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This is a discussion on British Army bosses do it in style ! within the Current Affairs forums, part of the General Discussion category on Politics.ie. From Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph - Telegraph : Armed forces bosses spend £230 million ...
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| From Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph - Telegraph : Armed forces bosses spend £230 million on hotels and dining Armed forces bosses spent £230 million on hotels and dining - 13 times more than was spent on upgrading dilapidated living quarters for soldiers. |
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Firstly, Other ranks do include 3 types of ranks. The private soldier, the Non Commission Officers and the Warrant Officers - plus the other minutae which they'll often be. There does only happen to be one kind of commissioned officer. I can't think of a single army which will not refer to commission officers and 'other ranks' (in all but name). Secondly, Officers will tend to be 'better' or even 'far' better than private soldiers and this is reflected in pay scales, responsibility, hardship and privileges. To be an Officer you need to be able to have the ability to achieve a degree. You need to pass AOSB (or equivilant) then do 1 year of officer training, then onto the required training specific to the arm which is being joined. Then in effect, after that 2 (in effect) year process has been completed - an officer will be on probation and under the close supervision of a senior NCO. On a general level - the requirements to be an officer are far in excess to that of 'just' a private Soldier. An Officer entrant (at AOSB stage) is expected to be as fit as a typical Soldier who has just left basic training. Incidently - where are the requirements to be of a certain bloodline, from a certain school, to have a certain amount of income on the MoD website? Because I can't find anything of the sort. if you're the right sort, you're the right sort. Yes you are going to meet Farquar and Tarquin on numerous occasions, but any more than in the Healthcare, the City, Architects? Engineering? Yes some regiments might be more old school tie than others due to the make up of the regiment, but you pays your money and you takes your choice as it were. I would like to see an actual breakdown of these expensives, what they include, what they don't include and a comparison between MP's, and funnily enough Plc's in general. Whilst the accomodation situation is appalling - its a bit knee jerk to try an address that, by pointing at another budget item - when the major point is that Britian's defence budget simply isn't large enough for the commitments it takes on. |
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On another point, in the British Army a newly commissioned officer is most certainly NOT under the supervision of a SNCO! He holds commands of the platoon and can (and they often do) tell the SNCO to not tell him what to do. Furthermore, all officer cadets at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst are addressed from day one by the SNCO instructors as 'Sir'. They are also given single rooms. The US Marines and Navy certainly do not do this. Prior to passing the course and receiving their commissions, officer cadets are referred to by surname only and live in dormitories.
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Without wishing to go into unnecessary detail - like I said before - Other Ranks include Warrants, Non-Commission Officers & Private Soldiers, along with all the other minutae of ranks which make up 'Other Ranks'. It is a method of differentiating between those who are a commission officer and those who are not and pretty much every Armed forces uses this distinction, even down to 'Other Ranks'. The only other English differentation is Officers and Enlisted (Which means exactly the same thing) in the US Armed Forces. So what's your Problem with it? Quote:
Its the Army Officer Selection Board which consists of Briefing and then Main Board (TA Officiers entrants have to go to Main Board too). Quote:
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Incidentally, whilst these are again 'Old School Tie' don't confuse this with being barred entry. Simple advice that you would might not fit into such a regiment - is just that. Advice. Quote:
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Secondly thats not what I said. This is what I said. Quote:
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I think the aforementioned SNCO, with upwards of 12 years exprience in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq & Afghanistan will be largely responsible for allowing that Officer to grow into the leader of men that he will have to be in the coming years by supervising his actions (along with the RSM or CSM) and hopefully guiding him down the right paths of best practice etc. Its not as if the SNCO is the 2IC of the Platoon should the new Officer become incapacitated and has, at various times and various extents been doing the jobs of the Platoon Commander for several years. Quote:
Call it what you will - but I call it supervision, because that's exactly what it is. Quote:
Further to this, All officier cadets through out the world are doubtless told this one thing by Warrant Officers. "I call you sir, You call me Sir. The difference is, You mean it and I don't". Lets not try and confuse the issue further with pointless references to things that don't really mean anything. Quote:
You failed to address the following points incidently. "Interestingly - the Irish Army also refer to Commissioned and Other Ranks." "Incidently - where are the requirements to be of a certain bloodline, from a certain school, to have a certain amount of income on the MoD website?" "Because I can't find anything of the sort. if you're the right sort, you're the right sort. Yes you are going to meet Farquar and Tarquin on numerous occasions, but any more than in the Healthcare, the City, Architects? Engineering? Yes some regiments might be more old school tie than others due to the make up of the regiment, but you pays your money and you takes your choice as it were." Well? If your basis for Quote:
Everything you've posted - hardly reflects a Army - riddled with the class system. Does it? Last edited by Conor the Bold; 6th October 2008 at 04:48 PM. Reason: typos. |
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| “Is the fact that Officer Cadets are called Sir and Marm, the Other Ranks are called 'Other Ranks', and that some Regiments tend to have a higher quotient of Old school ties than not - the its a pretty bloody poor show then isn't it what?” pardon my ignorance of things military, but what on earth is a “Marm”? |
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| I wouldn’t know a lot about the officer bit, but the criteria you have just described is exactly what you would need to be a very successful spy. |
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| it's a bit mixed really - anyone in theory can become a British officer no matter what their social background and some do. But its pretty obvious that the middle and upper classes dominate the Officer Class. Not saying they do a bad job because of it but the easy exercise of command and a willingness to lead are necessary attributes + maintaining a social certain distance from the ranks makes the task of getting orders carried out a bit easier. Actually the highest NCO rank in the BA is the Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) who even officers treat with respect.
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