THE REPUBLIC OF SCOTS (SCOTLAND – RoS)
Area: 78,772 km2 (10,3253km2 including Ulster)
GDP (in US$, yr 2010): 600 billion
GDP per head (US$): 41,000
Population (2010): 14.5 million
Capital: Perth
Government: Parliamentary Democracy
Languages: English, Lallans, Doric, Scots and Irish Gaelic
Religion: Secular society, no State religion
Adult literacy: 99.5%
Life Expectancy: 79m, 81f
Currency: Euro
Member of -
EU, NATO, OECD, G20, CaleCom (other members are Hong Kong, Jamaica, Malawi, New Zealand, Nova Scotia)
Dependent Territories -
Scottish Indian Ocean Territory (Cocos and Christmas Islands)
National Motto -
Nemo me impune lacessit (Alt Tr: Wha dare meddle wi me? No one can harm me with impunity; Cha togar m' fhearg gun dìoladh)
History
Although a European nation state dating from the medieval period, modern Scotland originated in the 1690s. During this period money which had been collected to invest in a proposed colony at Darien in Panama was diverted to investment in home based trade and industry. The prosperity which resulted placed the country on a firm economic footing and put an end to any discussions of political union with England (Lower Britain). In the 18th Century, the scientific and cultural Enlightenment was to find an industrial counterpart in the revolution in production methods, which began about 1760.
Scotland stayed neutral during Lower Britain’s wars with France but the Jacobite rebellion of 1745 left Scotland split into highland and lowland enclaves for the next 45 years. The republican revolutions in France and America also took hold in Scotland with both the Stewart dynasty and the Hanoverian viceroys swept away in a bloodless coup in 1790. Unfortunately, this led to friction with Lower Britain and the War of 1812-15 was not resolved until the defeat of Wellesley’s forces at the Battle of La Belle Alliance by a Franco-Scottish army.
During the 19th Century while Scottish industry continued to grow, explorers, traders and other adventurers founded a small but prosperous Empire. Friendly relationships developed with both Lower Britain and Europe. Like Holland, Denmark and Norway, Scotland wisely remained neutral in 1914 but by 1917 shipping losses caused by unrestricted U-boat warfare resulted in a declaration of war on Germany. She was able to play a major part in the naval campaign which protected trade and in the string of victories on the Western Front against Germany in 1918 which brought the war to an end.
In 1922, after the partition of Ireland, the League of Nations granted Scotland the mandate for governance of Ulster, an agreement which was later ratified by the UN. In 1975, following a plebiscite, Ulster seceded to the Republic of Scots and became an integral part of the country.
Careful management of the economy together with a refusal to follow Lower Britain’s error of returning to the gold standard meant that Scotland weathered the inter-war years with her economy in better shape than many other countries. Considerable investment in new industries allowed the nation to take advantage of the technological advances made after World War One.
Although Scotland had once again avowed neutrality, re-armament started in 1935 and by the time Norway and Denmark fell in early 1940 Scotland found herself in the front line and in close alliance with Lower Britain. Once again, Scotland’s contribution to World War 2 was telling with respect to the country’s size particularly at sea where the strength of her shipbuilding industry and merchant marine was an important weapon for the Allies.
Economy
After the Second World War, Scotland was one of the first to sign up for the Common Mercat, as the EU was then known. Scotland gradually dissolved its overseas empire and the newly independent countries formed the International Caledonian Community (aka “the Calecom”). The nation continued to develop its traditional industries including ship and aircraft manufacture, but during the ‘70s and ‘80s, industries like oil and electronics began to replace staples such as coal and textiles. Diversification, with no reliance on any single sector has always been a main plank of the country’s economic policy. Today, while knowledge-based industries grow rapidly Scotland remains famous for its ships, railway locomotives, aircraft, computers and energy products such as oil well equipment and wind turbines. Most experts still consider Scottish machinery to be amongst the best in the world; the SMW for instance, is the favourite car of many of the rich and famous internationally.
Politics
The constitutional framework of the RoS is a modernised version of the one, which came into effect in the late 18th Century. There is an Estates General of 300 seats and a Senate of 100, each chamber having fixed five-year terms which overlap so that there are never two elections in the same year. Election is by proportional representation using the additional member system. A joint mandate of both chambers, appoints the President, normally a senior Senator, who is Head of Government as well as Head of State. The President must retain the representatives’ confidence to remain in office. Scotland also returns 18 members to the European Parliament.
In the period since 1945, no single party has managed to achieve an overall majority in either house so coalition government is the norm. The ruling faction is prone to splits and a censure motion in the Senate can bring down the government or President.
(Extract from the Concise Encyclopaedia Caledonia, 199th Edition, Edinburgh, 2010)
Defence
Budget: €11 billion
President of Scots: The Honourable Duncan King, CE MA BSc (titular Commander-in-Chief)
Minister of Defence: Dr Kenneth J Finlay, CE MA PhD
National Defence Consultant: Quentin Banks BA LLB FNIDS
Chief of the Defence Staff: General Eleanor Bains-McKenzie, MS BSc (Eng) (de facto Commander-in-Chief)
Commander-in-Chief (Maritime): Admiral John H Allen, VM MA FNIDS
CE = Conscript Elder (ie Member of the Senate)
FNIDS = Fellow of the National Institute of Defence Studies
MS = Military Star
VM = Victory Medal (highest medal for gallantry, approximately equivalent to the Victoria Cross in Lower Britain)
The Minister of Defence sits in the Senate and is a senior member of the Cabinet, fourth in order of precedence after the Chancellor (Prime Minister), the Foreign Affairs Minister and the Finance Minister. The Defence Minister is assisted by three under-Ministers responsible for procurement, personnel and strategy. Two of these under-Ministers normally sit in the Estates General. The National Defence Consultant is a non-elected adviser to the President, Chancellor and Minister of Defence and in addition sits on the Defence, Foreign Affairs and Security committees of the Cabinet.
Since 1950, the Army, Navy and Air Force have been combined into a single command, The Scottish Defence Force (SDF). The effect of this is most seen at the highest level, with a unified Staff and High Command, as well as procurement and research and development functions. At the lowest level, all recruits (volunteer only) undergo a common 3 months basic training as an Infantry Fighter Grade 1, after that they specialise in which ever branch they prefer but transfer to another branch is always possible, eg a Missile Defence Operator in the Land Forces can opt to transfer to a similar position in Maritime or Air Forces. Recruits selected for officer training enter the Officer Training Unit after completing the basic training. Refresher basic training is compulsory at three year intervals for all ranks.
Service is normally for five to seven years depending on speciality. However at the end of the allotted period, they may opt for further service if they so wish followed by three or more years in the Reserve. After completion of basic training all Defence Force personnel including the Chief of Defence Staff, are issued with a personal weapon, usually a rifle, and in a national emergency are expected to serve with that weapon, if called upon. The Reserve also includes a Volunteer Reserve of “weekend soldiers” who may be called to any appropriate Branch in the event of an emergency.
As Scotland has no land border with any potentially hostile power, most defence spending has gone into naval forces due to the need to protect trade and the former colonies which make up the Calecom. The army is relatively small, although well mechanised and trained for marine intervention (there is no Marine Corps as such, every soldier is a potential marine).
Navy
Role
The main mission of the Republic of Scots Navy (RoSN) is to protect Scottish interests at home and abroad. It executes the foreign and defence policies of the Scottish Government through the exercise of military effort, diplomatic and other activities. The RoSN is also a key element of the RoS contribution to NATO, with a variety of assets allocated to NATO tasks at any one time. The mission is delivered via a number of core capabilities:
• Provision of a medium scale maritime task groups with organic air assets
• Delivery of the RoS amphibious force
• Provision of forces in support of Caledonian Community members in the event of threats against them (Calecom Pact)
• Contribution of assets to SDF Air Strike Command
• Contribution of assets to the SDF Helicopter Command
• Maintenance of standing patrol commitments including Long Range Maritime Patrol
• Search and Rescue (SAR) and pollution response in support of the Coastguard and Emergency Services
• Provision of emergency humanitarian relief following natural disasters in any littoral region
• Provision of Mine Counter Measures capability to RoS and allied commitments.
• Provision of hydrographic and meteorological services deployable worldwide.
• Protection of the RoS and EU's Exclusive Economic Zone.
Organisation
The CinC (N) has four direct reports, The CinC (Ops), who is also 2i/c, The Chief of Naval Staff, the CinC (Recruitment and personnel) and the Chief Engineer. Combat assets are assigned to Squadrons under the CinC (Ops) and include the Atlantic Squadron, the Patrol Squadron, the Amphibious Squadron and Naval Air Command. The Training Squadron is assigned to the CinC (Recruitment and Personnel).
Active units include 1 CVA, 2 x CH, 3 x LPD, 16 DDG and FFG, 6 AOR plus various MCM, FAC, support, logistic and other vessels. More details on these to follow.
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