Revolutionary, Reactionary or just plain Budgetary? The Army 2020 Announcement
Few will have missed the coverage
this week of the plans to change the British Army into a new force by 2020.
From the start of the week where the Daily Telegraph produced an article, best
described as pure fantasy, on the resignation of generals, through to the leak
of private correspondence between a Regimental Colonel and the Chief of the
General Staff, this has not been a good week for the media, or those entrusted
with keeping private correspondence private.
The announcement in the Commons,
by the Secretary of State has set out the detailed plans for the future
structure of the Army, and given more depth to the role of the Reserve Forces. The
genesis of this work was the 2010 SDSR which set out plans to reduce the Army
to around 95,000. Further work, once it was clear that the sums in the SDSR didn’t
add up, revised this figure downwards again, to a total of 82,000 regular
personnel. This announcement was the means by which the new structure of the
Army was put out to the world.
In summary, the Army will
comprise two very distinct elements, the so-called ‘Reaction Force’ and the ‘Adaptable
Force’. The Reaction Force will comprise what appears to be a slimmed down
Armoured Division, built around three brigades, and augmented by 16 Air Assault
Brigade (and effectively 3 Commando Brigade) plus supporting units to provide
the short notice rapid response capability. The Adaptable Force is built around
those units which are held at longer readiness to move, and which will provide
the routine garrison, training and roulement duties. Within this structure some
units will be held at different levels of readiness depending on how the
security situation looks. Essential to this plan is the use of some 30,000
trained Army Reserve personnel to augment both forces, through a bolstered set
of employment rules. The force structure will be implemented over the next 4-5
years, as the drawdown from HERRICK continues.
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Some feel the Army Plans are going off the Rails (Copyright MOD) |
The reaction has led to what
can best be described as an outbreak of hysteria in the media. The usual suspects
have been wheeled out to claim that the UK no longer has an army, only a self-defence
force, or that we are no longer capable of defending ourselves. Society as we
know it is threatened, as we will be at risk of invasion by an enemy so
powerful that no one seems to be able to define exactly who it is yet. At the
same time, the local pressure groups (otherwise known as the Cap Badge Mafia)
are generating angry letters that ‘their regiment’ is for the chop. Citing
hundreds of years of loyal service to the Crown, (and conveniently ignoring the
reality that almost all Regiments today are bastard amalgamations of many other
regiments over hundreds of years), they make the case that our national security
is threatened too by the loss of a cap badge.
Lets consider for a moment
some of the more hysterical accusations and put them in their place. Firstly,
the Army is losing about 18,000 personnel or under 20% of its strength. This
hurts, but no more than the RN or the RAF, both of whom have lost similar
proportions of personnel over the last 10 years or so. Additionally, in 1990
the Army lost nearly 40,000 soldiers as part of Options for Change, and
strangely enough civilisation didn’t come to an end.
So, let’s think positively for
a moment. Even after these cuts, there will still be sufficient combat power
held in the UK to enable us to deploy either a one off commitment of three
Brigades plus supporting elements of about 30,000 troops to fight a high
intensity war for 6 months, or to sustain a Brigade indefinitely on operations.
How many nations in the world are capable of doing this – sending 8-10,000 troops
4-6000 miles from home, and ensuring they stay for the duration. At a push the
US, possibly France, maybe China (although this would be a push) and possibly
Germany, if they really tried. So lets be clear – these cuts do not alter the
fact that the UK will remain one of only a handful of countries in the world
able to deploy effective combat power at distance and outside of their local
neighbourhood. The reality is that we’re not going to be fighting alone on the
sort of high intensity operation. Can anyone seriously imagine the UK being the
sole participant in a war involving putting an Armoured division on the ground?
What the UK will retain is an impressive ability to put meaningful power on the
ground at the highest level of war fighting.
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The Main Battle Tank - The ultimate measure of high end warfighting (Copyright MOD) |
That said, there are real
challenges that will need to be overcome in order to make this a success. From
the outset real leadership is going to be needed to avoid the accusation and
emergence of a ‘two-tier army’. It seems clear from looking at the wiring diagrams
that large swathes of the Infantry and supporting units is going to be working
under what was previously seen as the Regional Forces. Assuming that the Arms
Plot has not been reintroduced, and that battalions will remain locked into
their roles, it is going to take a lot of effort to convince people to join a
unit which is posted to the ‘Adaptable Forces’. Who is going to want to join
the part of the Army that is unlikely to deploy anywhere exciting, or where
deployment is likely to be peace keeping, and not high intensity warfare? It
will be a real blow to the morale of many soldiers if they perceive that their
soldiering careers are in future going to be spent on Salisbury plain
practising feeding Orphans or watching fake militias simulate slaughtering
innocent civilians whilst they have to stand and watch in accordance with their
UN ROE. Meanwhile their peers in the Reaction Forces will be charging around
playing with the best equipment, newest kit, and better deployment prospects.
The Army manning cell at Glasgow
is going to have to come up with a very good way of ensuring that those who
join for a career regularly cross between the two forces. There already exists
a sense of ‘them and us’ between the Regional Forces and the rest of the Army.
One feels that this will only get worse over time, particularly if deployments
go to units such as the Paras or Guards, which enjoy better publicity in the
eye of politicians.
The danger is that the best
posts get earmarked for the high flyers, and that over time the Officer Corps
will emerge with the best and brightest occupying all the promotion jobs, while
everyone else is left to stay in the Adaptable Forces. This could lead to a
real challenge as good officers walk early, not leaving sufficient leadership
across the Army as a whole.
One interesting development is
the re-emergence of the emphasis that the military should play a greater role
in homeland resilience. This is deeply ironic as the MOD has spent many years
trying to extract itself from this area, and instead focus on getting local
authorities to do more. It’s now likely that much of the good work done since
the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 to force local authorities to take more responsibility
will be undone, as councils seeking to make cuts amend their Disaster
Management plans to read ‘call the Army’.
As a reservist, Humphrey has
completed an op tour. While it was incredibly satisfying to do, and it remains
a highlight of time in the Reserve Forces, it also set his career back by a
year. The author would think long and hard before willingly volunteering to
mobilise again, as the wider damage to career prospects is just too great. The
challenge future TA members will have is going through this once every five
years. Bluntly, the Army seems to believe that employers are going to willingly
recruit people and then happily see them spend 20% of their working time every
five years working for someone else.
It’s hard to describe the
difficulty having mobilised employees causes small firms. While most people are
keen to support the military, and have no objection in principle to supporting
an employee ‘doing their bit’ on a one off basis, this goodwill quickly evaporates.
It is likely that smaller firms will become far more reluctant to employ
someone who is a reservist – why take a chance of putting someone with
potentially business critical skills into a post when you know they will
probably disappear soon. This is particularly the case for people with niche
skills, where they may be a single point of failure for a company, and may be
hard to replace with temporary labour.
One can see that unless legislation
is brought into specifically prevent employers discriminating against
reservists when hiring, that many small-medium firms will actively try to avoid
recruiting from reservists in future.
Thus, recruitment into the
reserve will become increasingly difficult to achieve. While there will always
be a pool of younger people, perhaps just out of university, or looking for
extra cash, it is hard to see them staying for the long haul. Already retention
is extremely poor, and tied into the so-called ‘holy trinity’ – work, partner,
family. The moment a reserve member feels that the pressure from any of those
three is more hassle than their value gained from belonging to the reserve,
then they will usually leave. It is hard to see someone willingly staying into
a full Army career, knowing they will be doing a similar number of op tours to
regular Army peers, without the same level of equipment or support or pay, and
also ‘career fouling’ themselves with their regular employer at the same time.
Army 2020 is going to rely on
Reservists for over a quarter of its manpower solution. One must hope that the
manpower planners are realistic enough to accept that the future Army Reserve
will be a high churn organisation, and that there will be far fewer people
willing to stay the long haul to fill posts than before. Its not that people don’t
like mobilising, but they want to have normal careers too, and these will
always take priority over the Reserve.
You get the Army that you are
prepared to pay for, and it could be argued that the British Army has priced
itself out of the market. Its not just the expensive cost of even an infantry
section salary, but the associated equipment bills to go with it. The lesson
from Iraq and Afghanistan has been that there is an unwillingness among
politicians to countenance losses, and to do everything possible to reduce
loss, even to the extent of fixing military personnel in key locations. To
equip an infantry unit with the full range of weapons, armour, protective
mobility, support equipment and the like to operate in HERRICK now with minimal
risk, costs a fortune. The UK simply cannot afford the cost of equipping the
entire army out to the level of OP HERRICK, and the Army structure does appear
to be an effort to reduce the need to do so. The key lesson though is the
curious problem whereby politicians are increasingly averse to taking
casualties, and order ever more expensive protection. Along the way the costs
force reductions in the size of the forces, and thus make it more likely that
casualties will occur.
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Even today the British Army has more horses than helicopters (Copyright MOD) |
All’s Fair in Love and War
Speaking to acquaintances with non Army backgrounds and they will quietly whisper a sense that the Army is whinging a little bit too loudly at the way they’ve been treated. To some, the Army has not changed its structure in any meaningful sense since the end of the Cold War. The Army today nearly exactly mirrors the anticipated Options for Change structure set out in 1990. Meanwhile the other two services have been cut, cut, and then cut some more to keep the Army safe. Among the authors friends, there is a sense that this is long overdue. In 2004, the RN and the RAF jointly agreed to take far heavier cuts to their structures to enable the Army to succeed in Iraq, and latterly Afghanistan. The RAF in particular has been hammered with capability reductions in the last eight years, and the RN has lost nearly half its surface fleet. The Army has lost little equipment, or units on its ORBAT, but some may think it could be argued to have failed to achieve meaningful success in Iraq and Afghanistan. Despite the incredible bravery of individuals in theatre, and the heavy price paid in terms of human life, there is a sense that the Army could have achieved more.
Tough questions have been
asked by some of the authors friends about why an Army of 100,000 has failed to
sustain more than about 6500 troops on HERRICK without hitting breaking point.
There is a view that for all the talk about how overworked it was, the Army has
been operating with far more organisational fat in its system than the RN or
RAF have. Right now, this would seem to
be the time that the Army has to step up, lose the admin overheads and focus
resources on what really matters, which is delivery of combat power to achieve
effect, and not to staff endless papers in a mid level HQ iaw JSP101.
So, it will be an interesting few years as the Army seeks to adjust to a brave new world and a brave new force structure. In the eyes of this author at least, it wont be as bad as it is made out to be, but it will still be very painful. Perhaps it is best summed up by a comment from last night, when as the author was leaving the pub, he bumped into an old friend from HM Treasury, out for drinks with the office. He asked ‘was the Treasury out to celebrate scrapping 20% of the Army, or commiserating at not getting rid of the remaining 80%”…
From what I have read, the Adaptable Force is going to actually be the busier part of the Army, doing the "upstream" stuff and kicking around doing lower level operations and tours. The reaction forces are the fire brigade and may sit on their arses throughout their 6 month readiness stint whilst adaptable force units are exercising somewhere interesting or on some UN escapade in Africa etc etc
ReplyDeleteThere will be a two tier Army in terms of conventional warfighting on any scale, but I don't think we are going to see a two tier Army in terms of activity levels.
Same anon as above, I can't get this thing to work.
ReplyDeleteThe TA is the big question. With the warning times and the concentration on CS and CSS I think the TA can be well placed to deliver on this as long as there are some changes in terms and conditions. I must be honest I didn't think they had the balls to change those but it looks like they will be trying to do so.
So really, this is just half the announcement, half the solution. We can get amongst it for 18 months at brigade level and after that we find out if the TA reforms work.
I personally would like to see the name change from TA to Army Reserve and I think I am picking up hints of this change. This government likes a clean slate and all the TA baggage gets in the way now I think. Perhaps its time to put the Volunteers to bed after a long time.
Thank you for an excellent, perceptive analysis of this week's announcement. I think you picked up almost all the big issues. As an ex-Regular Captain who retired seemingly an age ago (1997 actually), you got it all right, especially the point about the reservists: an overseas intervention is not enough to make employers think they need to do their bit, only an existential threat will do.
ReplyDeleteThe one point that I detected in the Army 2020 glossy brochure that you didn't mention was basing. There is a nifty little map that shows all the Reaction Forces AI Bdes being based around Salisbury Plain. Good luck with that: I can't believe that there is enough space there to exercise what is essentially an Armd Div.
There's some confusion in the main text in between the roles of the TA and of Reservists. They are not the same, by any definition.
ReplyDeleteI do agree that we need to look at both culture and of various laws to allow individuals and units to deploy without some of the worries of redundancy being imposed. I don't believe there's much that can be done about career fouling your civvy life if you put yourself forward for a tour. You have to make choices, and accept the consequences if they are not egregiously unfair.
Not convinced by the (my paraphrase) "equal pain shared equally" for cuts in the services. Decisions on force levels should be taken on the best possible forward look as to which capabilities are needed in future. Without picking out any single service, if that means that one service takes a 70% cut, and another grows (all within some overall budget), so be it, if that is best for Defence as a whole.
Sir Humphrey will have his own experiences, but mine are that there's not much to choose between levels of fat in any of the three services. I therefore do not subscribe to the view that somehow the Army is kicking back and relaxing and the two others as taut as a drum. I've spent quite a lot of time in the last three years visiting HQs of all 3 services, and this just does not appear to be the case. There are also some Joint functions in both Northwood and spread around the country in which whole Joint units are completely crying out for a serious shakeup - I'll offer you the Defence EW Centre in Waddington for one. But there are so many vested interests and excuses and hiding behind arcane regulations and green baize doors that it would take someone more senior than CDS to make an inroad.
Sir, while I agree with the cutting of the flab and preparing a a SMART ARMY for the SMART WARS of the future -----where human intensive armies would be sitting ducks. SMART WARS WOULD BE FOUGHT BY SMART SOLDIERS---- where there would be no REAR and FRONTS. The cyber soldiers would be Remote Controlling the ROBOTISED WEAPONS and ROBOTISED frontline soldiers. However, I also see the changing battle grounds--- from no " frontline" to " circular" combat zones , where danger would be more internally than externally. We are entering the age of WOM--- War by Other Means ---- when internal vulnerabilities would be exploited ,more --- and thus Security Forces have to be so organized that they take on the IRREGULAR SOLDIERS effectively. In so doing, we might require a manpower intensive army. UK must draw a balance before making huge cuts in the manpower. After all, it does not face more danger from outside but inside, due to changing demography. This is going to be the state of Western Europe, nay entire West. No more panzer armies would zoom across the plains of Europe but Al Quaida or any other "non-state actors", as they fancifully call them, would endanger core of the Western ideology and the nation states. Is your army preparing for that? This is the question which must be answered by the Defence analysts of the West and UK.
ReplyDeleteAny force is constrained by its logistical train- even with the current setup we can't support more than 8-12000 men and associated equipment indefinitely (at least not without mercilessly pillaging the yanks), so on the face of things the reforms won't alter the numbers we can deploy enormously.
ReplyDeleteWhat has me worried is that it seems the proposition is moving towards a 'two speed' force. One would pray that someone in there is sensible enough to figure that the 'adaptable force' needs to occasionally rotate people out of theatre in the unlikely event of a large scale deployment. I can only hope that enough troops will remain who are able to do so.
I don't like the idea of a smaller force. I don't think anyone really does. However I do feel that the incoming policy is a reflection of the times; it is unlikely that any big bad is going to crop up in the near future, so having the forces on standby to deal with it is not really necessary. We still have the capability for immediate action, and the ability to regenerate capabilities if needed. For now though, peacekeeping and patrol seems to be the name of the game.
Its interesting that you raise the thought that the other 2 services have been hammered in cuts since 2004 to preserve a (partially) deployed Army.
ReplyDeleteAt that time, of course, the then Chancellor had flattened the cycle and we were in a period of endless growth. This, if anything, truly shows where Defence sits in the nation's and its politicians priorities.
We are going down the route of the inter war years and when we do need to be able to fight, we will be in the same boat as in 39-42. Whilst my chest fills with pride to acknowledge your point that we are amongst only a few nations to be able to deploy world able to send 10,000 troops anywhere - I have to ask: To what end? 10,000 isn't enough to do anything really hot, is it?
Its almost like saying we are one of the few nations able to send cheese to the moon.
I agree that the number of 10,000 sounds useless in the grand scheme of things, but really it certainly isn't a force to be sniffed at. That's equivalent to being able to put more than the UK commitment to ISAF anywhere in the world with very little notice.
DeletePerhaps more to the point however is the ability to sustain them indefinitely during high tempo operations, which requires feats of logistics that many countries would struggle to accomplish even on their home turf.
Fighting an incursion of that size takes planning, excellent organisation and supply- it certainly isn't a job for the equivalent of the local TA. 10,000 might not be a scary number compared to some ORBATS, but it is reasonable to expect that all but the most well equipped or prepared forces are going to be unable to bring more than that number against them in sufficient time to stop them wreaking merry havok.
"Bluntly, the Army seems to believe that employers are going to willingly recruit people and then happily see them spend 20% of their working time every five years working for someone else."
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't. The Future Reserves 2020 paper was released at the same time as the MOD realised further Army cuts would be needed. Merge together and hey presto a Cabinet Office success story. Its stuck to a course of action that is likely to fail without a level of investment that will probably make reserves little cheaper, and less flexible, than regulars.
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