Portsmouth News

Cutting size of army a 'huge gamble': city MP

9,000 posts to be shed by 2025

- By Steve Deeks and Tom Cotterill newsdesk@thenews.co.uk

AN MP has said cutting the size of the armed forces represents a ‘huge gamble’ with national security.

Portsmouth South MP Stephen Morgan, the shadow armed forces minister, was responding to defence secretary Ben Wallace’s announceme­nt on Thursday.

Parliament heard the army will be cut by 9,000 to 73,000 by 2025 amid a reorganisa­tion into four divisions, with some existing brigades merged or deleted.

There will also be 33 site closures, including Alanbrooke Barracks at Topcliffe in North Yorkshire, severing ties the army has with communitie­s across the UK.

A new elite unit of ‘Rangers’ will be created to operate in complex, high threat environmen­ts as part of an army special operations brigade.

Among the soldiers who will form part of the new Rangers will be troops from Hampshire’s local infantry unit, the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment.

Likewise, changes are also proposed for the region’s local reservist Royal Artillery units.

Plans suggested by defence secretary Ben Wallace, would see the 106th Regiment, Royal Artillery – which has air defence batteries based in Hilsea and Southampto­n – being ‘restructur­ed’ from January 2023.

There is no clear message as to what this restructur­e would involve.

A serving soldier told The News: ‘I think that there are a lot of people in my unit that have high hopes for this review.

‘Conditions for serving soldiers have improved over the past decade. But there is still do much more to be done.’

Mr Wallace claimed the changes would ‘transform the army into a more agile, integrated, lethal, expedition­ary force’.

However, concerns have been raised by Labour.

Mr Morgan said: ‘The government's decision to cut the size of the army to its smallest since the Napoleonic era is a huge gamble with our national security.

‘At a time when the threats faced by the UK and its allies are growing it is vital that we maintain the ability to reinforce Europe against Russia and be an effective warfightin­g partner to NATO allies.’

Jack Watling, of the influentia­l defence and security think tank RUSI, said: ‘The British Army has essentiall­y admitted that it cannot field a force for high-intensity combat for the best part of a decade.’

 ?? ?? THREATS Stephen Morgan MP has national security concerns
THREATS Stephen Morgan MP has national security concerns

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