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MoD has lost track of veterans on recall list, says defence adviser

about 15 hours ago
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The Ministry of Defence has lost track of military veterans they intend to recall at a time of national danger, according to a key government adviser.About 95,000 former soldiers and officers are in the strategic reserve but it is claimed that officials have failed to maintain a full record of their contact details.George Robertson, a former defence secretary and head of Nato who co-authored last year’s strategic defence review (SDR), made the claim at an event in Salisbury, Wiltshire.“What the review talks about is having the strategic reserve, that is, all of the people in this room who’ve been in the forces who have got a continuing obligation,” the Labour peer said.“But the Ministry of Defence at the present moment doesn’t even know where most of them are.

So we need to sort of round up those who are available and fit and willing to be able to do it.”Under existing law, all former officers, regular and reserve, retain recall liability for life.The Ministry of Defence maintains contact with former military personnel in the first six years after they have left full-time service through an ‘annual reporting’ letter.It is understood that records have not been similarly maintained for a larger cohort of personnel whose service ended more than six years ago and that the practice of maintaining contact with all veterans liable for recall fell by the wayside after the end of the cold war.The SDR, chaired by Robertson, Gen Richard Barrons and Fiona Hill, a former chief adviser on Russia to the White House, recommended last June that the government should urgently address the issue of rejuvenating the strategic reserve.

Plans were proposed to map reservists’ locations and skillsets and to “make a more concerted effort to engage them under a refreshed veterans’ communications strategy”.The government announced in January that as part of the armed forces bill they would increase the maximum age for military recall from 55 to 65.The legal threshold for recall was also broadened to include ‘warlike operations’ rather than solely an ‘actual attack’ on the UK.The strategic reserve is in addition to the active reserve that consists of an actively trained component of about 32,000 part-time and full-time volunteers.But Robertson expressed his frustration this week that the government was still dragging its heels on committing fresh funding for the military and in preparing the country for war.

He accused Britain’s leaders of showing a “corrosive complacency” toward defence and putting the country “in peril” at a time when it was “under attack”.He said: “We are underprepared.We are underinsured.We are under attack.We are not safe … Britain’s national security and safety is in peril.

”The Royal United Services Institute has also criticised the scope and pace of the changes to the management of the strategic reserve.In a briefing paper published in February, the defence thinktank argued that the government had “not explained how recalled personnel would be funded for routine engagement, armed, trained collectively, or integrated with under-sized regular and reserve formations expected to generate corps-level effects or how they would integrate into homeland defence forces”.Keir Starmer, the prime minister, recently echoed the warning of Nato that Russia would be ready to attack the alliance in three years.An MoD spokesperson said: “We recognise the importance of the strategic reserve, which is why we are delivering on the Strategic Defence Review through our armed forces bill.“The bill will expand our pool of reserves by increasing the maximum age limit for recall, enable seamless transfer between regular and reserve forces and give the defence secretary power to authorise recall for warlike operations.

We are also constantly improving our data and communicating with our strategic reserve community to mobilise talent rapidly when it matters most.”The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods:The Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs.This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said.

If you don’t already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu.Select ‘Secure Messaging’.Our guide at theguardian.com/tips lists several ways to contact us securely, and discusses the pros and cons of each.
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The Guide #239: Two successful seasons in, The Pitt has resuscitated the medical drama

After a wait more interminable than most spells in an A&E reception area, medical-drama-of-the-moment The Pitt finally made it on to UK screens last month, via the arrival of streaming service HBO Max, and just about everyone I know has spent the following weeks hoovering it up. Some, in fact, are already up to speed with its second season (the finale aired last night on US TV) and so are trying very, very hard not to blurt out major plot points at the office tea point/on public transport/in an actual hospital waiting room – we’re in a post-spoiler age, remember.I’ve been a little bit slower off the mark – mainly because it took so long to figure out if I actually had access to HBO Max as part of my bafflingly arcane Sky TV package – but I’m racing through it now, and so am ready to share the same observations that everyone else made weeks, or in the case of the US, a full year ago. The main one being: how did not one TV producer have the idea to mash together ER and 24 before? It was right there, staring you all in the face! (Jed Mercurio, whose forgotten 2015 medical drama, Critical, also had a real-time element, might have a finger raised in objection at this point.)Beyond The Pitt’s formal innovation (each season follows, to the second, a 15-hour shift at an under-resourced teaching hospital in Pittsburgh), what’s striking is how familiar it feels

1 day ago
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Winners and judges out of pocket as £20,000 writing awards appear to have closed

A competition for new writers that promised a £20,000 prize fund appears to have shut down, leaving winners and judges, including a Booker prize-winning novelist, out of pocket.Established in 2022, the Plaza Prizes last year offered 10 awards that were judged by the “finest poets and writers in the world”.However, some of the judges for the 2025 competition say they were not paid, and a number of winners say they had their entries withdrawn after being accused of using AI to create their work – allegations they strenuously denied.One judge, the 2021 Booker prize winner Damon Galgut, described the competition as a “scam” after he did not get paid for his work judging a fiction section of the annual competition.Anthony Joseph, who won the 2022 TS Eliot poetry prize, also says he was not paid for his work

1 day ago
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Zelda taught me the importance of play – and has helped me deal with work, parenting and grief

I initially dismissed the Wind Waker’s cartoonish visuals as juvenile. But now I try to carry the game’s sense of joy into all aspects of my lifeI had a complicated relationship with video games when I was a teenager. I had straightforwardly, wholeheartedly loved the Nintendo games that I’d grown up with, tumbling around primary-coloured dreamscapes in Super Mario 64 and having the time of my life. But as I grew into a pretentious young adult in the early 00s, I started to want more from games, and I wasn’t finding it. So many of them were mindless, or juvenile, or needlessly violent

1 day ago
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From Lee Cronin’s The Mummy to Zayn: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Lee Cronin’s The MummyOut now You probably know what The Mummy is, but do you know what a Lee Cronin is? Allow us to assist: he’s the Irish director responsible for effective indie horror The Hole in the Ground and the highest grossing entry in the Evil Dead franchise, Evil Dead Rises. His version of this classic horror sees a journalist (Jack Reynor) and his wife (Laia Costa) reunited with their child who went missing in the desert eight years ago, with nightmarish consequences.The Wizard of the KremlinOut now Jude Law is, wait for it, Vladimir Putin, with Paul Dano as fictional spin doctor Vadim Baranov in a new thriller from Olivier Assayas (Personal Shopper). Based on the l’Académie française prize-winning debut novel from Giuliano da Empoli.Miroirs No 3Out now German director Christian Petzold returns with a new film (the title refers to the piano solo by Ravel) starring his regular collaborator Paula Beer as a classical piano student recuperating in rural idyll afrer a dramatic car crash

1 day ago
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Lost Federico García Lorca verse discovered 93 years after it was written

A previously unknown verse attributed to Federico García Lorca has been discovered 93 years after the celebrated Spanish poet and playwright is believed to have jotted it on the back of one of his manuscripts.Lorca is thought to have written the eight-line poem in 1933 while working on the collection Diván del Tamarit, a homage to the Arab poets of his native Granada.The newly discovered verse was found on the reverse of a manuscript of one of the Tamarit poems – Gacela de la raíz amarga – which the flamenco singer and Lorca enthusiast Miguel Poveda bought from a German antiquarian.It has since been verified by the Lorca expert Pepa Merlo and will feature in a forthcoming book.The brief verse, composed three years before Lorca was murdered in the early days of the Spanish civil war, reveals the poet’s familiar preoccupation with the passing of time: “The clock sings / I count the hours mechanically / Seven o’clock; twelve o’clock / It’s all the same / I am not here / It is the mark of flesh / That I left behind when I departed / So as to know my place / Upon my return

2 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s Vatican feud: ‘Damn, the pope just read you for filth’

On Thursday night, late-night hosts weighed in on Donald Trump’s tense back and forth with the pope over the war in Iran, high gas prices and outlandish details from a new biography of Robert F Kennedy Jr.On the Late Show, Stephen Colbert focused on Maga’s escalating feud with the pope. Reacting to comments by the House speaker, Mike Johnson, that Pope Leo XIV misunderstood the concept of the just war doctrine, Colbert said incredulously:“Correcting the pope on Catholic theology is a little like going into the woods and saying: ‘Excuse me Mr Bear, do you really think this is the appropriate place for you to be pooping? Who’s going to clean that up?”Colbert went on to explain that the “just war” is a concept of Catholic doctrine that goes back to the earliest days of the church. “It must be in self-defense once all peace efforts have failed,” said the host. “Only then can the war can be said to have ‘just cause’

2 days ago
foodSee all
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Just the tonic: why it’s more than a mixer

3 days ago
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Move over matcha: how ube cocktails and coffees are hitting the UK’s sweet spot

3 days ago
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Rachel Roddy’s ‘high-ranking’ penne with potatoes, cabbage, butter and cheese – recipe

4 days ago
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How to turn old bread into a brilliant Italian cake – recipe | Waste not

4 days ago
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Roast chicken, cheesy scones and a genius cocktail: Ravinder Bhogal’s recipes for cooking with lime pickle

5 days ago
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Vegemite is recognised globally – but how many people know Milo was invented in Australia?

5 days ago