Yorkshire Post

Army recruitmen­t numbers ‘are shrinking due to delays’

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THOUSANDS OF prospectiv­e troops are dropping out before completing Army training, with lengthy delays suspected of fuelling the trend, according to reports.

More than 100,000 people signed up to the British Army in the 12 months up to March 2017, but only 7,500 became soldiers, according to newspaper.

It takes an average of 300 days between a person’s first contract with the Army to them becoming a soldier, the report said.

The uptake in interest marks a high-point in recent years – having shot up from 58,000 attempts to join in the 12 months ending March 2016.

Former head of the Army General Lord Richard Dannatt told the newspaper: “I’ve heard of a number of people who have been trying to join the Armed Forces and got fed up at the length of time it takes. The system is too complicate­d, the Army knows the previous system was better and would like to go back to it.

“The reason why it’s not being done is because it’s too expensive.”

It comes amid concern that the military is in the grips of a recruitmen­t crisis.

Last year a study by former Armed Forces Minister Mark Francois, which was commission­ed by Downing Street, said all three branches of the military were “running to stand still” as they struggled to replace the numbers leaving.

The 7,500 new recruits remains below the 10,000 needed to join each year for the Army to maintain its strength.

An Army spokesman said: “The huge demand to join the Army is to be welcomed and our new recruitmen­t campaign and fitness app means thousands of people are applying.

“We are working hard to speed up the process so recruits who meet our world class standards can start their training as soon as possible.”

It is not the first time the former army head has given grave warnings about the future of the forces.

Last summer General Lord Dannatt warned that an emphasis on spending on “big ticket machinery” had led to a squeeze on manpower.

He told that “any thought of Britain being taken seriously in the world after Brexit would disappear” if forces were cut any further.

He also warned that further cuts would see America “give up on us as a useful ally”.

 ??  ?? Former Army chief said the current signing up system was too complicate­d.
Former Army chief said the current signing up system was too complicate­d.

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