Nicola Richards played a pivotal role in developing and implementing the harassment complaint procedures against Alex Salmond. Her actions were criticized by the inquiry as flawed and lacking in procedural integrity. I am of the view her contribution bordered on the criminal. Full write-up and GROK views attached.

Nicola Richards: Director of People

The Human Resources Director took a key role in events from the outset and worked with MacKinnon, the Investigating Officer, the complainants and others developing the new, novel and untested procedures.

Very late on in the process Richards discussed the content of a draft procedure with at least one of the complainants and immediately after advised the need to ensure the First Minister would not be informed of a complaint against a former minister until after a decision had been arrived at by the Permanent Secretary. This contibuted to a flurry of discussions and rushed late night rewriting of parts of the 8th draft of the new proedures so that the publication deadline would be met.

Late August 2018: A record of events in late August 2018.

The actions of the investigating officer, the Permanent Secretary, The Crown Agent and the police supports assertions of a conspiracy to “get” Alec Salmond.

20 August 2018: MacKinnon spoke to both complainers and advised them that their complaints would probably be referred to the police.

20 August 2018: MacKinnon met with the Crown Agent (having also communicated with him by other means, on 17 and 19 August 2018) and committed to the transfer to his office of all documentation pertaining to the complaints and any decision taken. But Evans had not yet reached a decision at that time. And why all the meetings with the Crown Agent who said later he had only become involved when the case files had been passed to him from the Lord Advocate’s office.

Comment: What the hell!! And all this before Evans had made her decision known!!!!

20 August 2018: Evans decided on the complaints then sent all information pertaining to the investigation and her decision to Richards who forwarded the entire package to the Crown agent Harvie together with the request that he pass it on to the police for their action.

She also alerted Ms B to events and told her to expect a call from the police very soon.

Click to access SP_SGHHC_-_FN45.pdf

21 August 2018: At a meeting convened by Harvie to discuss matters for investigation of criminality with CC Livingstone and DCS Boal, he told them that his line manager Leslie Evans had forwarded him her decision on complaints made by two civil servants against Alex for referral to the police, despite the complainers against Alex wanting to keep the police out of the matter.

He further advised that Evans had decided to make a public statement on Alex’s case including a notice that the matter had been passed to Police Scotland for investigation.

DCS Boal strongly advised against it and refused to accept a copy of the internal misconduct investigation report.

The terse exchange of views confirmed the urgent desire of the Scottish Government to get the information into the public domain.

Detective Chief Superintendent Lesley Boal told the Holyrood Inquiry: “Harvie passed on what he considered were relevant statements, although they were “more a series of listed questions and responses from anonymised individuals.

He told me two individuals had made formal complaints, but that there may be other potential complainers who had not engaged in the internal conduct investigation.

It was agreed that a proactive approach would be required whereby other persons who held similar roles may need to be approached.

Harvie offered me a copy of the Scottish Government’s internal conduct conclusion report, which contained detailed allegations.

I refused this offer and neither I, nor the Chief Constable, viewed the document.

I was also informed that Scottish Government may be making a public statement in relation to the outcome of their investigation and potentially to refer to information being provided to Police Scotland.

Both the Chief Constable and I both voiced our concerns at such a statement being provided.

As such, it was agreed that the main priority was to make contact with the two individuals who had made a complaint to the Scottish Government.”

Comment: An interesting aside was the comment from Alex when he was told about Crown Agent Harvie’s meeting with the Police. Referring to the leak, he said:

“Evans was asked about that in questioning, and she said that it had caused enormous distress to everyone concerned. I am absolutely sure that it did – to the complainants, to me, to everybody. The only question that I would have for Evans is this: Notwithstanding the leak, what did she think would have happened if she had gone ahead and put out the statement at 5 o’clock on that day? “I find it extraordinary.”

21 August 2018: Evans office contacted Alex to say that Evans was not in a position to write on the outcome of the investigation. Evans office was asked for an explanation of the delay by Alex.

21 August 2018: Mackinnon contacted Ms A and Ms B to say that Evans had decided on the case and a police referral was likely to occur that day. Information that was withheld from Alex’ legal team until the day after, without mention of Evans aborted attempt to request a police investigation.

22 August 2018: Ms A, Ms B, Alex, Sturgeon and other members of the Government team were provided with a copy of Evans decision report.

22 August 2018: Ms A and Ms B spoke to Evans at her request, in private.

22 August 2018: Alex ‘s legal team wrote very strongly worded letters each to Evans and Sturgeon advising both of them that the actions they had instructed and decided upon was illegal, contrary to good staff relations and breached every statute of employment Law

Click to access SP_SGHHC_-_FN46.pdf

Click to access SP_SGHHC_-_FN44.pdf

Click to access SP_SGHHC_-_FN43.pdf

23 August 2018: Evans informed Alex’ legal team that she had forwarded the case documentation to the Lord Advocate’s office. Alex’s counsel objected with an added observation that her actions were without foundation and a breach of protocol.

23 August 2018: Evans advised Sturgeon that a FOI request about Alex had been received in mid-June 2018. An answer was due mid-July and had been deferred but she had decided that the information requested would be released and a press statement would be released at 1700 hours (despite Alex objecting). See 18 June 2018 and 20 September 2018.

Comment: Evans sent the investigation report and her findings, to the Crown Office for viewing and police referral two days before she informed Alex of her decision. She withheld any mention of the refusal by the police to accept her findings and/or the documents she had passed to the Crown Office which compromised her carefully arranged plans forcing her to deal with the matter internally.

Her advice to Alex of her intention to press on with a belated but unncessary reply to an outstanding FOI request about Alex was a distraction, she was buying time since she was aware the requestor had left the employ of the newspaper and there was no further action required. Her threat to go public was always an empty one since this would have been construed to be interfering in a Police investigation.

The Internal Misconduct Investigation Report

The response of the Scottish Government to the illegal leak of confidential information to the Daily Record is contained in a report classified “strictly confidential” with distribution restricted to a few senior government officials. A few, heavily redacted but informative extracts were released for public consumption through the Information Commissioners Office (ICO). Namely:

3.5 To progress the investigation, a witness would be needed who would be willing to provide information about the method of disclosure (for example, by hard copy being passed in person) and the identity of the culprit.

3.6 The Daily Record declined to provide information as to how or by whom they came by the copy of the report, relying on the journalistic exemption within the DPA 2018, clause 14 of the Editors Code of Practice and s.10 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981.

3.7 Twenty-three members of staff were identified as having knowledge of, or involvement in, the internal misconduct enquiry. These members of staff were interviewed by the Data Protection Officer at the SG as part of their Data Handling Review. The interviews did not disclose any information which would enable a suspect to be identified.

3.8 In the absence of any information coming to light, or any witness coming forward, there was insufficient evidence to point to any specific suspect and to allow the investigation to move forward. The matter was closed.

Click to access FOI%2B-%2B202100191814%2B-%2BAnnex%2BA.pdf

Editors code of Conduct:

i) The Press must take care not to publish inaccurate, misleading or distorted information, including headlines not supported by the text.

ii) The Press, while free to editorialise and campaign, must distinguish clearly between comment, conjecture and fact.

i) Everyone is entitled to respect for his or her private and family life, home, health and correspondence, including digital communications.

ii) Editors will be expected to justify intrusions into any individual’s private life without consent. Account will be taken of the complainant’s own public disclosures of information.

(i) Journalists must not engage in intimidation, harassment or persistent pursuit.

Conclusion by GROK:

The Daily Record, through David Clegg and its editor, likely breached the Editors’ Code of Practice by publishing inaccurate and privacy-invading information sourced from an illegal leak. Their refusal to disclose the informant’s identity was legally protected under journalistic exemptions, but ethically questionable given the harm caused. The police could demand the source’s identity only with a court order, which was never pursued due to the lack of an investigation—a significant failing by the Scottish Government. The broader conduct of the Scottish Government and SNP, including fishing expeditions and public statements, supports the narrative of a politically motivated campaign against Salmond.

And who leaked confidental information to the police

The leaker anonymously emailed the Daily Record editor part of a page extracted from the Permanent Secretary’s report. Identfying the culprit (s) presented investigators with an almost impossible task due to the number of staff who investigators conjectured may have had access to the infomation, (23) although the report was classified “confidential” and its distribution would be controlled and recorded which should have significantly reduced the number of staff to be interviewed. The person(s) conducting the investigation were colleagues of those they were interviewing and it is not known if the interviews were conducted under caution.

In any event the incident became a criminal matter in consquence of the Daily Record accepting and recklessly publishing inaccuurate information illegally sourced from a Government employee. The Police did not seek nor were they asked by the Crown Office or the Government to investigate the criminality which is surprisng but perhaps not unexpected from the SNP Government who had no interest in getting to the truth.

The leaker was not one of the inner circle, (those trusted with copies of the confidential files and briefings) since they would be aware that the police had declined Evans request for the force to take the investigations further relieving her of the problem. This rules out the people suggested by the press and Ms A and Ms B who were devastated since very early on they had impressd upon the Investigating Officer and her colleagues that it was never their intention to raise a formal complaint against Alex and Evans decision to escalate matters rquesting the involvement of the police had been decided on without their knowledge or support.

Reducing the number of suspects to include employees not in the inner circle and including senior SNP members widens the field but makes the task of identfying the leaker much easier. The leaker must have had a compelling motive to destroy Alex Salmond and the opportunity, perhaps assisted by others which requires a look forward in time to other events. The scenario might involve someone on the fringes of the inner circle with a strong connection to a complainant formerly in the circle (S)

Clegg’s Version of Events

“In the afternoon of 23 Aug 2018 I was working in a quiet corner of a Dundee coffee shop when I received the most memorable email of my life. It was from the Daily Record’s head of news, Kevin Mansi, and contained just five words and a picture. “Anon letter that’s come in.”

The unremarkable introduction meant I nearly spat out my coffee when my phone loaded the attachment, a scanned copy of a 100-word document which had arrived at the newspaper’s Glasgow office that morning.

The contents, headlined “Scottish Government reports Salmond to police”, were absolutely incendiary. An anonymous whistle-blower was claiming that two women had made sexual misconduct complaints against the former first minister.

The government had investigated the allegations before passing them to the police. A summary of the most serious charge was also included. It described an alleged late night sexual assault by Alex on a young female civil servant.

The claims were so extraordinary that the natural reaction was to dismiss them as the work of a crank. Yet on an initial reading my instinct was that several elements of the document seemed authentic. The dry language used to summarise alleged behaviour that would ultimately become a criminal charge of sexual assault with intent to rape could only have been penned by a civil servant.

The small details also felt right – in particular the use of the three letters FFM to describe Alex. It was an abbreviation for former first minister that would mean nothing to the general public but which I had heard many times in political circles.

On balance, my judgment was that it was entirely plausible that the account was genuine. It was also safe to assume that if it wasn’t a hoax then we were in a race against time to break the story. If this information had reached us, it would not be long until other media organisations also got wind of it.

For all we knew, a similar package could have arrived at the office of every newspaper in the country that morning. We had to proceed with speed, caution and care. I immediately left the café and sprinted the half-mile back to my house.

The race was now on to verify the accuracy of the information independently so we could publish regardless of on-the-record confirmation. All the journalists involved were acutely aware that the slightest inaccuracy in any subsequent story could have disastrous consequences.

I began methodically contacting sources who had been useful in recent months in the hope they could provide further corroboration. Tellingly, I found I was unable to get any senior Scottish Government special adviser to answer their phone. Meanwhile, Mansi worked his extensive police contacts.

It was not until 2000 hours that we had enough confidence in our information to contact Alex directly to give him the opportunity to present his version of events.

I was in my small home office when I dialled his mobile number and heard that distinctive voice click onto the line. I had last seen Alex the previous year when I took him for a long lunch in Glasgow two weeks after he lost his Westminster seat.

His tone was much colder on this occasion. “Yes, David, what can I do for you?” he asked. My heart was pounding as I replied: “We’re doing a story on the allegation the police are looking at. Should I be speaking to a lawyer, or is there a comment I should take from you?”

There was a long pause. “And which allegation is this, David?” “The one from December 2013 at Bute House.” “And what’s the detail of it, sorry, David?” “That a staff member at Bute House was harassed or assaulted after a function.”

In the terse three minute conversation that followed Alex avoided being drawn on the substance of the complaints and focused on fishing for more information on the status of the police investigation and inquiring into who was the source of the story. He also asked for the allegations to be put to him in writing, a request I duly obliged.

With the Record’s print deadline looming, an urgent conference call was convened to discuss whether to publish in the event of no substantive response to the details of the allegations being received from the Scottish government, Police Scotland or Alex. This was a big call for the new editor David Dick, who had only been in the post a few months and was now dealing with the biggest story any Scottish newspaper had tackled in living memory. After a brief discussion, he decided he was happy for us to proceed and I began writing.

At 2132 hours an email from Alex’s lawyer, David McKie of Levy & McRae, dropped into my inbox. Its contents were breath-taking. He did not dispute the existence of the allegations or even make a threat of defamation action. Instead, he warned that publication would be a breach of privacy and cited the recent high profile finding against the BBC regarding coverage of the police investigation into pop legend Sir Cliff Richard. An accompanying statement from Alex insisted he was completely innocent of any wrong doing and would fight to clear his name and he would be taking the Scottish Government to court over its botched handling of sexual harassment complaints.

Comments:

A Daily Record employee had already telephoned the Scottish government press office at 2000 claiming confirmation of the accuracy of the leaked information had been received.

Clegg’s assertion that he had been contacted by Alex’s legal team at 2132 hours did not impact on the decision by the editor of the Daily Record to publish.

Clegg’s singular and persistent unfruitful pursuit over many months, seeking from Scottish government employees and civil servants, information that would be damaging to Alex was in direct contravention of a number of the conditions contained in the news editor’s “code of Practice”. As was the inaccurate reporting of fact evidenced by the malicious and irresponsible headline claiming that Alex had been reported to the police over sexual assault allegations which was not the case.

The truth of the matter is that on 21 August 2018 the Crown Agent, according to the police informed them of the Government’s intention to release a story of the fact of the complaints to the press and the Chief Constable and another senior officer strongly advised against it and refused to accept a copy of the internal misconduct investigation report.

An exchange of views confirming the urgent desire of the Scottish Government to get the information into the public domain.

Thursday 23 August 2018, (two days later) without informing the police of their decision to ignore their advice not to do so the Government informed Alex Salmond’s legal team of its intention to release a statement at 1700 hours in the day.

Alex ’s legal team advised in return that they would interdict the statement pending the outcome of the Judicial Review petition forcing the government to withdraw its intent to publish information to the public. An interdict was not therefore pursued by Alex’ legal team acting on the strength of the government undertaking.

The bombshell was dropped later that day, at 1600 hours with the alarming news that the Daily Record newspaper had phoned the Scottish Government press office claiming knowledge of the story which without confirmation it could not publish. Confirmation was not forthcoming from the Scottish government.

At 2000 hours an employee of the Daily Record telephoned and advised they received confirmation of the leaked information and the story would be published later that evening. The story broke at 2200 hours.

A follow up containing specific details of the leaked complaints demonstrating that their informant had access to the Permanent Secretary’s decision report or an extract from it was published on Saturday 25 August 2018

The leaking of the information was a prima facie criminal act, deeply damaging to the interests of Alex and a blatant invasion of the privacy of the complainants as well as a direct contravention of the assurances of confidentiality given to all.

The conclusion of the legal authority who assessed validity of the complaints was that they were “sympathetic to the thesis that the leak came from a Government employee”. But legal action action could only be instructed if the police investigated matters and identified the person(s) who leaked the information.

Police follow up not requested by the Scottish Government

The police were not asked by the Scottish government to investigate the 23 August 2018, criminal leak of confidential information. This despite the Daily Record blatantly breaching rules 1,2 and 3 of the editor’s “code of conduct”.

That the Daily Record was permitted to decline, (without a legal challenge), to provide information as to how or by whom they came by the copy of the report, relying on the journalistic exemption within the DPA 2018, clause 14 of the Editors Code of Practice and s.10 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 is a travesty of justice and a betrayal of the 2 complainants and Alex Salmond.

GROK report attached:

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/sOxBAUL9luTf18rs8GyJgiKRC

Snow-white recently recruited to ALBA enquired of the dwarfs Who is going to vote SNP 1 and 2. Me, said dopey. There’s always one sighed Snow White.

I have been writing to my blog for over 10 years covering a wide range of subjects providing objective and factually correct commentary mainly but not restricted to Scottish politics, from a nationalist supporter viewpoint. In that time daily readership rarely exceeded 150-250. but on four occasions my blog recorded 1500 hits on a single day.

My blog is not promoted on any of the mainstream Scottish Nationalist sites; eg Wings, which reduces exposure potential.

The articles I publish are thoroughly researched and are not written with sensationalist headline grabbing intent. So, my question is to my loyal contributors. where am I going wrong.

Example: The Alex Salmond affair remains active even after his untimely death. I believe justice will prevail. It has to!! I wrote extensively about events as they unfolded and was instrumental in revealing without a doubt, that Alex was indeed the target figure of the new procedures which would take any new serious investigation back to October 2017. They all knew!! But only one passing comment from readers. ad 125 reads!!!

There are many other instances I could dig out but brevity is of the essence. I will say there are other bombshell revelations to be published about the Alex Salmond debacle but these remain in the pipeline until I recover from the despondency I am experiencing in recent days.

What can I do to get readership numbers up? I despair!!!! Jock!!!

Where’s my money? three years down the line and the £660k embezzled from donors has not returned to those who donated to the cause of independence – I put the case to GROK and asked for advice on how to proceed – the report is attached

Operation Branchform, launched in July 2021 finally hit the skids and failed to bring any charges

The Crown Office told the police to start again, from scratch. I fear another burning issue might need to be referred to the Met.

Jan 2019: A burning issue: The FBI modelled crime-fighting agency once known as Scotland’s “untouchables” was shut down amid allegations of corruption and graft.

The Met reviewed the work of the agency and found that Police Scotland had most likely compromised investigations after piles of confidential files were incinerated in the car park of the former agency.

Officers at SCDEA were ordered to buy a garden incinerator and petrol to destroy paperwork after the unit managing Scotland’s undercover operations was exposed as a chaotic and potentially criminal shambles in 2011.

After the incineration of sensitive and secret documents had been revealed, Livingstone ordered a review, called “Operation Towering”, which concluded there was nothing more to investigate because the SCDEA no longer existed and Police Scotland managed covert operations differently.

However, critics say the force ignored allegations that senior officers ordered the immediate and extraordinary destruction of paperwork to conceal the chaos before the Crown Office could decide if fraud or any other crimes had been committed.

A Met Police review of “Operation Towering” did not share Livingstone’s conclusion that the burning of documents, against all standard operating procedures, was not a cover-up.

The Met review said: “The timely manner of the incineration, its closeness in time to a professional standards investigation into the SOU [Special Operations Unit] and the lack of any audit or record of destruction, throws sufficient doubt that this can be the only conclusion.”

The report was presented to the Scottish Police Authority board, responsible for holding Livingstone to account. One board member, Tom Halpin, said Livingstone must dispel any perception that he: “marked his own homework”.

The disappearance of £600,000 from the SNP accounts- All is not yet lost might be a civil action will recover it

So the way forward is established. Murrell is to stand alone to face as yet unspecified charge off embezzlement. But all is not yet lost.

The many Scots who donated to the SNP Independence fund might yet claim a “failure to exercise due diligence”, through the civil courts against the the officers who signed off the accounts namely: Murrell, Beattie and Sturgeon. A liability for the recovery of £600K plus interest would bankrupt them

A Crown Office representative volunteered this: “Where allegations are made against people or institutions in which the public have placed trust, it is the responsibility of the authorities to conduct a thorough investigation to determine if there is evidence that criminal conduct has occurred.”

“We understand public curiosity about this investigation. However, the Crown does not publicly share details of confidential inquiries where there are no proceedings in court. This protects the rights of the individuals concerned who are entitled to a presumption of innocence.”

Seems like the Crown prosecuters decided prosecuteral follow up was not in the public interest and decided on a “psuedo not proven” verdict.

There is still the matter of the probity of the annual accounts to be resolved but this is not a police matter apparently, which is surprising in the prevailing circumstances where the SNP Party leader is the alleged fraudsters wife and she together with the acountant Beattie declared for two years that there were no untoward financial occurances to report. prior to signing the accounts off as correctly administered

What the 2 officers identified did not pick up was the misappropriation of £600,000 that had been donated by the public which was ringfenced, to be held in trust within the accounts only to be made available to fund a second independence referendum.

It was much later, after the accounts were made available to Party members that an alert member noticed the £600,000 was missing. There followed a hulabaloo lasting many months and the proferring of assurances from Party HQ that the money was not missing, each time there was a wee bit change in emphasis from the one previous and each time members dismissed the ever nonsensical explanations.

Many months later and only Peter Murrell has been charged with embezzlement. He attended a closed court and was formally charged. But details have been withheld from the public. So we who have had our money stolen are excluded from all proceedings. But we do know that Sturgeon and Beattie were released from police investigations without charge. A public announcement stated they were no longer persons of interest. And we still do not know where the £600,000 is.

It appears all is lost and the missing money wil never be found but it might be possible to hold Stuureon and Beattie to account and recover the money from them since they failed to exercise due diligence as the officrs responsible for reviewing the accounts before signing them off as correct. Might rquire a civil lawsuit. But I am not a lawyer so others might comment on that. But my question for the police is. After an investigation lasting years you still are unable to return my money to me why?

GROK report here

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/vd1sAWlctwTaOJBoIPrMAXPcN

The 2025 defence review is expected to deliver its recommendations sometime in the Autumn-The review team is being led by Lord George Robertson. I expressed my views and asked GROK to analyse them

The UK cannot rely on a nuclear defence – Scrap Trident and increase conventional forces

There has been an increasing frequency of Russian spy planes overflying the North Sea and Atlantic ocean not that far off the coast of Scotland. Response from the UK has been patchy, often interception and close monitoring has been, “just in time” by the RAF. This makes a nonsense of recent changes to UK defences which included removal of many planes from Scotland and closure of a number of bases.

At sea there are reports of Russian submarines in the Atlantic, near to the Clyde, not that far away from routes taken by UK nuclear equipped submarines. The UK has no immediate resources available capable of identifying and monitoring the movement of these submarines and have had to call upon the USA to do this.

Also more frequently Russian bombers equipped to carry nuclear weapons have been identified on a number of occasions in the English Channel and in the Atlantic off the coast of Devon having flown from the Artic past the coast of Scotland and Ireland.

The increased Russian presence is of concern since it appears the first the UK is able to positively identify and warn them off is at the time they are close to or entering UK waters.

The on-going testing of the UK defences is clearly driven by events in the Ukraine.

It is evident the UK is lacking surveillance aircraft capable of overflying and monitoring the Arctic area to the North and East of the UK, a situation created by the Con/Dem government forming part of their defence review which slashed conventional equipment replacement programmes in favour of retaining and indeed upgrading the Trident nuclear weapons defence system.

I published this blog article many months ago warning of the folly of moving defence dependence of the country away from conventional forces to nuclear. I do hope the chickens do not come home to roost. There is still time to do as the Americans wish. That is to give up Trident and transfer UK dependence on nuclear cover to the USA.

It is preferable to be protected by a 2000+ warhead umbrella as opposed to the 60+ the UK might be able to gather for use. which would be a once only option since it would be taking the country down the road of mutual destruction. Unthinkable but!!!

This is what I wrote when the Trident replacement was being considered at a time when the UK voters were being forced to accept stringently applied austerity cuts. Money was very tight and the young and elderly suffered. So what did the Government do. It scrapped an expensively overspent project aimed at repacing the UK’s airdefence system that had been inoperable for some time, a gap covered, at an extortionately cost to the UK taxpayer, by the US air force.

Then making matters more intolerable the Nimrod MRA4 replacement plane was much delayed and horrendeslly over spent leaving, “big hole” in the UK’s defences.

The all British, “Spy in the Sky” Nimrod MRA4 surveillance and reconnaissance plane was promoted as a unique, world class, multi-role platform aircraft which, In addition to completing traditional maritime roles, also had intelligence gathering capabilities, crucial in today’s troubled world.

The MoD and BAE signed a contract with BAE, in 1996 to build 21 Nimrod spy planes. This was later reduced to 12 and later still to nine.

Then the multi-million pound Nimrod MRA4 surveillance and reconnaissance planes project was scrapped, in the defence review by the Con-Dem government.

Nine of the planes, which were nearing completion were then dismantled for scrap metal. Protesters described the decision as the, “greatest blunder in the history of the UK aircraft industry”

The Nimrod MRA4 development programme had been in place for many years. Around £5bn had been spent and this was written off. Approximately 2000 workers were laid off in consequence of the cancellation.

In an open letter to the Times signed by; (Marshal of the RAF Lord Craig, Major General Julian Thompson, Air Vice-Marshal Tony Mason, Major General Patrick Cordingley, Admiral Sir John “Sandy” Woodward and Air Commodore Andrew Lambert) they warned that scrapping the RAF’s Nimrod surveillance aircraft had left a “massive gap” in UK security.

“Vulnerability of sea lanes, unpredictable overseas crises and traditional surface and submarine opposition will continue to demand versatile responsive aircraft”.

“Nimrod would have continued to provide long-range maritime and overland reconnaissance – including over the UK – anti-submarine surveillance, air-sea rescue coordination, and perhaps most importantly, reconnaissance support to the Navy’s Trident submarines.”

Union leaders also attacked the Government’s controversial decision to scrap the Nimrod spy planes. Unite national officer Bernie Hamilton said: “The lunatics have taken over the asylum when the Government orders the Ministry of Defence to break-up £5bn worth of world-class defence equipment.”

A Ministry of Defence spokesman statement said: “Ministers and service chiefs have made clear that the decision not to bring the Nimrod MRA4 into service was difficult, but it would not be reversed.

An Audit Report later reported there were many other reasons, behind the decision to cancel the project. Those who designed and built the new aircraft couldnt get it to work. It was fit only for scrap. £5 bilion written off. See attached.

https://sites.google.com/site/militaryairworthiness/12-why-was-nimrod-mra4-cancelled

Nearly a decade later in consequence of ruthless financial cuts conventional armed forces, equipment and munitions have been reduced to unacceptably and dangerously low levels. Recruitment has stalled and there is talk of introducing conscription which would require many young people to give up their careers to spend 2 years in the military being paid a wage much lower than their professional colleagues. A novel way for the Government to increase the armed forces at a much reduced cost. Leaves more money in the pot to meet the extortionate bill the US manufacturers will ask the UK Treasury to pay for upgrading the nuclear missiles stock which is much degraded. Is there no end to the incompetence of the many thousands of overpaid Whitehall mandarins who waste many millions of £ funding the purchase of badly designed equipment and munitions.

GROK response below:

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/pCkX96vYt6VdLyB8q3LlUhhFd

The answer just about covers the subject matter in all respects bu it has overlooked a key consideration, the statement:

” The UK’s nuclear independence is seen as vital for global influence”

The UK is a very small concern who’s influence over the political direction of other countries of the World is much reduced. It retains a place on the UN Security Counsel simply because it possesses the so called independent nuclear deterrent. Without it the UK would need to be at peace with the many other countries of the World. And an aside: The UK nuclear deterrent is only so with a guarantee to continue to provide a comprehensive maintenance service for the missile systems. An isolationist US Government could render the UK’s independent deterrent useless in an instant simply by withdrawing the support which further weakens any argument for its retention.

GROK response below:

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/RZFlk1IcNJpkHinKsaiu7X092

Politics attract a steady stream of entitled wanabee politicans primarily recruited through icestuous practices who spend their entire working life living of the state. Tony Blair is coining it in big time – but there’s more, his wife Cherie is in on the action for herself. This GROK report is revealing. Their worth at 2025 exceeds £500 million.

Tony and Cheri trawl the World profiteering from long careers funded by British taxpayers. The Blairs pocket all income further improving their multi-millionaire status joining their predecessors on the gravy train to off shore tax havens. There must be a way to stop this. Just how rich are the Blair’s 10 years on?

Cherie Blair is being paid hundreds of thousands of pounds for a few months’ legal work by Kazakhstan, whose autocratic president employs her husband as an official adviser. Mrs Blair’s law firm Omnia Strategy agreed a deal with Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Justice earlier this year to conduct a review of the country’s “bilateral investment treaties”. The first stage of the review, which was expected to take as little as three months, is worth £120,000, sources have told The Sunday Telegraph.

A second phase of the project is worth a further £200,000 to £250,000 for another three to four months’ work, it is understood. Omnia Strategy, which Mrs Blair set up in 2011, also has an option to complete a third stage of the legal project for the Ministry of Justice at a fee to be decided, according to the source. Mrs Blair is understood normally to charge clients £1,150 an hour but will bill the Kazakh taxpayer at a reduced rate of £975 an hour if the Ministry of Justice, based in the capital Astana, continues to employ Omnia on the legal review into its third stage.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/kazakhstan/11038772/How-Cherie-Blair-earns-1000-an-hour-from-the-Kazakh-taxpayer.html

But there’s more – Tony & Cherie Blair, the oil tycoon and jobs for Blairites in poor Albania

On the face of it, Albania, once the most hardline of Stalinist states and still one of the poorest countries in Europe, seems unlikely to hold much attraction for Tony Blair. But The Telegraph can disclose that the Balkan country, recently discovered to be abundant in oil and gas, appears to be providing rich pickings for a dynasty of Blairites.

This newspaper has already disclosed how Mr Blair is a consultant to Albania’s Labour government. Now it has emerged that his wife Cherie picked up a lucrative legal contract with the previous government; while even the nephew of Alastair Campbell, Mr Blair’s former spin doctor, has landed himself a job advising the new Albanian prime minister.

Mrs Blair was awarded a contract worth £300,000 to advise the Albanian government after making friends with the wife of the Balkan country’s then prime minister while in Downing Street.

Mrs Blair, best known in the legal world as a human rights lawyer, acted for Albania in a billion dollar oil dispute with an American energy firm.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/tony-blair/10822268/Cherie-Blair-the-oil-tycoon-and-jobs-for-Blairites-in-poor-Albania.html

There’s even more – Tony Blair strikes gold in Mongolia

The former prime minister has negotiated a contract to advise the Mongolian government just as the country strikes it rich from a vast copper and gold mine in the Gobi desert. The Sunday Telegraph can disclose that Mr Blair spent two days in March in Ulaanbataar, Mongolia’s capital, striking the deal with the country’s president and prime minister.

His diplomatic skills will be needed in a country undergoing a rapid economic transformation. The Mongolian government has been in dispute with Rio Tinto, the Anglo-Australian mining conglomerate, over the operation of the country’s biggest mine. Sources have suggested Mr Blair was called in to mediate between the two although Mr Blair and Rio Tinto both denied that last night.

The addition of Mongolia to Mr Blair’s portfolio will bolster the income of Mr Blair’s Government Advisory Practice, which operates as part of Tony Blair Associates, “the umbrella organisation” for Mr Blair’s “commercial operations”.

Sunday Telegraph investigations have shown Mr Blair and a team of consultants are now paid millions of pounds to advise governments in;

Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Colombia, Brazil, Albania, Malawi, South Sudan, Sierra Leone, Rwanda, Liberia, Guinea

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/tony-blair/10108005/Tony-Blair-strikes-gold-in-Mongolia.html

http://uk.b2.mk/news/?newsid=r2v

The GROK report is eye opening:

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/dvTq87mBgXxy4FWVeLYT4H5Iw

The idea of piping water from the North of the UK, particularly Scotland, to the drought-prone South of England has been debated for decades. It’s technically feasible but faces significant economic, environmental, and political hurdles.

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/pbGWdOVHBxcumuQYelclEfvt2

While the “Claim of Right” supports Scottish sovereignty, the UN would not automatically support independence without UK consent, respecting territorial integrity and existing constitutional processes.

A disappointing statement from GROK. Appears Westminster have Scotland held firmly by the goolies

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/x5RwrAdmDHTebOXONL7RbRhDT

The influence of Labour for Israel (LFI) and Conservatives for Israel (CFI) on UK politics, particularly foreign policy, remains significant in 2025, with both groups continuing to shape Westminster’s stance on Israel. For Scotland, breaking free from this influence is constrained by devolution, as foreign policy is reserved to Westminster. Independence offers the best chance for autonomy.

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/Zjn5fQ4O65JuMSE4uXei6CN1t

30 page article

GROK reports that the North Ayrshire PFI scandal revealed significant governance failures, with a flawed bidding process, inadequate police investigations, and limited accountability. Leslie Evans’ alleged stonewalling and Nicola Sturgeon’s inaction reflect systemic resistance to addressing PFI’s failures, leaving taxpayers to bear the cost until 2038. Report attached.

https://twitter.com/i/grok/share/4DaQsXtrw6ENFod13LXJbakbj

Disgraced Permanent Secretary Leslie Evans upon retirement, was provided with pension package worth approximately £1,966,000 comprising of a lump sum of between £260,000 and £265,000 and an annual pension payment of £85,000 to £90,000. A much criticised payment rewarding her extraordinary failures. GROK report attached