British public โ€œnot as worried as they should be about how close we ar | Politics | News


Following the release of the National Security Strategy and the Strategic Defence Review (SDR) concerns have emerged over the UKโ€™s readiness for a major military conflict, especially in light of escalating global tensions.

Speaking on The Division Bell podcast, The Expressโ€™ defence reporter Conor Wilson warned โ€œthe British public is not as worried as they should be about how close we are to warโ€.

He went on to say: โ€œItโ€™s now feasible weโ€™ll be in the range of a missile, and we donโ€™t have the defences to counter that threatโ€.

Despite PM Sir Keir Starmer pledging to boost defence spending by 5% to meet NATO targets, Wilson described the plans as โ€œsmoke and mirrorsโ€, pointing out that money alone wasnโ€™t enough.

โ€œThe British defence industry canโ€™t magic drones and equipment overnight,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd the MoD has a terrible track record when it comes to delivering kit on time or within budget.โ€

To highlight the issue, Wilson revealed that military contracts worth over ยฃ20 million take roughly six and a half years to deliver equipment into soldiersโ€™ hands. And, even if Britain had top-tier weapons itโ€™s not just equipment that we need but the infrastructure to transport it. We could have the best bullets, bombs and soldiers but, as Wilson pointed out if โ€œyou canโ€™t move them over bridges that will only tolerate 18 tonsโ€ โ€“ then what?

While Britain wouldnโ€™t be alone in being unprepared for a potential conflict, the reality of our position is โ€œdepressingโ€.

When asked about troop numbers, Wilson quipped the British Army has โ€œless than the crowd of a Taylor Swift concert โ€“ and probably about 10% of those are not medically deployableโ€.

He also pointed to a troubling recruitment crisis, citing research that found a military career is seen as only slightly less attractive than working at McDonaldโ€™s or KFC.

Still, there is some hope. Wilson agreed with hosts of The Division Bell, Lizzy Buchan and Christian Calgie, that in the event of war, our patriotic spirit would come back in full force.

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