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Originally posted by biggilo
The only countries capable of deploying and maintaining a fighting army on a different continent are USA, Russia, UK and France. All the rest casn only defend their borders or run accross them.
200 million man army (cf. Revelation 9:16)? Why do people mock the idea of the Bible predicting a 200 million-man army when Time magazine in their May 21, 1965 edition (Vol. 85, No. 21) on page 35, stated that Red China had one? And how much more possible is it 43 years later? Do your homework, unbelievers -- it's coming!
3 years ago
answers.yahoo.com...
"No Real Risks." To back up Lo's bluster, Red China passed the word that its 200 million-man (and woman) militia had gone into serious training. The mainland press reported shrilly that units on the Yunnan border were engaged in intensive bayonet and machine-gun drill; men and women in blue boiler suits marched briskly through Peking streets with rifles slung. Read more:
www.time.com...
Originally posted by stumason
reply to post by curioustype
There was talk, at one point, for ditching the F-35 and buying Rafales!
French aircraft on a Royal Navy ship? God forbid....
Oh yes, the HMS QE should be completed in 2015 (Steel was first cut 4 years ago anyway) but the jets to fly off them won't be available until 2020, making them largely useless... What is an aircraft carrier without aircraft?
We do still have HMS Ocean, although I am unsure as to how long she will be in service.
At a push, we could do what we did in the Falklands... Refit en route and bring stuff out of mothball. We have a huge fleet in mothball and those Harriers are likely sitting around in a hangar somewhere too.... If not, borrow some of the US Marine ones..They're not as good and made in America, but should suffice in a stretch..
The first, HMS Queen Elizabeth, will be mothballed immediately it is launched in 2016, according to the existing plan. However, the second, HMS Prince of Wales, is not now expected to be fully operational until 2031. Moreover, it will only be able to stay at sea for up to 200 days a year, significantly fewer than envisaged, says the Commons public accounts committee.
Margaret Hodge, the former Labour minister and chair of the public accounts committee, told the Guardian: "The carriers' starting cost was £3.5bn, is currently about £6.2bn, and is likely to rise to up to £12bn. There will be nine years without a carrier, and it will be at sea for fewer than 200 days on average."
She accused David Cameron of deceiving parliament by claiming, after the defence review was agreed last year, that cancelling the carriers would have cost more in compensation to BAE Systems, the builders, than going ahead with them. According to the MoD's own figures, cancelling both ships would have immediately cost the government £2.4bn in cancllation fees but would have led to savings of £1.2bn in the long term.
An MoD spokesperson said: "It is incorrect to claim that a full carrier strike capability will not be achieved until 2030. The more capable carrier variant of the Joint Strike Fighter fast jet will begin operating from our aircraft carrier from 2020, with six UK jets available for operations.
Originally posted by CountDrac
reply to post by hawaii50th
point being the US still calls the shots...