The Mail on Sunday

BARMY ARMY FIRE SALE

Anger as military hardware is dumped at knockdown prices

- By Mark Nicol

BRITISH Forces’ ships, planes and vehicles are going at bargain prices in the country’s biggest-ever sell-off of military equipment.

Experts fear the sale agreed by top brass will reduce Britain’s ability to conduct military operations, but the money is desperatel­y needed to plug an estimated £ 20 billion black hole in defence finances.

The fire sale includes a £175 million fleet of armoured troop carriers, the Royal Navy flagship – which is currently leading UK hurricane relief operations – and a fleet of Special Forces helicopter­s.

The equipment, which is expected to be sold at a huge loss according to industry insiders, has been brought together in a Ministry of Defence sales catalogue distribute­d to representa­tives of armed forces from around the world at a recent arms fair in London.

The Warthog armoured troop carriers now on sale entered service in 2010 as an urgent operationa­l upgrade and were immediatel­y praised for saving the lives of UK troops in Afghanista­n. Some 17 Warthogs were blown up by Taliban roadside bombs, but not a single soldier travelling inside the vehicles was killed.

Yet just seven years later, and with no armoured troop carriers to replace them, 85 Warthogs have been made available to foreign buyers alongside thousands of British Army vehicles at an estimated cost of £500,000 per vehicle.

The Navy’s sell- off i ncludess helicopter carrier HMS Ocean, which arrived in the Caribbean last week to lead the UK’s relief effort following Hurricanes Irma and Maria. The ship’s 650 crew brought with them 60 tons of aid, including constructi­on equipment, hygiene kits and water purificati­on tablets. HMS Ocean, which cost £150 million when it entered service, is also equipped with Wildcat and Merlin Mk3 helicopter­s. The ship, which underwent a £65 million refit in 2014, is expected to be sold d for £80 million early next year.

The Royal Navy is also selling g its only ocean survey vessel, The e Mail on Sunday can reveal. HMS S Scott was refitted in 2015 and is s today equipped with the latest t sonar and hydrograph­ic equipment, , which is used to map the sea bed.

Last night, former head of the e Royal Navy Admiral Lord West said: ‘I am appalled by the loss of HMS Ocean, which is bound to be e sold for a knockdown price. Her departure means we cannot conduct any large-scale amphibious operations and she represents quite a coup for whoever buys her.

‘ I am both surprised and concerned about HMS Scott because she does a lot of oceanograp­hic work on behalf of Britain’s nuclear [submarine] deterrent and this is a capability we need to retain. Overall, this sale represents the hollowing-out of Britain’s Armed Forces and a significan­t loss of capability. These aren’t efficienci­es, these are cuts. This is affecting us at the sharp end of what we can do on land, by sea and by air yet people still seem to be in denial about how bad the situation is.’

The RAF’s kit sell-off includes 50 Tucano T1 training aircraft, gliders used to train air cadets and executive-style jets flown by the RAF’s Royal Squadron. VIP passengers usingu the BAE 146 include the QueenQ and Defence Secretary Sir MichaelMi Fallon. The RAF is also sellingsel six C- 130J transport aircraft,cra but these are being replaced by Airbus A400Ms.

Vast quantities of ammunition are also on the sales list. This follows the scaling-back of military exercises and reduction in size of the Army, down to 79,407 fully trained soldiers, according to latest figures.

The slowdown in UK military activity has also convinced Army chiefs to sell 700 support trucks, 100 pick-up trucks, 100 Vector light protected patrol vehicles, 50 Snatch Land Rovers and as yet unconfirme­d numbers of Spartan, Scimitar, Samson, Sultan and Samaritan combat reconnaiss­ance vehicles, as well as Gazelle and Lynx helicopter­s, which were flown by the Army Air Corps and Royal Navy.

The MoD defended the sell-off, saying: ‘ The revenue generated can be reinvested to support cutting-edge technology for our Armed Forces. Sales do not compromise the capabiliti­es of our Forces and are undertaken when equipment is surplus to UK requiremen­ts.’

‘This is a significan­t loss of capability’ * and we’re flogging off our ships and aircraft too!

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