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A good commander looks after his men, just as an effective trade union leader represents the interests of his members. General Sir Richard Dannatt, the head of the British Army, has been outspoken in voicing the concerns of those soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan or training for deployment.
Campaigning close to the legal and conventional limits of his job, General Dannatt has already raised the issue of welfare conditions, equipment shortages and military overstretch. Yesterday he spoke about pay. Was it right, he asked, that a soldier who risked his life in Afghanistan was paid less than a parking meter attendant? Should Britain not value the commitment and bravery of its troops by offering a private more than the £16,227 that an 18-year-old earns as a basic wage?
The immediate response of the public, whose respect for the Armed Forces stands high whatever view is taken of their deployments overseas, would be an emphatic yes. Yet pay cannot be set by attempting to price courage or a willingness to make sacrifices. Such things are, literally, priceless: valour, heroism and human life are not measured in pounds and pence, nor pay rises of inflation plus 3 per cent. For any job — from firefighting to playing football — wages must be set simply to recruit and to retain staff of the right quality. Setting wages therefore requires a shrewd understanding of the motivation of recruits. Soldiers do not enlist primarily for money. Challenge, excitement, training, the chance to serve: these are all more powerful reasons for joining up than pay. The Army is about 3,500 below strength and has been for years. An attempt to boost intake with a generous pay settlement in the past two years has not solved this problem.
The State’s failure to honour the service of soldiers is not in the modesty of pay, but the inadequacy of equipment, and the shabbiness of conditions. Our soldiers should have the best equipment available; be certain that the accommodation for their families is better than the dilapidated barracks too often available for married personnel; and know that the care they would receive were they injured would be comprehensive.
This raises the question of cost. If pay is increased above the rate of inflation, where will the money be found, what programmes must be cut and what signal does this send to public sector wage negotiators amid a worsening economic outlook?
The Ministry of Defence has no funds for higher pay. Its budget this year is £34 billion. This is no mean sum. But it is a rise of only 1.5 per cent over last year at a time when equipment costs are going up between 8 and 12 per cent and when other big-spending departments have seen far greater increases. To change the budget now would mean rewriting the Comprehensive Spending Review settlement.
So the Government must be hardheaded in its response to General Dannatt. Over time, however, military spending will need to rise. The Government may have improved equipment and spent money on accommodation, but plainly it is not enough. The Government cannot keep looking away from the fundamental issue of defence spending that arises from its military commitments. This country cannot will wars and decide upon interventions and then fail to provide the means to fight them successfully.
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The report is interesting in Indian context for similar ongoing debate for Forces. Shortage, reluctance and poor pay packages in UK are as alarming as in India as compared to Private Sector. How about exclusive Committee in UK unlike India where bureaucrats decide wages for civil and Defence?
Vinod Tuli, Gurdaspur, India
They give us their best and lay their lives on the line and should be paid accordingly.
We seem to find money for other things,like daft adverts that everybody ignores., lets not forget the infamous expense accounts of our government which we pay for with our taxes.
It's time we paid our troops
Sheila, Robertsbridge, East Sussex
It's my firm belief that soldiers should have a 100% increase in their pay. Not spending £500,000,000 on a few helicopters that can't fly would leave us more than enough. If you don't agree, then make sure you are available to put your life on the line for your country when it needs you.
James Lynch, London, UK
I agree with Eric that penny pinching on kit is a betrayal of our soldiers, but disagree that the pathetic pay is not. The parents of dead servicemen may not be irate about pay, but the live soldiers should be - the Government has treated it's soldiers very, very shabbily.
MikeP, Nth Lincs., England.
"If pay is increased above the rate of inflation, where will the money be found, what programmes must be cut and what signal does this send to public sector wage negotiators"
Hmm...theres a difference between soldiers being ordered abroad to be shot at and council workers busy snooping in bins!
Anthony, Brum,
Mediocre senior military commanders are also to blame, by failing to ensure that the men and women under their command are properly supported and equipped.
Their self-interest and refusal to set an example by resigning over the wilful degredation of our armed forces makes them unfit to lead.
Alan Johnson, Guildford, UK
"For any job from firefighting to playing football wages must be set simply to recruit and to retain staff of the right quality"
In which case how have doctors squeezed excessive pay through bullying resulting in them being paid way above any others in the EU. The Forces are far more deserving
David Cartright, Birmingham,
A great man once said something on the lines of' "Give us the tools and we will do the job" (Winston Churchill). The same holds true today. Our Armed Services must be, and deserve to be, well equipped. Anything less is not acceptable.
Peter, Brixham, Devon
For years we have been running a Woolworths Army on Marks and Spencers battlefields and it never did work, however, superb manpower resources and training lead politicians to believe that they can get away with it.......but not anymore !
Tom Scarff, Phuket, Thailand
I concur with Eric who posted before me. There are many arguments about the various deployments of our troops, but we as the British tax-paying public may not expect the wages to be in comparison with what Sir Alan Sugar is offers. We however do expect that our troops be properly equipped.
Richard Maguire, Dundee, Scotland
Unarguably, death caused by penny pinching on vital kit is a far greater betrayal than inadequate pay ever could be. Whatever their outrage about kit (or political reasons for deployment), I have never heard the parents of dead servicemen irate about their wages.
Eric Skelton, Cardiff, Wales