Final flight for Harrier jump jet

Harrier leaving the Ark RoyalThe Harrier was revolutionary when it was introduced in the late 1960s
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The Harrier jump jet will make its final operational flight on Wednesday, leaving from RAF Cottesmore in Rutland.

One of Britain’s greatest technical achievements was retired early after falling victim to defence cuts.

In celebration of the aircraft, Harriers will pass over seven military bases, the town centres of Stamford and Oakham, and Lincoln Cathedral.

The Harriers will be decommissioned in 2011 to be replaced by the Joint Strike Fighter by the end of the decade.

Axing the Harrier is set to save £450m over the next four years and £900m in total, and involve the redeployment of 12,000 jobs in the Harrier force.

Overall, the defence review is cutting 5,000 personnel from the RAF – bringing the number serving in the air force down to 33,000 by 2015.

Last month, a formation of Harriers made a final journey from HMS Ark Royal – the last such flight from a Royal Navy aircraft carrier for about 10 years.

The four GR9 jets marked the end of an era when they roared off the deck near North Shields, North Tyneside.

The crew of the 22,000-tonne Ark Royal, which saw active service in the Balkans and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, lined the decks to watch the historic departure.

The Ark Royal is being scrapped under cost-saving measures, along with the Harriers.

The ship will be replaced by the Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carrier at the end of the decade, which will carry F35s.

Meanwhile, the Chief of the Defence Staff, General Sir David Richards, has said the package of cuts announced in the government’s strategic defence and security review (SDSR) will “not be plain sailing”.

The head of the armed forces acknowledged that some decisions such as scrapping the Ark Royal and the Harrier had already provoked an “understandable emotional response”.

Speaking at the Royal United Services Institute think tank in Whitehall, he said: “The SDSR has undoubtedly meant taking difficult decisions.

“All three services and the civil service will lose manpower, and I am painfully aware of the understandable worry caused by the decisions we have made.

“Achieving this will not be plain sailing and much innovative and radical thinking will be required, including being prepared to shed outmoded or irrelevant attitudes and structures.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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