Defence in the Media: 20 August 2015
...government email addresses registered with the dating service are among those released online, raising fears that criminals could use nude pictures and details of sexual desires posted on the site...
...government email addresses registered with the dating service are among those released online, raising fears that criminals could use nude pictures and details of sexual desires posted on the site...
...neglected. Yet, since then, we've worked hard to join up the dots between Government, Reservists and employers. Working to get our relationship right; making sure a better package of benefits...
...complex and necessarily time-consuming process which can be made more difficult by some legal firms and opponents seeking to use the system for their own ends. Just because an allegation...
...There is no overall programme to deliver free wi-fi access to UK based soldiers for personal use, however wi-fi is currently provided across 90% of the Army estate on a...
...included coverage of the Prime Minister’s speech in which she said: There is no practicable alternative to the use of force to degrade and deter the use of chemical weapons...
...Code £21m of Service Pupil Premium payments made to support the pastoral needs of over 60,000 Service pupils in state schools. 24,500 children from Service families have benefitted from 154...
...opinions from the White House, that even a miniaturised device would be expected to have created a blast far bigger than the more rudimentary atomic bombs North Korea has tested...
...of these partner agencies the Environment Agency would normally be the main focus for questions from the group. I served on Operation SHAKU, the code name that the MOD...
...open-minded approach to how we employ people. It means we’ve got to think hard, I think, about the balance between full and part time service, which may mean that legislation...
...be a new code of leadership in September and that the complaints procedure would be “sound” so that people felt that they could complain. General Sir Nick Carter, Chief of...