Skip to content

Donate to support our work

email signup

ForcesWatch

ForcesWatch
  • About
    • About ForcesWatch
    • ForcesWatch FAQs
    • Privacy policy
  • Our work
    • Military power in British democracy
    • Military recruitment & service
    • The military in education & youth activities
    • The military in society
  • Comment, analysis, news
    • Comment & analysis
    • News articles
  • What to do…
    • Before you sign up
    • If you are already in the armed forces
    • In your school/college/community
    • Resources to use with political representatives
    • Get involved in the campaign
  • Resources
    • The Warrior Nation podcast
    • ForcesWatch materials
    • research & reports
    • education materials
    • book/paper
    • audio & film
    • guidance
    • legislation & conventions
    • facts & figures
    • organisation
  • Projects
  • Contact
    • Get in contact
    • Stay in touch
  • Donate
  • Shop
    • Basket

Home » risks » Page 8

risks

ForcesWatch response to the Ministry of Defence’s statement about The Last Ambush, 28 October 2013

27/10/2013

ForcesWatch

In response to The Last Ambush report, the Ministry of Defence has issued a statement containing some claims that are either inaccurate or not relevant to the report’s findings. Here we respond to each claim in turn.


Young soldiers ‘more likely to die’

22/08/2013

Evening Standard

Soldiers serving in Afghanistan who joined the Army at 16 are twice as likely to die than those who joined at 18 or above, a new report has claimed. Human rights groups Child Soldiers International and Forces Watch, who were behind the study, said the increased risk reflected the "disproportionately high" number of 16-year-olds who join front-line infantry roles.


ForcesWatch response to the Ministry of Defence’s statement, 22 August 2013

22/08/2013

ForcesWatch

In response to the paper, ‘Young age at Army enlistment is associated with greater war zone risks’, published by ForcesWatch and Child Soldiers International (August 2013), the Ministry of Defence have issued a statement. Here we respond to their points.


Youngest Army recruits pay highest price in Afghanistan, new report shows

21/08/2013

ForcesWatch and Child Soldiers International press release

The risk of fatality in Afghanistan for recruits who enlisted into the British Army aged 16 and completed training has been twice as high as it has for those enlisting at 18 or above, according to a study published today on behalf of human rights groups Child Soldiers International and ForcesWatch. The authors believe the increased risk reflects the disproportionately high number of 16 year olds who join front-line Infantry roles.


Young age at Army enlistment is associated with greater war zone risks: An analysis of British Army fatalities in Afghanistan

August 2013

This paper, published by ForcesWatch and Child Soldiers International, indicates that the risk of fatality in Afghanistan for British Army recruits aged 16 and completed training has been twice as high as it has for those enlisting at 18 or above.


ForcesWatch submission to Defence Select Committee Future Army 2020 inquiry

June 2013

ForcesWatch's submission to the Defence Committee's inquiry Future Army 2020, which recomments an evaluation of the case for an independent review of the minimum age of recruitment into the Army with a view to recruiting only adults (aged 18 and above) in the future, looking at five reasons why the time is right for this.


The inescapable psychological cost of conflict

A study published in the Lancet called Violent offending by UK military personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan has found that men in the UK armed forces are more likely to have been convicted of violent offences than their civilian peers. The study shows a strong link with age – that fighting and being traumatised by it tends to make those in younger age groups more likely to be violent afterwards.


US military struggling to stop suicide epidemic among war veterans

15/02/2013

The Guardian

Last year, more active-duty soldiers killed themselves than died in combat. And after a decade of deployments to war zones, the Pentagon is bracing for things to get much worse


Fifty troops commit suicide after Iraq and Afghanistan tours

15/02/2013

The Telegraph

More than 50 members of the UK Armed Forces have committed suicide since serving in the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, figures suggest.


Recently… on ‘moral injury’ and armed forces suicides in the US and UK

2012 was the the first year 'in at least a generation' in which a greater number of currently-serving US Army soldiers killed themselves (177) than were killed in active duty (176).


  • Previous
  • 1
  • ...
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • Next
Post navigation
Older posts
Newer posts
← Previous Page1 … Page7 Page8 Page9 Page10 Next →
Advanced search
    • from
    • to

Subscribe

Sign up for our newsletter. See more options.


See our privacy policy

Support our work

If you'd like to support our work with a donation, choose Paypal or Patreon, or see more options here.

Become a patron at Patreon!

  • Home
  • About ForcesWatch
  • Comment, analysis, news
  • Our work
  • Projects
  • Resources
  • Contact

Creative Commons Licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

ForcesWatch, 2024.
  • Kids with guns introduction
  • Background information
  • Why this should be challenged
  • Local communities taking action
    • Wrexham
    • Leicester
    • Chester
    • Back
  • Strategies & resources

Subscribe to our newsletter for regular reflections and info


In subscribing, you give consent for us to send you our newsletter by email. You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from any email you receive from us. See our privacy policy.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with this.Ok or scroll to acceptNoPrivacy policy