The reason for Faslane, officially known as HMNB Clyde, hosting the UK’s nuclear submarines is often the subject of conspiracy theories, but what is the reality?

Faslane was first constructed and used as a base in World War II. During the 1960s as the Government began negotiating the Polaris Sales Agreement with the United States, the submarines carrying these nuclear weapons were to be based at Faslane.

Faslane itself was chosen to host these vessels at the height of the Cold War because of its geographic position, which forms a bastion on the relatively secluded but deep and easily navigable Gare Loch and Firth of Clyde on the west coast of Scotland.

The position of the base provides for rapid and stealthy access through the North Channel to the submarine patrolling areas in the North Atlantic, something that can’t be replicated by a base further south or on another coast. The frequent cloud cover also offers a great advantage for submarines coming and going.

HMS AMBUSH and HMS TRIUMPH berthed alongside Valiant Jetty HMNB Clyde.

Faslane is the second biggest single-site employer in Scotland, after the new Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow which employs around 11,000 staff.

Direct employment at the base is currently around 6,500 with many more thousands dependent on the base for jobs through the supply chain. It is understood that around 11,000 are directly and indirectly reliant on the base.

All 11 Royal Navy submarines will be based on the Clyde at Faslane from 2020, seeing the number of people directly employed at the base rising to 8,200.

In addition to the nuclear submarines, the base is home to 10 conventional surface vessels of the Sandown class mine countermeasure and Archer class patrol vessel fleets.

The annual spend generated by the base in the local area and the wider region is estimated to be more than £270 million per year.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

87 COMMENTS

  1. Peter Henessey’s ‘Cabinets & The Bomb’ covers the discussions about where to base the Polaris subs –
    quite a few places along the west coast, including in England & Wales were considered.

  2. Sturgeon’s recent vist to Brussels should sound alarm bell in the MOD. She is not giving off the right vibes to encourage UK military investment in Scotland. Her constant references to another vote appear to demonstrate that she is not overly concerned if it stays or goes?

    Before any serious new infrastructure gets underway at Faslane, Westminster needs the Scotish parliament to give assurances that it won’t order the closure of this facility; for at least thirty years and not five as previously stated, if independence is achieved. Without that, I would look for another UK site with immediate effect. By stationing the UK’s nuke fleet in Scotland after a yes vote, would place it in a compromising situation and not one of choice. Thereby, an agreement now on a thirty-year contract, the Scotish Government would have to exclude the nuclear bases from their previous manifesto demands. This assurance would enable stability in near-term planning, and retain many Highland jobs.

    • Agreed. Except for Tory voters, the Scottish voters of all the other parties (>70% of electorate) don’t want them. Given Brexit, a future Yes vote is highly likely.

      Put simply Scots don’t want them..its only 20 miles west of Glasgow! and they’re unaffordable.
      Incidentally, figures released by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) under freedom of information law reveal that there’s only 520 civilian jobs at Faslane and Coulport near Helensburgh are directly dependent on Trident…….the figures herein are vastly exaggerated. These jobs have nothing to with the Highlands..the highlands are in the north of Scotland.

      There’s plenty of other appropriate sites, particularly on the Welsh coast..the sooner they are moved the better

      • I worked at the Faslane in 2011, I assure you many thousands of decent Scots work at that base. Thousands, not hundreds.

      • Why move them, I reckon you don’t live in the Helensburgh or Dunbartonshire and Argyll and Bute area’s where lots of business rely heavily on all the families that live in the area that are part of the Navy in particular but the Marin’s, Army and large amount of civil servants live in the area so spend a lot of their incomes in these businesses plus there are hundreds of veterans families that have settled in the region plus their extended families so this will amount to a rather large number of people that live here that due directly or indirectly because of the base and there a convoy of buses comes into the base every day bringing civilian staff to the base the traffic is extremely busy into the base every day and out at night.
        You have got to take into your figures all the hundreds of different contractors and subcontractor that come in on daily basis, the region needs this passing business to start with and all the ongoing day to day business that it brings.
        The housing market in the region would collapse if the base move as there would have to be an exodus of personal to any new base and would you like to be a homeowner losing a fortune on your home as thousands appear on the market all at once, I don’t think my son would be to happy losing a fortune.
        The base needs to stay until the end of the Dreadnought class as I believe technology will have moved on by then and submariner’s will be a different bread and possibly non nuclear and unmanned.

    • I’d move them to Belfast. Support for secession from the UK is much lower there (about 30%), whatever Remainers insist. It’s actually fallen since the GFA – even amongst Catholics.

      I’d also be not so stupid as put all of our subs in one place. Even if there are only a 11 of them (truly astounding it’s that few).

      • Behave yourself, putting nuclear submarines and weapons in Belfast is a terrible idea mate, that would fuel Irish nationalism, it’s already a tool for Scottish nationalists.

        And I’m pretty sure it would break the demilitarisation part of the good Friday agreement.

        And that 30% is not telling the full story at all

        The lates polling shows 48% support staying in the EU trough reunification if it’s a hard Brexit.

        Also the latest yougov poll over here says that 36% of British people think leaving the EU is more of a priority than keeping Northern Ireland in the United Kingdom (29%). No doubt that will be all over Sinn Féin’s next leaflets.

        We need to be very careful with Northern Ireland.

        • The downward trend of support for independence is long-term research and analysis over many years by Queen’s University. Polling by companies is what told us Remain would win comfortably two years ago. I know which I trust.

          I don’t believe the Northern Irish will suddenly switch allegiance just because a few subs are parked in Belfast along with ten thousand jobs. So a few Nationalists will whine. Won’t make any difference to anything.

          No such thing as “hard” Brexit. We leave or we don’t. The UK voted to leave, and in my experience the people of Northern Ireland have largely accepted or come to terms with that fact.

          • “The downward trend of support for independence is long-term research and analysis over many years by Queen’s University. Polling by companies is what told us Remain would win comfortably two years ago. I know which I trust.”

            You do realise the research done by QUB is based on every poll and survey taken from the late 19th century ?

            It’s a bit more than “a few subs parked” isn’t it though, and like I said before, part of the good Friday agreement is demilitarisation of NI by both sides, building a naval base to accommodate 7 nuclear attack submarines and 4 nuclear ballistic missile submarines slight falls into that catagory I think.

            “No such thing as “hard” Brexit. We leave or we don’t”

            I’m not sure if you’re aware but hard Brexit is if we leave without a deal, no customs agreement etc, soft Brexit is if we leave with a new trade deal and a customs arrangement, so there definitely is a soft and hard Brexit, it’s not as black and white as cancelling a gym membership mate.

    • The last thing we want is to break up the U.K. That would be absolute madness, to break up our already small enough country into tiny, irrelevant little countries. We must never let that happen. Together we are the equal of a France or a Germany.

      • Believe it or not Patrick Scotland would be entitled to around 10% of whatever hardware the MOD has including ships, submarine’s, tanks, planes, tugs, every conceivable piece you can think of we would be entitled to 10% as we paid for it with our taxes.
        You may think our wee Navy will be a piece of crap it may be small but we will have modern diesel boats and frigates and destroyers and all the support these type of vessels need and most of the British army will move back north as most of them are Scottish anyway lol, and we will have our F35s we got as our share so we would take more land version from the UK and you can keep the F35Bs to play with on one of the carriers at a time as you won’t have enough for two carrier’s and then we will take our 10% of the RAF followed by our 10% of the Marines, so when you think of it we will have a good we foundation to start from with and we can build a modern small force for our specific needs from there, asking other small countries like Sweden, Norway and Holland how they do their coastal defense and pick the best of whatever advice we receive, it’s small step.
        Don’t forget we are not going to be enemies and I’d hate think the people of England and Wales would think this as well, all we want to do is run our own affairs why is this so hard to understand.
        People from England don’t get this bit as they have always told others what to do, and now we want to be like other commonwealth countries independent, but still friends.

    • Not in your life how deep do you think Rhu narrows are it was bad enough to get it deeper for the Vanguard class submarine’s but there is not a hope of putting these huge beasts in such a small channel area, infact I get amazed that all the submariner’s are going to be kept in the one area as it wouldn’t take a military genuine to realise all you have to do is sink an old oiler at Rhu narrows when most submarine’s are in Faslane which is a lot of the time as they are normally broken down and this includes the new Astute class and apparently they are considering not making the last 4 instead just going straight to the next type of submariner’s as the Astute’s have proven to be a disaster at over a billion each, but the Russians could scew us up by blocking this little channel could you imagine if the put Capitol ships and destroyers and frigates there, you could shut the Royal Navy down in one go, soon move to Faslane for the majority of the fleet just wouldn’t work.

  3. In all seriousness, has to be the most beautiful setting of any naval base in Europe? Wonder if Norway has something that tops it actually…

  4. There will be a lot more jobs than the current 520 jobs if Trident were to ever leave and it was (as flagged by the Nats) as a future Scottish Naval Base

    • The position of the base provides for rapid and stealthy access through the North Channel to the submarine patrolling areas in the North Atlantic, something that can’t be replicated by a base further south or on another coast. The frequent cloud cover also offers a great advantage for submarines coming and going

  5. If there on about another try at on independance then the uk government needs to start preparations to secure a second site. If this means the lose of jobs then so be it. We need to keep uk safe. Scotland go it alone would put uk navy ship building and submarine operations at risk.

  6. I think it’s about time to shut Sturgeon up and call her bluff
    There’s a £100 million upgrade going on up there to that base so why not stop it until the result of the indy ref she is proposing
    Stop the ships being built on the Clyde
    And also stop the upgrade to Losemouth
    Stop until the result of the ref she is determined to have
    PS Im not anti Scottish honest

    • Hi Barry, I think you’re “bigging-up” Ms Sturgeon.
      She leads a minority administration in Holyrood, with its powers devolved by a Westminster parliament which includes Scottish MPs of Conservative, Labour and Lib-Dem hue. There is a diversity of opinion in Scotland over independence, and poling indicates Ms Sturgeon does not speak for the majority of Scots.
      Policies which you’re advocating would be hugely controversial, and simply alienate the majority unionist vote in Scotland – and be exploited by the nationalist community. Indeed they could be a potential game-changer; supporters of the union might begin to feel minority SNP support was being cynically exploited by English nationalists to divert much needed defence funding away from Scotland.
      Warships are built on the Clyde because that’s where the best skills are found; likewise Lossiemouth and Faslane are operationally the most appropriate locations for Northern QRA, and submarine basing – plus nuclear weapons storage. That’s the reason why these locations deserve funding.
      With devolution, Scottish nationalism is going to be around in UK politics for a long time, people are just going to have to learn to live with it – and perhaps stop over-reacting after ever utterance by a leading SNP politician, or my good friend Dad’s Army!

      • That’s why I advocate a thirty-year retention compact to keep the Faslane base in Scotland. To remove the Nukes from the independence debate, does not necessarily weaken Sturgeon’s aims. There are other key issues she is identifying, which should keep her flame for independence alight. A thirty-year agreement is good for the local Scotish economy, and therefore common sense should prevail?

        • in the event of independent scotland would the rest of the uk really want its nukes and all its subs in a foreign country?

          • Foreign is a cold term and I don’t, and won’t accept Scotland as a ‘FOREIGN’ country. I believe the union will still be there even with independence, and don’t see any real issues with regard to the subs being based in that country. Whatever happens, we are still joined at the hip!

        • My preference is the lifetime of the new Dreadnoughts which is 40 year’s and as I said earlier by then I think submarine technology will have moved on dramatically and we will be into fully armed drone submarine’s and possibly not even nuclear as there are new batteries being invented that last 10,000 longer than the average battery so if this technology is scaled up for a submarine these things could be running around unmanned so none of the life support systems required which is a massive saving on space and energy and cost and on the plus side these batteries are totally different to the huge cells we carred in Polaris I’m unsure if the are still large block batteries linked in a chain under the lowest deck, but the new type are the equivalent of a garden shed would run a submarine probably two one as back up or knowing the Navy it could be 3 lol.
          The point is politics will have moved on, submarine technology will have moved on and hopefully sense will prevail and we will still have a joint UK base in Faslane even though Scotland may be independent and I don’t see anything wrong with this arrangement at all.

      • Indeed Alan. And to be honest even if it does increase support for Indy I don’t want it, as after Indy we will want to have good relations, and co-operation, both sides of the border.

        May and her antics are, of course, quite acceptable 🙂

  7. Oh come on, we all know that the only reason the English nuclear submarines are kept in Faslane is because Westminster hates the Scottish people and doesn’t want to store them down south where they might threaten the health and safety of English people. You know, exactly the same reason why we make the nuclear warheads down the road from The Queen’s house and 20 million English people in, er, the south of England.

    You’re such a tool of Westminster.

  8. The downward trend of support for independence is long-term research and analysis over many years by Queen’s University. Polling by companies is what told us Remain would win comfortably two years ago. I know which I trust.

    I don’t believe the Northern Irish will suddenly switch allegiance just because a few subs are parked in Belfast along with ten thousand jobs. So a few Nationalists will whine. Won’t make any difference to anything.

    No such thing as “hard” Brexit. We leave or we don’t. The UK voted to leave, and in my experience the people of Northern Ireland have largely accepted or come to terms with that fact.

    • Well this is annoying. If when posting a reply you forget to check the box, and hit back on the browser, it disconnects your comment from the one you were replying to.

  9. Are there not overseas territories where we could build a resilience naval base? Some rugged half abandoned island or peninsula a thousand miles from anywhere?

      • Not really, the fallback position of the Falklands are that they go Independent to stay out of Argentina’s clutches (kind of discussed obliquely by am HoC Select Committee back in around 2012 or before. And that would then at the very least, be against the NNPT. It’s also South Atlantic and far from the madding crowds!

  10. I think one of the reasons was geography in an aerial sense, in that being surrounded by hills would make bomb runs more problematic. Not a problem these days. Also the availability of a close by relatively unused glen for land-based silos, and extensive storage. Also not a problem now since the demise of the WE-177 and Vulcans.

    Cloud cover would also be totally meaningless, with open borders since the 90s, there’s probably so many “observers” that alone contributes to the local economy substantially. Anyway, “they” can read it on twitter and get photos from there.

    In reply to other comments, I doubt the MOD has neglected the possibility of Independence for Scotland, in fact I think there’s a strong case to be made the SSNs had to be moved out of Devonport first, to allow extensive rebuilding in case of need. And whereas it would have been 10 years for a 2016 Indy date, I suspect it could be done in a shorter time now, where we’re heading for a 2021 date.

    • It would be absolute madness to break our small island up into tiny, separate countries. All talk of this has to be put to bed, it is extremely divisive for our country. Together we form Britain, a major European country, every bit the equal of a France or Germany. In the future we all need to get behind a support Britain, our great nation.

      • I have two countries currently Stephen, Scotland and the UK and I wish both well. After Independence I will have one country Scotland, but still wish the rUK well, as it will be our next-door neighbour.

        Just turn the music up loud enough so I can hear it clearly please.

  11. After reading Red Storm Rising I often wondered if the UK SSBN’s turned left not right exiting the Clyde and loitered (or plan to) in the Irish Sea. 100m+ deep.

    • Ah well, another speculation could be that the boat leaving Faslane is not the actual going on duty boat. But shush, don’t tell them about that one.

  12. deep waters and hard to track works both ways. I wonder what sort of defences they have around the base. I assume at least some decent sonar coverage and anti sub mines.

  13. Remember. If Scotland goes independent then it will be entitled to 9% of the fleet. Couple of type 23 or 31and a bunch on opv for large fishery job…. Batch 1?

    • I’m sure we could come to some arrangement for the Batch 2s and a few Type31s. The RN could then order more of the latter.

    • Good point Rob, 9% of the fleet you say.

      Well, in the event of Scotland going completely insane and leaving the union, my response would be:
      A, declare Faslane a sovereign base area
      B, transfer the decommissioned Swiftsure class boats to Scotland … 5 boats is a generous 9%.

    • An independent Scotland would have very little interest in defence and security matters imho. I couldn’t stand keeping up with all the independence for and against arguments post 2014, but the last I checked there was a debate within the SNP itself about whether Scotland would even want to apply to join NATO. The newly independent government would be much more likely to use defence assets as a negotiation tool to lower its share of debt obligations, for example. That could mean either a renunciation of claims to any of the surface fleet (excluding the OPVs, which I imagine would interest them for fisheries protection), or granting rights for basing and other installations in Scottish territory (e.g. Lossiemouth/Saxa Vord?) in exchange for more favourable outcomes on whatever issues it would rather prioritise. I think too many of those under the independence umbrella are too ideologically opposed to nuclear weapons (including the FM herself) for that to include rights for SSBN berthing at Faslane, but I wouldn’t put it completely outwith the realms of possibility (at least in the medium term). The SNP are ridiculously good at holding together a big tent coalition

    • Interesting views. Don’t forget the GIUK cap becomes the GIS gap, and there will still be bear flights or similar around Scotland, various Russian warships to escort, handed over from Norway to us to the rUK, so fast jets, ASW and anti-ship will be needed.

      The SNP decided by 52% to 48% in 2013 after a fierce debate at the autumn conference to change from Partners for Peace membership, to full NATO membership which means in theory the defence budget would need to be 2% by 2024, though currently I think it’s just over half the current membership actually have plans to increase to that level 🙁

      My feeling is that we’d need 2% certainly by 2024, and maybe before. Whoever does it, QRA North is still essential, Typhoons or ultimately the Gripen E/F with Meteor, and the Arctic passages will become more and more important to protect for merchant shipping, and resources. No subs for a few years, not till the end of the 20s I’d think.

      Scotland actually isn’t short a few international relations experts, or defence ones, and look at it this way, there would be countless armchair “experts” like me making ourselves heard, from all countries – what a challenge to mould a new armed forces.

  14. If Scotland votes for independence there will not just be military repercussions.
    I doubt rest of the UK will allow a newly independent Scotland to retain use of Sterling. In fact I have already written twice to my English MP demanding that in any vote for independence we the rest of the UK do not allow Scotland to use our currency.
    Any independent country without its own currency is a junk country and will be treated as such on the financial markets.
    The move of subs and nuclear deterrent will have to be partially paid for by Scotland I am afraid. So 9-10% of relocation costs. Devon and Cornwall are the only possible sites for relocation and building a new submarine base is likely to cost 8-10 billion in relocation/ infrastructure.

    Also Scotland will have to take its proportionate share of the sovereign debt. Say 9-10% that is only fair as Scotland and it’s people have helped to generate this debt. So what is that £125-150 billion pounds of debt to take on immediately.

    QRA/RAF will have to move South of the Border as Scottish air force will have to guard its own airspace.
    We will need a few new airbases in Northern Ireland for Poseidon MPAS and Northumbria for Northern QRA, I have mentioned on this site several times sites in Northumbria that could do this role. Cost of 1-2 new airbases in Northumbria would be what £200-300 million each? Land is relatively cheap up there and the previous WW2 airbases are lying dormant and unused currently
    Putin will be laughing in his porridge if Scotland votes for independence as they will overnight have damaged NATOs northern flank and defence posture.
    Sturgeon meeting Barnier will not help. The EU is a wounded animal needing putting out of its misery. Come on Italexit. The reason the EU is in trouble is that it was supposed to be an economic union for trade not some stealth implementation of a federal superstate that noone has voted fo. Yet national governments have simply ceeded power to the EU without even a whimper of a democratic vote. Except in Denmark which turned the EU down.
    The world is in a bit of a mess and Sturgeon and her small simpleton minded poison of English hatred and dream of an independent Scotland are just folly. We are simply stronger and better together.
    If they go for independence vote again then it has to be written in law that no 3rd vote will be allowed for a period of at least 50 years as I for one am sick of having to hear the poisoned witch of the North…Sturgeon on our radios and TV screens talking out of her arse and really not concentrating on her day job. Governing Scotland….how is that going by the way?
    I do not think she is doing a very good job. Neither do many Scots who voted against her policies and reduced her majority at the last elections. We need to stay a united kingdom, unity is weakness and division plays into the hands of our potential enemies

    • Scotland already said if Westminster did not allow them to keep the pound they would not take their share of the debt.

      Scotland has been contributing and been part of sterling since the union of the crowns in 1604, you can’t expect them to take the bad parts of the union (debts) and not have the good parts (currency)

      Why would you want to hurt them by not being allowed to use sterling, just because of a democratic decision to become independent?

      • ‘Why would you want to hurt them by not being allowed to use sterling, just because of a democratic decision to become independent?’

        Because it would tie the rest of the UK to the economic fortunes of Scotland. Why should we put ourselves at such risk in such circumstances, particularly as Scotland can’t afford to be independent as things stand. Unlike when Osborne was spouting the lie in 2010 ‘that we’d be like Greece’, Scotland actually would, being totally beholden to its neighbour’s much larger economy and the Treasury.

    • The only way to stop any country using sterling is to end it being a reserve currency, stop it being a fully convertible currency, and impose currency controls. There endeth the City of London, and probably about 15% of the rUK’s GDP.

      The rest of your anti-Scottish rant I ignore. If a majority of people in the rUK thought like you, then that WOULD destroy NATO.

  15. It’s astounding that so many English people hell bent on leaving the EU don’t, won’t or can’t see the parallels between their arguments and the those that were pushed by the SNP etc in the lead up to 2014 (democratic control and lack of democratic accountability, national sovereignty, national economic revitalisation etc etc)

  16. There are no parrells between EU vote and Scottish independence vote.
    We never had over 150 years of peaceful union and membership of the EU.
    As a nation we had never voted to join a EU federal superstate. When we were asked if that membership was what we wanted we exercised our democratic vote to leave said federal superstate.
    Scotland is welcome to have its vote. Go ahead.
    But we then have a right as the rest of the UK to then make sure if Scotland departs the UK that this is done in a correct manner
    All armed forces move south of the independent nations borders
    Scotland take a share of the national debt
    Use of Sterling would be for the rest of the UK to consent to.
    Cause and effect. The Scottish nationalists like to think they can have their cake and eat it. But BREXIT shows this is a lie and has been proven to be untrue.

    • Give me time and I could literally find you a parallel quote from someone on the Scottish nationalist side of things for every single thing you’ve just stated there….Your “never voted to join” would be something akin to their chattering about the Acts of Union being forced upon them. Your “all forces move south” would be something like “all oil revenues stay North”.

      BREXIT isn’t going to revitalise the North of England or English industry, it’s not going to drop your ridiculous house prices or expand access to mortgages, and it isn’t going to stop your demographic transition.

      Just like Scottish Independence isn’t going to fix any of the real world problems we face up here. And then we’re down to what? Abstract notions of national sovereignty and national revitalisation.

      This country has its head buried in the sand. Long past time we stopped moaning and started trying to find workable solutions to a fair number of problems, and seeing as we’re all supportive of HM Armed Forces and defence + security issues on here, maybe we’ll somehow manage to create some sort of new patriotism in the process.

      Nationalism poisons the mind, no exceptions, anywhere

    • “Scotland take a share of the national debt
      Use of Sterling would be for the rest of the UK to consent to.”

      Do you listen to what anybody says, If the rest of the UK don’t consent to Scotland using the currency it’s been part of for over half a millennia then it won’t take its share of the national debt, it’s not hard to understand.

    • ‘we exercised our democratic vote to leave said federal superstate’

      Hmmm…… how many hundreds of millions for the NHS was it ? People, seeing the consequences of leaving the ‘federal superstate’, have now changed their minds ?

  17. I have no particular opinion on the merits or otherwise of independence for Scotland. However. If it were to occur then it would be on an equal pro rats share of everything subject to the inevitable horse trading.

    Debt. Military hardware. (Army, naval, airforce) , govt IP in technology developed etc etc as well as use of currency. (interestingly scottish sterling notes carry a different category of legal standing to the BofE notes.)

    A strategy for a scottish treasury may be to simply take the 9%*of everything and then monetise much of those assets on the secondary market and simply retain those elements it wants to keep to equip the @ 20000 envisaged regulars and reservists.

    That strategy is contested with recent debate hinting at retaining stronger collaboration in key security matters with the rest of the UK where it makes sense for both parties.. Training , training areas, surveillance and Intel etc.

    Irrespective… Mod should be aiming on construction timeliness for new assets that takes account of potential further loss of assets to an independent Scotland… Global ambitions could be seriously compromised if assumption is everything will remain as is.

    • Wow, a posting I can agree with heart and soul.

      In my view there need to be two levels of talk in the event of a YES vote. One clearly between politicians, but the more important one between sefence bods on both sides whose sole interest is in maximising the defences of Scotland + rUK to make it as near the equivalent of the UK as now, and maybe even better if there is some diversification of emphasis relevant to the geography and even political standing of the different governments – for instance it is possible an iScotland might co-operate more closely with the Nordics, giveing some extra strength and forces to them, and even take a load off the rUK allowing it to concentrate more on southerly or easterly matters.

  18. Come along now guys, we have had the Scottish referendum and the answer was to stay in…..

    We then voted as the UK to leave the EU…. End of.

    Its called democracy, just because the minority didn’t get what they want, they jump up and down and throw their toys out of the pram!

    Suck it up and move on….

      • Well Daniele, we do have the technology to keep the UK as it is forever, though it could do with a bit of up-dollying. So we could have clones that age fast to a certain age then mature at a regular rate. There’s May and Corbyn, they’d be 40 year old youngsters. Arlene Foster you could make 30 years old. David could be pre-trained as an expert in snookering himself, and of course we’d try a 14 year old Boris to see if anyone noticed the difference. And after 10 years having learnt a few lessons, we do the reclone and keep them going forever and a day, improving as we go along.

        Sounds like fun to me, can I emigrate to the North Pole please?

    • Presumably you’d be in favour of establishing the Conservatives in a permanenet government, and cancelling all future General Elections. The UK could even make it a family affair, and aim for a 5,000 year dyanasty.

  19. The thing is Dads Army, if you read down some of the comments on here, some people really seem to have forgotten that they already had two referendums, one to leave the UK and and one to leave the EU

    Both done and settled, legally and definitively. They seen to have rejected the Democratic process and that’s a really sad thing for our democracy.

    • The thing is John Clark that there have been two referendums, one the result was to stay in the UK which was in the EU by 55% to 45%, bit some people really seem to have forgotten that the the other result was to stay in the EU by 62% to 38%, but because of a 11 to 1 vote ratio, the result is overruled by the wishes of the rest of the UK. But Scotland voted 62% to remain in the EU, so there is a Democratic contradiction.

      And it’s as simple as that, whether or not the SNP want another Referendum, the people of Scotland are entitled to decide if they want to stay in a UK which is exiting the EU, or to leave the EU and either stay in the EU trasnsitionally until membership is formally applied for, or rejoin – something the rUK is unlikely to do. Some posters eemd to have rejected the Democratic right of the Scottish People to resolve such a contradiction as set out in the first paragraph, and that’s really a sad thing for our democracy.

      This has nothing to do with the article, but infortunately the moment Scotland is mentioned some posters take the opportunity to rubbish Independence, the SNP, Sturgeon who is our First Minister, and at times the skills of the shipbilding workers themselves (see new thread for an example.

  20. Well I don’t see how Democratic snow blindness helps to be honest…
    Scotland is part of the Union, ( vote number 1) as we all are,.

    We all voted in the EU referendum and we voted to leave as the British Isles. ( vote number 2).

    I can’t understand the refusal to except the Democratic process by some elements, both in Scotland and regarding the wider EU vote.

    The Scottish first Minister has a country to deal with, but unfortunately, constantly trying to overturn the Democratic process and keep talking referendums, is only serving to undermine her own political base and turn incrasing numbers of Scottish electorate off.

    Keep it up and watch Labour take back control in Scotland, bit by bit.

    Just my jaundiced view of course Dad Army, but its always good to discuss what makes us different and conversely binds us together in these British Isles.

    • As you said earlier:

      “A, declare Faslane a sovereign base area
      B, transfer the decommissioned Swiftsure class boats to Scotland … 5 boats is a generous 9%.”

      Threatening to annex – colonise – a part of another country’s land, and dump a load of toxic readioactive Submarines on it, is hardly likely to “bind us together in these British Isles”.

      Personally I wouldn’t want to annex a part of the British Isles that didn’t belong to my country, or dump our radioactive or toxic waste on say England, and I guess that’s what “makes us different”.

  21. Come on Dad’s Army, surely you can see that comment was a joke!

    Please feel free to counter my points in the previous post though…

    In what way is what I said not hard facts? The last time I checked, democracy was about the will of the majority, challenge that basic fact and it’s a slippery slope for us all!

    • I already did. Scotland voted 62% to remain in the EU, but 55% to remain in the UK which is leaving the EU, so there’s a Democratic inconsistency which can only be resolved by another democratic Referendum.

      Anyway, this thread is supposed to be about nuclear submarines on the Clyde. Which in the event of Independence would clearly be better moved out of Scotland, but to allow time and decrease the overall cost of new basing and relocation, should, by agreement between both parties, be done over a 10 year term.

      For which of course the rUK would probably pay about £5 billion a year rent, either in cash or kind, as well as do the complete toxic clearup after it at its own cost.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here