Suff wrote:Actually apart from France, Germany and Italy, the rest sit somewhere behind Mexico and most of the German and Italian estimates are based on expenditure. Given that where the UK refurbishes both ships and tanks and planes, Germany just junks them and buys new one's, that is hardly a viable comparison. In terms of ability to execute a military campaign, Germany is considered somewhere below a banana republic....
I was talking fully functioning and I meant it. The only countries with combined strike forces are the UK and France. The UK is considered to be the more competent force, by a small margin, but the French force is twice the size. France is rabidly for the EU force because they want to downsize by 50%.
Let us have a look at some figures from Wiki and CIA Factbook regarding the above.
French service personnel, 242,000 inc reserve's but sans the 85,000 Gendarmerie. Expenditure $51bn.
UK service personnel, 232,000 inc reserves. Expenditure $69bn.
Short figures (personnel) for: Germany 191,000, Italy 185,000 & Spain 124,000
EU service personnel sans UK and France, 1,000,000. Expenditure $92bn.
EU front line equipment, in total: 546 ships, 2,448 aircraft & 7,695 battle tanks.
They hardly make out that the EU's force is France and the UK with the rest far behind. France and the UK are nearly equal in size and make up only 1/3 of the total EU force. Some EU countries might not have much in the way of Navies: Andorra, Austria, Czech Rep, Luxembourg, Hungary, San Marino and Slovakia, but then they are landlocked. Yes, a few of the countries, because of their size, would have problems taking on Bolivia, but when they all join together...........? Should anywhere else decide to take on the EU they would be facing a big hitter - very big.
Let us say that place might be Russia, and let us look at their forces.
Russia Service personnel, 1,000,000 (inc conscripts) inc reserves. Expenditure $85bn.
Russian front line equipment in total: 312 ships, 3,000 aircraft & 5,100 battle tanks.
A fairly equal fight, on the face of it. However, Russia would have to weaken its territory in other, hostile, places. The only ace Russia thinks it holds is in its numbers of strategic nukes. Unfortunately for them the UK and France have more than enough to wipe Russia off the map, as they could to the EU, both sides know it - stalemate.
I would also like to come back to this:
Workingman wrote:
Suff wrote:
Why on earth would the UK, a proud, versatile and extremely powerful nation on this earth feel that it had to bow down to that???
Nor sure, maybe the Scots can tell us.
Your original, to which my question applies was this:
So, as I said, if Britain were to leave, the EU would lose 50% of it's deployable strike force and the UK would lose nothing. Not One Single Thing.
Well, actually, it would lose something. It would lose a very expensive and draining commitment to contributing the strike forces to 26 nations who don't bring their own to the table. I call that a ++
So what did I say that is wrong? This is the whole thing about the EU. It's a huge bundle of BS written down on paper with a few very hard working "states" making it actually happen. The rest are playing games, talking big and making the best of it.
Why on earth would the UK, a proud, versatile and extremely powerful nation on this earth feel that it had to bow down to that???
Forget the first two paragraphs, what I was alluding to is that the UK is one of those 'few very hard working "states"' trying to make things better and drag those poorer states along. If the UK opts out and Scotland then seceded or got independence it would become one of the rest 'playing games' as you call it. Scotland would be happy to hang on to the apron strings of the larger economies. It might gain independence from the hated English, but it would then be dependent on the EU - some 'independence' that is given your arguments against the EU.