News

The assassination of 14 British agents in Dublin led to civilian ... Sinn Fein leader and Commander-In-Chief of the Irish Free State Army Michael Collins (1890 ... both in National Army uniform.
King Charles led a moment of silence and changed his uniform to pay tribute at the centuries-old Trooping the Colour parade.
A TD has apologised “profusely” after claiming the British Army “never retaliated” by targeting civilians during the Troubles. Cathal Crowe, a Fianna Fáil TD for Clare, said he made a ...
Fianna Fáil's Cathal Crowe has apologised after he "wrongly" stated that the British Army "never retaliated by bombing or shooting the civilian population of Ireland" during a Dáil debate on the ...
A British Army veteran has been left stuck with a £20,000 NHS bill for the rest of his life after he had a heart attack in Africa.. Steve Foreman, 73, was living and working on an oil rig in ...
According to the SDR, the British Army should be developed into a mix of regular and reserve soldiers of at least 100,000 troops, 73,000 of whom should be regulars.
British Army left 'playing catch up' as Putin's invasion highlights evolution of warfare Defence experts agree that the Russia-Ukraine conflict has fundamentally and irreversibly changed warfare ...
– Defence Secretary Mr Healey has pledged to “create a British Army which is 10 times more lethal”, by combining capabilities with air-defence, long-range weapons and other technologies ...
The British Army’s 47 th Regiment Royal Artillery is on notice that its Watchkeeper intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs) will likely be retired in 2025.
The "threat is real" to NATO, the chief of the British Army has said, warning of "serious challenges" to the alliance as worries swirl that Russia could launch an attack on NATO in the next few years.
Defence Secretary John Healey has warned a 'new era' for UK defence is needed as 'threats we face now are more serious and less predictable than at any time since the end of the Cold War'.
There was “horrendous violence” in the North “perpetrated by the British state and other actors, but the emphasis now has to be on reconciliation”, Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said.