‘UK must consider conscription NOW’…Calls for Labour to follow Europe’s frontline & ramp up readiness for war with Putin

BRITAIN is in “no position” to fight a war and the government “must” consider conscription now, former UK defence chiefs have warned.

Ex-Nato officers told The Sun that the UK must “wake up” to the looming Russian threat and recruit thousands more soldiers and reserves now – before it’s too late.

British soldiers with a Union Jack on a military vehicle.
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British soldiers before the start of Steadfast Dart 2025 exercise – involving some 10,000 troops in three different countries[/caption]

Soldiers crouching in a trench, aiming rifles.
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British soldiers practice an assault on February 17, 2025 in Smardan, Romania[/caption]

Soldiers in white camouflage operating a howitzer in snowy conditions.
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British troops load a 105MM Howitzer in Norway during war drills[/caption]

Royal Marine Commandos swimming ashore during a training exercise in Norway.
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Royal Marine Commandos take up position on a beach in Harvstad, Norway after swimming ashore during a training exercise[/caption]

Ukrainian servicemen firing a BM-21 Grad rocket system at night.
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Servicemen of the 24th Mechanized Brigade fire a BM-21 Grad multiple-launch rocket system toward Russian troops on a front line[/caption]

The UK and Europe have been forced into action after Donald Trump suggested the US will no longer act as our backstop for defence.

European leaders have been scrambling to bolster Nato defences across the Baltics amid the emerging threat of a Vladimir Putin attack – which defence chiefs fear could happen in a few years.

Some nations – including Poland and Latvia – have already brought back conscription to prepare themselves for the worst.

But the UK government disagrees – despite talk of British boots on the ground in Ukraine and Keir Starmer spearheading Europe’s peace efforts.

Cabinet minister and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat MacFaddon has clearly stated the government is “not considering” introducing conscription.

But military chiefs and defence analysts say this mindset is wrong and Labour should rule “nothing out at the moment”.

Sir Richard Shirreff, who served as Nato‘s Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe, told The Sun we need to look to conscript now – or it’ll be too late.

The former commander, said the only way Putin can be stopped is if Europe bolsters its defences and creates an effective deterrence.

And that means boosting our forces across Nato‘s eastern flank as well as filling the gap that could be left behind if Trump pulls out of the alliance.

The military chief says as it stands, the British forces stand no chance against Putin’s meatgrinder forces with over a million still prepared to fight.

Colonel Hamish De Bretton Gordon told The Sun that Britain must start conscription “if things go really badly” to avoid surrendering to Putin.

He said: “Militarily, Britain absolutely needs to look at all the options as has been described.

“We are not in a position at the moment to fight a ground war.

“There’s no way we’ll avoid [conscription] unless we surrender, and I don’t think anybody in this country is going to surrender without a fight, especially to Putin.”

With just 70,000 active troops in the British army – the smallest since the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 – De Bretton Gordon said there is a massive need to modernise our military equipment.

He added: “What is important is to modernise our military. Make sure that we have the right kit, enough ammunition, and enough training, and that we are in a position to support Ukraine.

“While conscription will take a huge focus away from our regular military – which we cannot afford at the moment – we need to plan for it.”

And Sir Shirreff said Britain needs to “think the unthinkable” and start planning to prevent a catastrophic event.

Militarily, Britain absolutely needs to look at all the options as has been described. We are not in a position at the moment to fight a ground war


Colonel Hamish De Bretton Gordon

He suggested that the government should look to launch “selective conscription”, which will help the British public get ready for war.

He told The Sun: “The government should rule nothing out at the moment. I can’t see how an army of just 70,000 is going to be able to deter Russia in the long term and maintain the mass it needs.

“If you look at the size of our regular army, it’s tiny and they’d find it difficult to deploy a brigade for any period of time.

“You need mass and you achieve mass through alliance and through creating larger forces but you’ve also got to build up your own army.

“Selective conscription must be looked at. We’ve got to think the unthinkable and one of the things we must be considering is selective conscription.”

While Starmer’s long-awaited defence hike of three per cent was widely welcomed, many experts say it’s “too little too late”.

The cash boost will add an additional £13bn a year to armed forces coffers from 2027, according to the PM.

The capability gap is extremely wide. The PM talks about deploying British forces to Ukraine, but the reality is we couldn’t field a significant military force


Colonel Richard Kemp

“We must change our national security posture, because a generational challenge requires a generational response, that will demand some extremely difficult and painful choices,” he said.

But only £6 billion of that is new money – calculated as the difference between spending 2.3 per cent and 2.5 per cent of GDP.

British MP and Afghan veteran Mike Martin said Starmer’s response fell short of what was needed at this critical moment.

Speaking to The Sun, the former Army Reserve Officer said: “Starmer made a big speech about us facing a ‘generational challenge’.

NATO troops running during a military exercise.
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Servicemen run to a position during the Steadfast Dart 2025 exercise, involving some 10,000 troops in three different countries from nine nations[/caption]

Illustration of UK defence spending as a share of GDP from 1960 to 2027, plus a breakdown of how £6 billion could be spent.

F-35B Lightning II fighter jet in flight.
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Britain’s F-35B Lightning II new supersonic ‘stealth’ strike fighter flies over the North Sea[/caption]

Aircraft carrier at sea.
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British aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth[/caption]

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Barrow’s new Trident sub to be named HMS Dreadnought[/caption]

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A British Storm Shadow missile
A man in civilian clothes stands with soldiers in camouflage uniforms in a snowy field.
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Sir Keir Starmer has committed an additional £6billion to Britain’s defence budget[/caption]

“And his response was to increase spending by 0.2% and be a bridge between the US and Europe? We’ve been doing that for 60 years.

“It hasn’t been a generational response.”

He urged the government to help the British public grow a military backbone.

“It’s the duty of the government to get the public ready – to lead on this issue,” Martin said.

“We could be looking at conscription after a period of getting the public ready,” the war veteran added.

Meanwhile, veteran Air Marshal Greg Bagwell who served in the RAF for 36 years, said he believes the UK’s military needs an extra 26,000 personnel across all forces – warning that the current 130,000 isn’t enough to put up a good fight.

The airman told The Sun: “There are 70,000 in the Army and 30,000 in the Navy and RAF and you might think that’s not bad to have 130,000.

“But they’re not all going to be on the front line, they’re not all going to be in planes or ships.”

Soldier firing a rifle.
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British soldiers practice retreat under fire during an exercise[/caption]

Soldiers in camouflage uniforms in a snowy trench, holding rifles.
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British soldiers at a Nato practice assault in Smardan, Romania[/caption]

Soldier firing a machine gun.
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A British soldier shoots his gun in Romania as NATO Allied Reaction Force training[/caption]

Vladimir Putin sitting at a table.
Putin will look to attack Europe in the next five years, experts warn

And he warned that’s not even taking into account the sheer scale of losses Britain and Nato as a whole could suffer on the battlefields against Russian troops.

That means Britain needs to recruit and train up thousands more soldiers and reservists so that there’s a constant backlog of troops ready to fight.

However, there are no signs from the UK government that it is working to fill in the gaping holes.

Lt Col Stuart Crawford, who spent 24 years serving in the Royal Tank Regiment, told The Sun that Britain has been doing the “absolute minimum” to maintain its military, and “the problem is deep”.

He said: “Politicians don’t get it yet… they are still banging on about other priorities for spending.”

Those priorities have to change – and fast, Crawford added.

Fix blackholes now

Retired army officer Colonel Richard Kemp said there is an “extremely wide gap” in the capabilities of the current forces and that he government certainly needs to have plans for conscription “if the situation deteriorates”. 

Speaking to The Sun, he said: “The capability gap is extremely wide. The PM talks about deploying British forces to Ukraine, but the reality is we couldn’t field a significant military force. 

“The British armed forces need to be dramatically expanded both in manpower and fighting equipment such as ships, tanks and planes. 

“We could no longer deploy troops on the scale of the Falklands War, Afghanistan or Iraq.

“We don’t have adequate numbers of infantrymen, armoured vehicles, artillery, engineers, air defences or munitions to keep them fighting.

Royal Marine Commandos on a beach in Norway during a training exercise.
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Royal Marine Commandos take up position on a beach in Harvstad, Norway[/caption]

British soldiers loading a machine gun during a NATO military exercise.
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A British soldier loads his machine gun during an exercise[/caption]

Romanian and British soldiers training in trenches during Exercise Steadfast Dart.
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Romanian and British soldiers train in trenches[/caption]

“I’m sure we’re up to strength in diversity officers but they don’t win wars.”

Lt Col Stuart Crawford said the armed forces have “failed to recruit enough people for the last 10 years”, so we must first sort out the regulars.

He said: “The forces are seen as declining organizations – which they are – and have been for at least the last 25 years, because of a lack of resources and funding.”

At the moment, there’s “nowhere to train these people”, “nothing to equip these people with”, and “not enough people to instruct them.”

Colonel Richard agrees, adding the British military needs to rampantly improve recruiting.

He said: “Our ridiculously small armed forces are undermanned. But I believe not only could this be reversed but also the size of the forces increased by fixing two things: recruiting and retention.

“The recruiting organization needs radical change.

“The situation is grave at present, and if the MOD continues to fail to get a grip of recruiting or if the situation deteriorates, the government certainly needs to have plans for conscription.”

Putin’s sights on three Nato countries

ESTONIA, Lithuania and Latvia have all condemned Putin’s grinding war in Ukraine.

These major Russian-speaking cities in each country are of historical importance when thinking about the Russian empire Putin follows on from.

Geographically they also all provide important elements, like coastal locations, sea ports, industrial centres or key borders.

NARVA – ESTONIA

Narva – which sits on the border between Russia and Estonia – was first occupied by Russia between 1558 and 1581, and then again in 1704.

97 per cent of the almost 60,000 residents there speak Russian.

It borders a river between the two countries – not far from Narva Bay.

On the edge of Nato’s eastern flank by the Baltic Sea, Narva is Estonia’s third biggest city.

There is a red line painted on the point where Narva crosses into Russia – on a bridge over the river.

Estonian border police told the BBC that thousands of Ukrainians have escaped war zones and fled into Estonia through this border crossing.

Narva has welcomed Ukrainian refugees during Putin’s war, the BBC reports.

KLAIPEDA – LITHUANIA

Lithunia downgraded its diplomatic relations with Russia after Putin invaded Ukraine.

It closed its Russian consulate in Klaipeda, which is bordered by Latvia, Belarus and Poland on the Baltic Sea coast.

The third largest city in Lithuania, Klaipeda is a major seaport.

It has the highest number of native Russian speakers among Lithuanian cities.

Under the USSR, Russia turned Klaipeda into a valuable marine base.

DAUGAVPILS – LATVIA

This Latvian city, in the south, is bordered closely by Belarus and Lithuania.

It is the second largest city in the country and well populated.

It is also only 75 miles from the Latvian border with Russia.

Daugavpils is historically a major railway and industrial point – and was part of the Russian Empire in the late 1700s.

It has an overwhelmingly Russian speaking population.

Latvia has strongly condemned Putin’s war in Ukraine, and has been added to a list of all EU countries dubbed “unfriendly” by Putin.

March 12, 2025
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Evil Josef Fritzl, 89, turns on long-suffering wife and demands divorce from jail cell

CELLAR rape monster Josef Fritzl is demanding a divorce from his wife.

Fritzl, serving life for keeping a secret family of seven children in his basement, has previously claimed to have written to wife Rosemarie believing she still loves him.

a man with a mustache wears a justizwache uniform
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Cellar rape monster Josef Fritzl is demanding a divorce from his wife[/caption]

Josef Fritzl, Austrian man accused of imprisoning his daughter.
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Fritzl, 89, was jailed in 2009 for keeping the children, born after he raped daughter Elisabeth, in an underground lair[/caption]

But his lawyer Dr Astrid Wagner told The Sun on Sunday: “Mr Fritzl told me he now wants to divorce his wife.

“It came as a real shock.

“It wasn’t long ago that he said that he was actually fantasising again about having his family around him when he comes out of prison.

“It is not quite clear to me yet why he has now decided he wants to divorce his wife now.

Josef Fritzl’s twisted timeline

1977: Elisabeth claims she was abused for the first time as an 11-year-old

August 28, 1984: Fritzl asks Elisabeth to help him install a door in his cellar before drugging her with an ether-soaked towel

The daughter is tied up and chained to a bed for the next 24-years

August 29, 1984: Fritzl and his wife Rosemarie report their daughter missing

1988-1990: The first children are born after Fritzl continuously rapes Elisabeth – Kerstin first followed by Stefan

May 19, 1993: Nine-month-old baby named Lisa found on the families doorstep with a ‘letter from Elisabeth’ – Rosemarie raises Lisa with Fritzl

December 15, 1994: Monika is also found outside by the parents and once again looked after

1996: Elisabeth gives birth to twins Alexander and Michael but Michael dies at birth due to breathing issues and is tossed in an incinerator

1997: Alexander appears outside the house just like Lisa and Monika and is taken in

December 2002: The final child is born in the cellar as Felix is kept trapped in the hellhole with his two other siblings

April 19, 2008: Kerstin, 19, becomes seriously ill and needs medical help so is taken by Fritzl to the hospital in Amstetten

April 19-26, 2008: Elisabeth is allowed to leave the cellar with her two children after police ask to contact Kerstin’s mother

April 26, 2008: Police arrest Fritzl, who is with Elisabeth near the hospital

April 27, 2008: Cops explore underground cellar as all the siblings meet for the first time

April 28, 2008: Fritzl confesses to his horrific crimes

2009: Fritzl sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to rape, false imprisonment, manslaughter by negligence and incest

March 2024: The perverted pensioner becomes eligible for parole after 15-years behind bars

April 30, 2024: Fritzl is moved from a high security prison to a normal one

“Perhaps it is because of his dementia – which really is an issue, these days – and of course you have to remember and bear in mind that he is a very elderly man.

“But I respect his wishes and as he has asked me to do this then I have tried to track down his wife so that I can then send her the divorce papers.

“I’m not quite sure where she is – I believe she is most likely still in Austria – so I’m still looking and I really hope I can find her.”

Fritzl, 89, was jailed in 2009 for keeping the children, born after he raped daughter Elisabeth, in an underground lair.

The Austrian is seeking early release on grounds of old age and dementia.

Rosemarie, now 86, claimed to have no knowledge of his crimes.

a white and blue police van is parked in front of a building
Newsflash

The house where Fritzl held his daughter Elisabeth captive[/caption]

March 9, 2025
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