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Recruitment for British army soars in Republic of Ireland

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »
    As per my previous posts - the US DoD census provides a breakdown of their PMSC spending.....and the work done at Uppsala......although I doubt such academically rigorous work as done by that university would be to your liking as they don't agree with your preconceptions......for example one of their papers contains the following.....

    Which has what to do with you point in bold here:
    "All signs seem to be that this activity will only grow".......even though the research shows otherwise

    I understand that this is tedious for others knucklehead6, but the pedantry and blocking to the conversation that is going on is crazy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »
    Except I didn't ask for a dictionary definition, I just insisted on the internationally accepted definition......

    ......no harm in insisting on the precise use of language is there?

    I used words in their commonly used way, YOU ASKED for definitions as described in the Hague Conventions. Jesus H.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,297 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Which has what to do with you point in bold here:



    I understand that this is tedious for others knucklehead6, but the pedantry and blocking to the conversation that is going on is crazy.

    You know......I was going to reply.....but what's the point? I've pointed you towards two sources and it's clear you've not engaged with either (as evidenced by your opening sentence).

    I suggest reviewing the figures there, doing a Google Scholar search to drag out the journal articles that have cited them and make your own mind up.....

    .....you won't accept any secondary or third party analysis I post up so go to the well and do your own.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,849 ✭✭✭knucklehead6


    there's a pair of ye in it!! :D

    and for what it's worth, I have no issue with people joining the BA or any other national force (apart from that shower of goons ISIL) and don't consider them mercenaries.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »

    .....you won't accept any secondary or third party analysis I post up so go to the well and do your own.

    Link to it man. Copy and pasting is easy to do.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,297 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    there's a pair of ye in it!! :D

    and for what it's worth, I have no issue with people joining the BA or any other national force (apart from that shower of goons ISIL) and don't consider them mercenaries.

    You're not wrong there :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    there's a pair of ye in it!! :D

    and for what it's worth, I have no issue with people joining the BA or any other national force (apart from that shower of goons ISIL) and don't consider them mercenaries.

    I am getting hung up on the use of specific words and refusing to link to stuff I claim exists?
    I don't think so.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    To be clear, I am looking for specific research that states that the growth in PMC's will not grow as per Jawgap's statement here:

    completely hypothetical......

    ......as has been explained to you, PMCs don't take on or in raw recruits they want experienced personnel.

    ......and yes, your expertise as amply displayed on this thread, leads me to conclude that you are right that "All signs seem to be that this activity will only grow".......even though the research shows otherwise, and the tendency now is not to intervene with boots

    ....personally, if it was me, I'd be staking my money on the growth of militarisation of the police......but sure what would I know.

    .....and if you are going to come up with some nonsense about Trump forget it - the Republicans believe in a large military, but they also believe it shouldn't be sent anywhere.

    I would also like Ohnonotgmail to link to what he claims are 'unbiased' articles and reports.

    Simple request. Denied so far. Which goes against the spirit of the charter here, i.e. to post links/sources when asked for them.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,297 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Link to it man. Copy and pasting is easy to do.

    Yeah, you know what?

    @knucklehead6 was pretty spot on with their sanity check intervention.....

    .....I'm stepping away from this pig wrestle because there really is nothing to suggest the next 14, 140 or 1400 posts will be any more constructive than has heretofore been the case - I start pulling data from the DoD, you'll keep going in your pedantry.....and it'll just keep rolling down the track.......you have your relevant facts and it's clear nothing will shift you from that position.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »
    Yeah, you know what?

    @knucklehead6 was pretty spot on with their sanity check intervention.....

    .....I'm stepping away from this pig wrestle because there really is nothing to suggest the next 14, 140 or 1400 posts will be any more constructive than has heretofore been the case - I start pulling data from the DoD, you'll keep going in your pedantry.....and it'll just keep rolling down the track.......you have your relevant facts and it's clear nothing will shift you from that position.

    So no data/research showing that the use of PMC's will not grow. Rather we have reports highlighting these facts. (If they are not facts please dispute with contradictory sources)
    Today, the PMSC industry comprises hundreds of companies
    operating in more than 50 countries worldwide and working
    for governments, international institutions and corporations.
    They provide a wider array of services than traditional
    mercenaries, and employ better public relations machines. They
    are involved in direct combat, operational support, the provision
    of security, intelligence gathering, training, technical assistance
    and post-conflict reconstruction.
    PMSCs also encompass a wide variety of legal structures:
    private companies, companies listed on the stock market, and
    subsidiaries of much larger entities. Over the last 10 years these
    companies have moved from the periphery of international
    politics into the corporate boardroom, and are now seeking to
    become a respectable part of the military sector



    In Saudi Arabia, US-based PMSCs play a key role in
    protecting the monarchy from unrest. Until recently BDM,
    parent of Vinnell, provided logistics, intelligence and
    maintenance services to the Saudi air force.Vinnell itself
    trains the Saudi national guard, while Booz Allen Hamilton
    runs the military staff college. SAIC supports the navy and
    air defences, and O Gara protects the Saudi royal family and
    trains local security forces.
    • In Afghanistan, 150 employees of DynCorp are guarding
    President Karzai and other leading figures in the Afghan
    government.
    • In Russia, tens of thousands of demobilised soldiers from
    the former Soviet armed forces have joined PMSCs. One
    example is the Moscow-based Alpha Firm, formed out of
    the elite Soviet special forces unit and now a subsidiary of
    British PMSC ArmorGroup. Contract soldiers have been
    found alongside regular forces in Chechnya and have
    defended facilities in Azerbaijan, Armenia and Kazakhstan.
    • In East Timor, Australian forces leading the UN Transitional
    Administration peacekeeping force in 1999 depended on
    logistics outsourced to PMSCs, while the UN employed
    private intelligence and security firms to assist.
    • Israeli PMSC Silver Shadow has worked in the Republic of
    the Congo, Angola and Colombia, where they assisted
    Defence Systems Limited in providing security for BP.
    • In Liberia, Intercon Security personnel guard the US
    embassy, and have been involved in combat with rebel
    forces during sieges.

    https://www.caat.org.uk/issues/corporate-mercenaries/war-on-want-corporate-mercenaries-report.pdf


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    How this 'army' has come to be seen as a benign career path by some Irish people is actually quite flabbergasting.

    But you have no problem with the relatively small number who joined the PIRA.

    It was against the law to join the Provisional IRA, it was never against the law to join the B.A.and indeed hundreds of thousands of Irish people have done so over the years.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    maryishere wrote: »
    But you have no problem with the relatively small number who joined the PIRA.

    It was against the law to join the Provisional IRA, it was never against the law to join the B.A.and indeed hundreds of thousands of Irish people have done so over the years.

    Gives you a sense of pride eh mary?

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/aug/24/india.randeepramesh


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady



    The shutters have come down 17-pdr. 'We cannot deflect with pedantry about common English words or post simple links so we take the ball home'.

    Classic really.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    And the controversal author, Amaresh Misra, who made the claims is a very discredited person, who also has claimed that the 2008 Mumbai attacks were organized jointly by the CIA, Mossad and RSS. Big deal, he is out to sell his little book. According to more reliable and generally accepted reports, the 2008 Mumbai (Bombay) attacks were a series of attacks that took place in November 2008, when 10 members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, an Islamic militant organisation based in Pakistan, carried out a series of 12 coordinated shooting and bombing attacks lasting four days across Mumbai. If Amaresh Misra cannot even grasp what happened in 2008, what hope has he of grasping what happened in 1857? According to the media, the lad Misra was arrested by Lucknow police from Gurgaon, for threatening to kill Narendra Modi and posting inflammatory comments against RSS on social media sites.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,849 ✭✭✭knucklehead6


    The shutters have come down 17-pdr. 'We cannot deflect with pedantry about common English words or post simple links so we take the ball home'.

    Classic really.

    I think its more a case of everyone being equally intractable in their views, and instead of taking their ball home, people have realised that the horse is dead and flogging it isn't doing anyone any good.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    I think its more a case of everyone being equally intractable in their views, and instead of taking their ball home, people have realised that the horse is dead and flogging it isn't doing anyone any good.

    Read back with an open mind. I asked several times for links from two posters. Denied.
    Instead they got into a huff over the use of ordinary English words. Words used liberally in the numerous 'links' I posted and was ONLY asking questions about their content. I even agreed not to use the term 'private armies' if it upset posters so much. But no, not good enough.

    The specialist forums here like the Military one would not tolerate that evasive behaviour I am sure.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,888 ✭✭✭Atoms for Peace


    When there's a perfectly good French foreign legion why take the queens shilling? :pac:


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    maryishere wrote: »
    And the controversal author, Amaresh Misra, who made the claims is a very discredited person, who also has claimed that the 2008 Mumbai attacks were organized jointly by the CIA, Mossad and RSS. Big deal, he is out to sell his little book. According to more reliable and generally accepted reports, the 2008 Mumbai (Bombay) attacks were a series of attacks that took place in November 2008, when 10 members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, an Islamic militant organisation based in Pakistan, carried out a series of 12 coordinated shooting and bombing attacks lasting four days across Mumbai. If Amaresh Misra cannot even grasp what happened in 2008, what hope has he of grasping what happened in 1857? According to the media, the lad Misra was arrested by Lucknow police from Gurgaon, for threatening to kill Narendra Modi and posting inflammatory comments against RSS on social media sites.

    The article already mentions that his views are controversial. Did you even notice that? I'm guessing not. Whats not in dispute is the thousands, if not hundreds of thousands who died in British reprisals in the aftermath of the 1857 uprising with many accounts of the savagery inflicted on the native Indians. Of course its the British we are talking about here so your morals on them are at best less than clear on their actions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 25 OxfordColours


    When there's a perfectly good French foreign legion why take the queens shilling? :pac:

    Met anyone who has come back from the FFL? They don't always come back in great shape. It's a tough life, far removed from the western european way of life that we enjoy these days.

    Having said that, the French Army have a brilliant set up. I'm quite jealous of how well they treat their troops.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    When there's a perfectly good French foreign legion why take the queens shilling? :pac:

    My suspicion is that the practice of joining a foreign army is only ok if the foreign country's foreign policy aligns with their world view.

    That is why I responded to the contention that these young people are only joining for financial gain-career opportunity- or 'jollies' with the question 'would that be ok if the young person wanted to join ISIS or the British Army of the period 17-pdr is talking about or armies that get involved in the illegal ignoring of sovereignty.

    Essentially what you are doing when you join a foreign army is offering a 'blank template for hire'.
    The rise of PMSC's seems to me to be a very worrying adaption if not an exploitation of the above.

    I am open to be persuaded otherwise but taking somebody's word that contrary info/data is out there is not good enough.


  • Registered Users Posts: 25 OxfordColours


    Essentially what you are doing when you join a foreign army is offering a 'blank template for hire'.
    The rise of PMSC's seems to me to be a very worrying adaption if not an exploitation of the above.

    I am open to be persuaded otherwise but taking somebody's word that contrary info/data is out there is not good enough.

    The PMSC's are just an extension of a governments armed services, with plausible deniability.


  • Registered Users Posts: 25 OxfordColours


    The specialist forums here like the Military one would not tolerate that evasive behaviour I am sure.

    Most of us have bailed from it because of the amount of civvy ****e that's posted, and pedantic/semantic arguments that most of you in this thread love.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,849 ✭✭✭knucklehead6


    Read back with an open mind. I asked several times for links from two posters. Denied.
    Instead they got into a huff over the use of ordinary English words. Words used liberally in the numerous 'links' I posted and was ONLY asking questions about their content. I even agreed not to use the term 'private armies' if it upset posters so much. But no, not good enough.

    The specialist forums here like the Military one would not tolerate that evasive behaviour I am sure.


    Francie, lets get to the crux of the matter.

    You, and a few others think that anyone joining the BA is a mercenary and they shouldn't do it. I seem to recall you mentioning that ANYONE working outside Ireland/the nation of their birth is paying taxes and therefore a mercenary. Are you likely to change your mind? No.

    Jawgap, and a few others think that joining the BA is not a mercenary activity, and that if a person wants to be a soldier, let them be a soldier. Are they likely to change their mind? No.

    So that is two diametrically viewpoints in the thread, neither of which is open to seeing it from the other ones point of view. Debate, in my opinion, is all about being open to questioning your own convictions as a result of points made by others. Neither side is showing this openness in this thread, hence my flogging a dead horse analogy.

    That's all I have to say on this matter. You can reply if you want to, you can accuse me of taking my ball home. All I'm taking home is my whip that was used on the poor horse...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Most of us have bailed from it because of the amount of civvy ****e that's posted, and pedantic/semantic arguments that most of you in this thread love.

    There are more people in the world than Military people. Or hadn't you noticed? ;)


  • Registered Users Posts: 25 OxfordColours


    There are more people in the world than Military people. Or hadn't you noticed? ;)

    Yes, and a lot of them like to wade into military chat despite no military experience, sadly.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,145 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    Hmm dole or potentially get blown to pieces in a country you truly shouldn't be in but were sent there by some ignorant people, dole please!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Francie, lets get to the crux of the matter.

    You, and a few others think that anyone joining the BA is a mercenary and they shouldn't do it. I seem to recall you mentioning that ANYONE working outside Ireland/the nation of their birth is paying taxes and therefore a mercenary. Are you likely to change your mind? No.

    ANYONE working outside the country, anyone who leaves a job for a better paid one etc can of course be described as being 'mercenary'.
    I don't understand the abject fear of a perfectly ordinary and normal word.
    The company president was a mercenary man who had no problem firing his employees to increase his own salary.

    If Jason wants to be a mercenary, he will have to forget about morals and follow the orders of the person signing his paychecks.

    The mercenary restaurant manager is trying to cut costs by selling inferior meat as prime cuts.

    Although the young woman swore she loved the old man, everyone knew the marriage was a mercenary one.
    Jawgap, and a few others think that joining the BA is not a mercenary activity, and that if a person wants to be a soldier, let them be a soldier. Are they likely to change their mind? No.

    So that is two diametrically viewpoints in the thread, neither of which is open to seeing it from the other ones point of view. Debate, in my opinion, is all about being open to questioning your own convictions as a result of points made by others. Neither side is showing this openness in this thread, hence my flogging a dead horse analogy.

    That's all I have to say on this matter. You can reply if you want to, you can accuse me of taking my ball home. All I'm taking home is my whip that was used on the poor horse...

    When somebody descends into diversion rather than back up what they are contending (it is simple to cut and paste links) and then constructs a 'reason' to depart, it kinda of speaks to the state of their argument in my opinion.

    I was not by the way making any argument about PMSC, I was asking questions about them. My mind is not made up on them at all.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    Hmm dole or potentially get blown to pieces in a country you truly shouldn't be in but were sent there by some ignorant people, dole please!

    Thanks to the B.A. effectively defending these islands during WW2, the Cold war etc, at least you have that choice.
    Most of us have bailed from it because of the amount of civvy ****e that's posted, and pedantic/semantic arguments that most of you Francie in this thread love.

    I remember Francie saying the PIRA was an army, a proper army, and Irish people who joined regiments of the B.A. like the Royal Irish Regiment or Irish Guards were just "mercenaries". When the dictionary definitions of an army were produced Francie was then asked that if the PIRA was an army, where was its known headquarters, had it even fought according to the geneva convention and was it the armed force of a country...was it the armed force of a nation or democratically elected government or dictator or what?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Yes, and a lot of them like to wade into military chat despite no military experience, sadly.

    And ask for info and data from 'dabblers'. Denied though.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    maryishere wrote: »
    Thanks to the B.A. effectively defending these islands during WW2, the Cold war etc, at least you have that choice.

    The Germans turned their attentions east post 1940, otherwise they could have invaded and occupied these islands with ease if they turned their full attentions in this direction. 'Effective defense' in the era of the Cold War and nuclear weapons?? You are funny.......


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,145 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    maryishere wrote:
    Thanks to the B.A. effectively defending these islands during WW2, the Cold war etc, at least you have that choice.

    Gimme a break with this ****, these countries start wars, involve themselves in other countries matters, all in the name of 'democracy', me hole! Sending kids to their death is what they specialise in! I'm glad I talked my young english cousin out of joining the army, I made him realise, he can work doing whatever he wants, save, and still travel the world, and he 'll more than likely come home alive with incredible stories. Disturbing what ****e they tell kids to get them to sign up. No human should experience war!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    And as if to underline the hypocrisy we get a post pontificating about the sanctity of the Geneva Convention when that very poster is over on another thread cheerleading Australia's breaking and continued flouting of International Law because it aligns with what people on that thread have called her 'racist views'.

    https://uploads.guim.co.uk/2016/05/17/CCPR-C-116-D-2233-2013-English-cln-auv_(1).pdf

    I have no idea if she is a racist but she is certainly being a tad hypocritical.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    The Germans turned their attentions east post 1940, .
    And what country was alone in standing up to Nazism in 1940?
    And where did the Arctic convoys ( there were 78 convoys between August 1941 and May 1945, sailing via several seas of the Atlantic and Arctic oceans), which brought military supplies etc, sail from? The UK.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_convoys_of_World_War_II
    It was not Develera who stood up to Nazism anyway. As said before and elsewhere"Several countries suffered invasions in spite of their efforts to be neutral. These included Nazi Germany's invasion of Denmark and Norway on 9 April 1940—then Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg on 10 May 1940".


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    And as if to underline the hypocrisy we get a post pontificating about the sanctity of the Geneva Convention when that very poster is over on another thread cheerleading Australia's breaking and continued flouting of International Law because it aligns with what people on that thread have called her 'racist views'.
    I do not have racist views, I was merely pointing out Australias treatment of economic migrants / refugees and contrasting it to Europes treatment of economic migrants / refugees. Even though Europe means well, more people drown getting to Europe because they are encouraged to make the crossing.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    Gimme a break with this ****, these countries start wars,
    They try to defend democracy. Not a perfect system, but thats the way it is.
    The problem is, to put it simply for you, there were always be baddies in the world with guns.
    You think nobody should have stood up to Hitler for example? Or after Saddam invaded little Kuwait , an international coalition should not have liberated it.
    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    Sending kids to their death is what they specialise in!
    How many people died last year in armed conflict in the B. Army. None.

    Over a hundred people die on French roads every bank holiday weekend alone.f
    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    No human should experience war!
    Correct, and thanks to certain countries, our generations are pretty lucky.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    We will 'defend democracy' by bombing you into the acceptance of 'our gifts'. :D:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,145 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    maryishere wrote:
    They try to defend democracy. Not a perfect system, but thats the way it is. The problem is, to put it simply for you, there were always be baddies in the world with guns. You think nobody should have stood up to Hitler for example? Or after Saddam invaded little Kuwait , an international coalition should not have liberated it.


    Oh dear Lord, please be aware, democracy doesn't exist anywhere, period! Noam Chomsky has correctly called it a 'plutocracy'. We must never forget, 'WMD's! Democracy, yea right!

    Baddies with guns, maybe we should arm all the 'good guys' with guns, that should 'solve' things!

    Liberate, oh deary me!


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    maryishere wrote: »
    And what country was alone in standing up to Nazism in 1940?

    Doing a great job they were too. They got their arses handed to them by the Germans in May and June of 1940. The debacle at Dunkirk effectively left the British as an army with without any effective warfighting material. As I said the Germans if they hadn't launched their campaign against Russia could have invaded Britain if they really wanted to.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    Oh dear Lord, please be aware, democracy doesn't exist anywhere, period! Noam Chomsky has correctly called it a 'plutocracy'. We must never forget, 'WMD's! Democracy, yea right!

    Baddies with guns, maybe we should arm all the 'good guys' with guns, that should 'solve' things!

    Liberate, oh deary me!

    I was amazed to read in one of the links about PMSC's that one of the many companies has up to 10,000 staff.
    This is an area that has no regulation and a UN dithering over doing that.
    The question is why, and what is the future of this activity?

    The majority of these 'companies' are based in and frequently work for countries and corporations in those countries which have had recent history of using their armies in aggressive and offensive missions which ignore the sovereignty of other countries because it is deemed to be what Dev called, way back in the 40's, 'their necessity'.

    Democracy is being defended? Very doubtful imo.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,145 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    The majority of these 'companies' are based in and frequently work for countries and corporations in those countries which have had recent history of using their armies in aggressive and offensive missions which ignore the sovereignty of other countries because it is deemed to be what Dev called, way back in the 40's, 'their necessity'.


    Sure I use to work for an American cooperation making products for the American military, in little old Ireland, neutral me arse! Chomsky is right yet again, rogue nation!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    Sure I use to work for an American cooperation making products for the American military, in little old Ireland, neutral me arse! Chomsky is right yet again, rogue nation!

    Our neutrality has steadily diminished over the years, and those who think it important to keep an eye on those who have historically shown they can't be trusted with the sovereignty of other nations, are depicted as loons and crazies. We are becoming a nation of hat doffers again in the face of this.
    I mentioned the word 'arrogant' in the same sentence as 'the British' over in another forum today, in relation to an air incident, and the ball got taken home again. :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    Our neutrality has steadily diminished over the years
    Were we ever really neutral when we could not defend ourselves? Did you know the RAF has been asked to defend Ireland in the case of incoming hijacked or unfriendly jets?
    Not too long ago Russian ‘Bear’ bombers were involved in ‘very unusual’ activities over Irish skies, chased away by the British.
    http://www.irishexaminer.com/viewpoints/analysis/how-much-to-protect-skies-above-ireland-311799.html

    https://ukdefencejournal.org.uk/royal-air-force-asked-defend-ireland/

    Ireland neutrality in WW2 done nothing to help the poor unfortunate neutral countries invaded by the Nazis, such as Norway and Denmark etc. Our neutrality then done nothing to help poor unfortunate citizens of those countries sent to extermination camps by the Nazis, or used as slave labour. The bodies of some of those who came across the Atlantic to help liberate Europe from the Nazis were washed up on our shores, and I'm sure they appreciated not having ports or airports to help in the attle of the Atlantic,
    On the Allied side there was 36,200 sailors killed
    36,000 merchant seamen killed
    3,500 merchant vessels lost
    175 warships lost
    741 RAF Coastal Command Aircraft lost in anti-submarine sorties.

    Those people helped liberate the neutral countries invaded by the Nazis. We as a country did not, but at least 100,000 volunteers helped the allied war effort.
    Neutrality is not worth a **** unless someone else can do the dangerous, dirty work.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    The 'war' is over for nearly 80 yrs.
    For 40 of those years the BA had boots on the ground in this country and killed innocent Irish and had a profound negative affect on thousands of Irish citizens.

    I owe the BA are, precisely nothing.
    Nor do we 'owe' them an hour of the life of one of our young people.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    The 'war' is over for nearly 80 yrs.
    72 years actually, assuming you mean WW2. If you mean the Cold War, much less than that.
    For 40 of those years the BA had boots on the ground in this country
    Almost 38 years in N. Ireland, which is part of the UK. It was the longest continuous deployment in the British military's history. Not long after arriving, there was a referendum in N.I. asking the electorate if they wished to remain part of the UK, and 99% voted that they did. When the army arrived, they were handed cups of tea and sandwiches by some Catholics.

    and killed innocent Irish and had a profound negative affect on thousands of Irish citizens.
    Considering over 300,000 British personnel served in N. Ireland and terrorists killed over 1000 of them in thousands of attacks, innocent casulties were very low. The achieved their objective in getting the terrorists on both sides to surrender their arms / explosives / put them beyond use.

    I owe the BA are, precisely nothing.
    Nobody said you did.
    Nor do we 'owe' them an hour of the life of one of our young people.
    Your idol Sean Russell did not owe the Nazis an hour of his life either when he tried to collaborate with them, on behalf of the IRA. Still, its a democracy we live in, you can be against Irish people joining the PSNI, you can be against Irish people joining Irish regiments in the B. Army etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 70,731 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    maryishere wrote: »






    Nobody said you did.


    Well could you do us all a favour and quit the guilt tripping. Its irrelevant to me and I am sure others, the debt you feel you owe.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    lol I do not owe any debt. I would assume people who join the services overseas do it as a career move, for money, for adventure, for camaradie, for travel, for training in different fields etc. ;)


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 607 ✭✭✭jack o shea


    Any "irishman" joining the British army deserves a riddling from isis or whoever they piss off next.....


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,502 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    maryishere wrote: »
    And what country was alone in standing up to Nazism in 1940?

    Doing a great job they were too. They got their arses handed to them by the Germans in May and June of 1940. The debacle at Dunkirk effectively left the British as an army with without any effective warfighting material. As I said the Germans if they hadn't launched their campaign against Russia could have invaded Britain if they really wanted to.
    As someone who makes his living studying WW2 history, there is a combination of misrepresentation here, and outright fantasy. The British Expeditionary Force gave as good as they got in 1940, their situation at Dunkirk was precipitated by the failings of their allies. No matter how good your guys are, if the lads holding your flanks are defeated, you're in a lousy situation. That the British were able to evacuate as many of their soldiers as they did, and a withdrawal under pressure is the most difficult military operation of them all, is a testament to them. The Germans never had a hope of successfully invading mainland UK. The issue would start and stop with the Royal Navy.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    The Germans never had a hope of successfully invading mainland UK. The issue would start and stop with the Royal Navy.

    Not with the logististics available for Sealion I agree, but with say the equivalent of what was built up for the invasion of the USSR for an amphibious landing I would hazard a yes, they would have succeeded.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,297 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Not with the logististics available for Sealion I agree, but with say the equivalent of what was built up for the invasion of the USSR for an amphibious landing I would hazard a yes, they would have succeeded.

    No, they wouldn't.

    For example, they had pretty much no anti-shipping capacity in the Luftwaffe in 1940 (aside from one Gruppe) and what little they had was poised to used modified large calibre naval shells as anti-shipping weapons.

    Difficult to amount an invasion in the face of flotillas of aggressively manoeuvring destroyers bearing down on you......especially if you've conceived the operation as a 'river crossing on a broad front' and are using barges with a low freeboard in historically stormy waters, and are hoping to support the landings with air cover only and not large volumes of naval gunfire.

    Plus the Heer had no tradition of amphibious operations - they were an continental land army. Even the Allies when it came to mounting OVERLORD had to learn from the numerous mistakes they made during TORCH, HUSKY, AVALANCHE and SHINGLE.

    HUSKY, for example, was actually larger, in some regards compared to OVERLORD but it was also a catalogue of errors.

    They may well have crossed, got ashore and even developed a lodgement but in terms of then being supplied, sustained etc they've have not faired well given their supply lines would have extended back across the Channel, and across Europe to Germany.


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