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Climate Change
Blog Archive
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▼
2011
(1596)
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▼
December
(147)
- The invisible revolution
- Hannan loses it
- Find your inner ape
- Spot the difference
- The great and the good?
- What if
- Slow on the uptake
- Why we must leave - 5
- A perfect storm
- Standing up for Britain?
- Slaves to the media
- Home for the stupid
- Why we must leave - 4
- Catching up?
- Burn the boxes
- One-dimensional thinking
- A pre-New Year resolution
- This England?
- Babies at work
- The "bounce" fades
- Christmas greetings from Bradford
- Christmas shenanigans
- Why we must leave - 3
- A retreat into dogma
- Semi-hidden Europe
- Fantasy business
- "Trappists monks" do the Hallelujah Chorus
- Words have meanings
- Have yourself a very merry Christmas
- Why we must leave - 2
- Fantasy politics
- Why we must leave - 1
- A Bill goes to the Commons
- A War of Choice
- No disaster before Christmas
- You can see why
- Soap opera time
- Virgin hypocrisy
- That fantasy veto
- A little more optimistic
- Don't ask an economist for history lessons
- The propaganda continues
- Boring
- Vote for apathy?
- A policy vacuum
- Making a meal of a meal
- Jong-il is dead
- Randall at large
- Running it to the wire
- To the shame of us all
- A lack of rigour
- The truth will out II
- The facts of (political) life
- The truth will out
- Xenophobia
- The forum
- Playing it as a farce
- Nothing more to add
- Superbly put
- The Monnet play
- We need to win
- The fog of Europe
- The collapse of politics
- The yellow in peril
- All rather downbeat
- Ve haff vays
- Hidden Europe
- Now it's official
- Wrong questions
- A force for evil
- Gone missing
- A rum do
- Tribal loyalty
- Not all it seems
- Wow!
- Not even close
- These we kill
- Reality begins to intrude
- A media contrast
- A rare event
- The looting continues
- Courage is not enough
- The story so far
- A statement from the Great Leader
- A phantom veto?
- The agenda all along?
- Electoral deception
- Telling porkies
- From the horse's behind
- Now you see it, now you don't
- A waste of space
- When fantasy becomes reality
- Armageddon deferred
- Authors of our own grief
- Sack Black
- A good start
- Been there before
- It must be true
- An odiferous rat
- An uncertain situation
- Decline and fall
- Walter Mitty territory
- A huge coup de théâtre
- A few points
- Read my lips
- Endless horror?
- The soap opera
- Keeping warm
- A triple betrayal
- A focus on news
- Planting the flag
- Spitting in the soup
- That letter
- Settling down?
- The arrogance of the Anglo-centric élites
- Which is the master race?
- No one listens
- Just leave
- Not a referendum - a veto
- Does he read his own clog?
- The Grand Old Duke of York
- Spot the difference
- A history of failure
- A-level fail
- They are getting there
- For the record
- The tales of tosh
- Civil disobedience
- A lack of political momentum
- A tale of two fantasies
- The Cameron paradox
- Taking candy from a baby
- The arrogance of office
- A disgrace
- Referism at work
- Fairytale?
- The other credibility chasm
- The credibility chasm
- Buying inflation?
- Another milestone
- Quick off the mark
- Danger, part-timer at work
- Never mind the evidence
- Synchronised departures
- Confused signals
- Tory Fail!
- Please let it fail
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▼
December
(147)
Ministers, we are told are considering proposals under which the private sector could play a large role in the procurement of weapons and equipment for the armed forces. Says The Guardian, the civil servant in charge of defence procurement, Bernard Gray, has submitted a report setting out options for bringing in private expertise, and a decision is expected in the New Year.
The problems, however, are not going to be solved this way. Contrary to popular belief, the procurement system is actually quite efficient. If the services want a particular type of widget, and tells the system to go out and buy a requisite number, it will usually do it, on time and within budget.
Where we have the major issues with "big ticket" equipment purchases, though, the excess costs arise for a number of reasons. One is the failure of the services to define properly what they want, and then to keep changing the specification through the procurement process.
Another is the use the defence budget to support British (and increasingly European) defence industries, with purchases dictated by political rather than operational need. And then there is the "pork barrel" dynamic, where equipment is purchase from specific areas, again for political advantage.
Of all the issues, though, the definition problem is perhaps the most acute – and the most expensive. That, basically stems from the fact that we have lost sight of what we really want our Armed Forces to do. Military equipment is (or should be) the ultimate in functionality, and if we are unclear as to the functions needed, it is almost impossible to specify the right equipment.
Thus, it seems as if we have a Tory-led government, with no real idea of what to do, retreating into dogma, and privatising some functions which should properly remain in the public sector. After all, if you don't know what kit you really want, getting Tesco to buy it isn't going to make things any better.
That aside though, whatever the merits or otherwise of such decisions, now – during the Christmas break - is not the time to announce them. These are major changes, with profound implications. They should be subject to full discussion, and should not be rushed.
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