for smaller brigades and regiments that followed the Cold War. The introduction of new technologies such as AI will make conflict less labour intensive, meaning that armies may not require as many soldiers.

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The Ministry of Defence was given £5billion to spend over two years in March, with £3billion set to go on the nuclear submarine programme and £2billion dedicated to stockpiling of ammunition given to Ukraine to help aid its conflict. Rumours about Gen Sanders' dissatisfaction began early this year after it was disclosed that he was concerned about the Army's operational capability after decades of cuts.

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One friend and former colleague described Gen Sir Patrick as a person with "flawless integrity". The source added: "Paddy is just not the form of particular person to begin thumping a desk and make threats about quitting, however he could have drawn a line within the sand and stated to himself, 'this far and no additional,' — and Ben Wallace is aware of that. It is difficult to recollect when the Army has been in a worse state."

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With recruitment down, the supply continued, housing issues and poor pay had been undermining morale, and it was extensively thought that the Army had change into the poor relation of the Armed Forces.

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