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- WORLD, Page 43World NotesBRITAINOld Regiments Just Fade Away
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- The cold war is over, so why is there so much saber rattling
- in Britain? When Defense Secretary Tom King announced last week
- that the British army will be reduced to its smallest fighting
- strength since 1830, the military reacted with anguished cries.
- The number of troops will shrink more than 40,000, to about
- 116,000, and the British Army of the Rhine will be halved.
- Twenty-two cavalry and infantry regiments -- many in existence
- for centuries -- will be forced to merge with old rivals.
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- Leading the parade of pared-down regiments: the royal
- household's elite Life Guards, which sprang up in 1659 to
- restore Charles II to the throne; and the Blues and Royals,
- whose origins go back to the early empire. Scotland will see
- four famous regiments fused into two. The Queen's Own
- Highlanders and the Gordon Highlanders will be united, and two
- Lowland units, the King's Own Scottish Borderers and the Royal
- Scots, will be merged. Sir John Chapple, Chief of the General
- Staff, tried to put the best face on the situation. "Our
- objective will be an army that is lethal, versatile, smaller,
- but effective," he wrote to army commanders. And still with some
- colorful vestiges of a long tradition.
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