Our country needs you: Rules relaxed to join Forces
Foreign nationals will be eligible to join the armed forces in greater numbers, ministers will announce, as British residency requirements for service are set to be scrapped.
The Ministry of Defence has removed the need for Commonwealth citizens to have lived in the UK for five years before applying for service.
An extra 1,350 personnel from overseas are hoped to be enlisted to the navy, army and air force every year.
The move comes as the armed forces struggle to recruit enough personnel to fill a shortfall in their ranks.
Applicants from nations including India, Australia, Canada and Fiji will be considered for all roles in the forces, without having lived in the UK.
Until now, they had to have resided in Britain for five years and their recruitment was capped at a maximum of 200 per year.
The Army will begin the admissions from early next year, while the Navy and RAF will commence the process immediately.
Other than the Nepalese Gurkhas and applicants from the Republic of Ireland who can enrol under a special arrangement, those from outside the Commonwealth will still need British citizenship to apply.
In April, a National Audit Office report said the full-time military was running at a 5.7 per cent shortfall.
An extra 8,200 regulars and 2,400 engineers were needed to fill the “largest gap in a decade”, the report added, while intelligence analysts and pilots were also in demand.
0 An extra 1,350 personnel from overseas are hoped to be enlisted to the navy, army and air force every year
The public spending watchdog is carrying out a review of army recruitment, including the contract with outsource firm Capita.
Critics have called for Capita to be stripped of its contract
over forces staffing shortfalls.
In January the Army unveiled a recruitment advertising campaign reported to have cost £1.6 million. It intended to encourage more people from different backforces
grounds, genders, sexualities and faiths to join up. However it was criticised for failing to target those most interested in joining the forces.
Colonel Richard Kemp, former commander of British
in Afghanistan, said the main group of people considering signing up are more worried about “how they are going to face combat”.