Armed Services

  • Exclusive: “The Soldier”

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a suspect in a “Brutality Network” that targets high-security Army facilities in the UK has been spotted online.

    @KrismasSnow

    He’s known as “The Soldier” because he seeks to physically harm soldiers in particular. He’s believed to have targeted facilities in Oxfordshire, and in Yorkshire.

  • King appoints Navy’s new head

    General Sir Gwyn Jenkins has been named as the new First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval Staff. He takes over the Navy at a difficult time, with staffing and funding issues.

    His predecessor, Adm Sir Ben Key, stepped back due to an accusation of professional misconduct. He also did so on the backdrop of the ongoing Dover Crossings crisis.

  • Our Armed Services are here to protect us

    Our Armed Services are our guide in times of need, and national emergency. They have a watch and a wherewithal over who we are and what we are in a global context.

    If we need to know something that’s operational in nature they are guaranteed to know about it all already. We just need to use its wisdom to make ourselves safer.

    The way it’s run is crucial to this overall task, because it means a continuation – or the end – of our way of life. It’s more clear in serious situations, like a war, and less clear if still true during peacetime.

    The type of Service personnel we produce out of schools, colleges, and training academies is vital to the overall strength of this enterprise. Their character is always their true quality in this type of work.

  • Caught: AWOL Naval officer

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a Naval officer alleged to be AWOL for a third time has been spotted in Reading, Berkshire.

    He’s alleged to abscond to spend time alone. It’s not clear what his duties are, but prior information suggested intelligence.

  • KC3’s apology means a lot

    The King often touts his pride of the Armed Services. He loves its history, it’s said. The trouble is they’re not that good.

    The Dover Crossings is an example. There are operational failures, budget overspill, and blame for war crimes, too.

    His Majesty is a big figure, and part of his youth was spent in the Services. But he’s not a diplomat. He’s simply a good King.

  • As spending goes up, so do defences

    The legacy stakes are high at this point. A Premier’s term is his or hers to own, but there’s always worry it won’t go well. The belief in a set of policies can get punctured by disappoints – and defeat.

    Sir Keir Starmer’s Plan For Change, a bold initiative from a Premier who got past his first personal test of ridding the Labour party of antisemitism, is his game changing stab at ultimate power.

    The announcement yesterday of an historic funding increase for the Armed services is appropriate, but it’s also a step into Tory heartland. It’s where defence has often also mattered more than not.

    Labour’s landslide victory is becoming a profitable policy point scoring exercise. It’s a spin doctor’s military drill, taking in many targets. A testy change of focus, it also means Starmer is on a warpath.

  • Exclusive: A barmy Army

    It was a difficult time, but it didn’t need to be impossible. The main ‘mission’ ahead of me, as part of my research, was to look at and sort out what had begun to happen at our South coast. It meant going to particular places and looking at particular things.

    This took into account people, places, and other people’s activities. It meant working around people, not in their way, and making sure everything I did was safe. I made sure that I plotted and planned my activities perfectly, and ensured it was safe.

    What I didn’t anticipate was the intervention of the British Army. It wasn’t requested, or called for by any superior to they, which would be Her Late Majesty, Queen Elizabeth 2. They turned up, anyhow, arriving in their jeeps and vehicles, and quickly spread out.

    It ruined their reputation, because they sought to intervene and in fact messed up the safety of our own coastline. It’s theirs to police, to keep peace over, and to make sure it’s secure. They have to work together with Border Force, who work inland too.

    It soon became problematic because of their reckless behaviour, which was due to a distraction called “Alternative Training”, which they also rolled out to UK-based media personnel, to improve their output quality. It didn’t work, but in the meantime it caused havoc.

  • UK army focus on procurement

    In a major change of domestic strategy, the Armed forces are due to get a National Armaments Director. He or she will cover for defence procurement.

    Their work is to fully equip and update the Army’s defence inventory to meet any challenges in future. It will also cover defence exports and outreach work.

  • Seedy army life

    The Army is as difficult to understand as the UK at times.

    There’s a load of people, a lot of activity, and it’s spread out all over. Never has it been clearer what is at fault in our lifestyles, however, in part because our paths cross and strange things occur as they do.

    It’s not usually positive in my experience.

    Most of the soldiers I’ve met are criminally minded, and in too many instances were engaged in crime as I met them. I found a young soldier cornering a civilian in an attempt to abduct her. He’s a sort that trades people for cash in the UK.

    Later, I found out about a group called “Abduction Unit”, who organised random kidnappings. It did it on a larger scale but by that I don’t mean hundreds or thousands of people. Perhaps “complex” is a better word. It implies operations are planned and targets are wealthier.

    In one target area children were told to “go down” for three months so their parents could secure it. In some places soldiers destroy civilian security measures put in place for our safety to remove any and all obstacles to their own operations.

  • Exposed: Ex-servicemen target Scotland

    He was found in an English town and on an ordinary yet blustery Monday morning. He described himself as a former “cadet” of the British Army and confessed he’d just dropped out. He said he was a “cadet” because now he couldn’t use the proper terms they had anymore.

    He was only willing to talk about it because in his eyes he was about to disappear into the English countryside to do his work and speaking to a journalist was a “cool” way to pass time he said and he would disappear anyway to “never to be seen again” he said.

    He’d found out a contact who was due to help him on his onward journey and he’d planned to operate independently from thereon.

    In my view he was a dangerous figure in a shaky situation. It wasn’t clear why he’d decided to leave and he seemed fit and healthy. His reasons weren’t obvious and he was too pliable for conversation.

    In short order stories began to emerge of problems afoot further afield in the country. It appeared this man was more dynamic than even he realised and he awoke “sleeping dragons” so-called who’d before also dropped out of armed forces to lay in wait.

    They had met him and got active. Their opportunity had actually arrived.

    In a short time chilling conspiracy theories began to emerge across the UK in online chat groups and “secret” forums where people discussed things openly and in complete freedom of thought as they believed.

    It one instance it was thought “Bitcoin” had a connection to Scottish independence because its inventor is alleged to still be a mystery. It was believed it originated in Scotland as a plot to eventually overtake the pound with its own currency and to stand alone from the UK.

    This is an example of the sort of “chatter” which initially started and following on it was all in time about Scotland.

    It emerged the British Army also began to see its officers in rank seduced by growing conspiracy theories against Scotland. Ordinary social issues in Scotland were blown up to become popular targets of “rebuke” at secret, fringe meetings.

    It was said to have descended into a spate insulting, one-way barrages of insults and criticisms meant to undermine Scottish confidence. It was sporadic and yet present in the Army itself.

    Inside the sinister workings of such a broad effort there were at least two main “projects” beginning to emerge which were meant to overcome public opinion about Scotland and cause harm against what was be perceived as a bullish belief in independence.

    In one instance a sort of “psyop” had been planned in the English media to fight Scottish ideas and decisions to make it come across as a set of “copycat” ideas from other parts of the world. It failed at first sight.

    In a second effort it was believed – in the eyes of these “activists” in the British Army – that depicting the Scottish Parliament as “fake” would further bring out its alleged superficiality in the opinion of the UK public.

    These plots failed to get off the ground but it was clear that such a serious intent was a present threat in the Army and went beyond mere opinions.

    In time all the plots began to unravel and it was possible to approach someone involved. A man who codenamed himself “Action X” was located first. He is a civilian who attempted to leave England and to fight Scottish nationals in Scotland no less. His plot started as an effort to covertly research Scotland and he hoped to turn it into a larger project.

    This all failed but the point remains that those here with nefarious intent tried to take over the future of the Scottish people and co-opt the UK into believing propaganda against itself.

    It’s also a testament of what can be done to disrupt the plans of those who want to disturb our democratic way of life here.