
Ajax maintenance requirements unrealistic in operational environment, readers say

BFBS Forces News readers have criticised a recommendation by a senior Army officer that tracks on Ajax would have to be maintained when stopping a vehicle, suggesting such a requirement would not be possible in an operational environment.
The Ministry of Defence paused testing of the armoured fighting vehicle after reports of soldiers vomiting and shaking after training on Exercise Titan Storm last year.
Lieutenant General Anna-Lee Reilly told the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee that the Army's investigation team reported that when Ajax is operated as designed, it presents no safety concerns.
A vehicle that is 'unfit for purpose'
Ed Arnold, senior research fellow for European security at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), criticised Lt Gen Reilly's statements and said Ajax is "unfit for purpose".
Mr Arnold went on to say in a LinkedIn post that it is "shameless blame-dodging", which shows "a rot at the core of defence".
"The UK will soon be at a point where soldiers will not fight for their government or generals," Mr Arnold said.
He then questioned why the vehicle has to be operated within certain parameters, considering wars do not have limited parameters.
"How on earth can the MOD defence be that commanders operated the vehicle outside of certain parameters? War has few parameters. The exercise was long?? Wars are long…" he added.
Lt Gen Reilly, whose job title is Director Strategic Capability, Engagement and Operations, Defence Equipment & Support, said in her parliamentary questioning: "The soldiers had been out on it for a prolonged period of time.
"Clearly, we had a situation where the platform wasn't operated and maintained within the specification it should have been, and that led to the incident."
War has no standard parameters
Other commentators shared similar concerns about the £6.3bn programme, saying that if the vehicle can only be operated under certain circumstances, then it is not fit to fight in conflicts.
The military historian, Jonathan Ware, said in a post on X that Lt Gen Reilly's comments represented the "reddest of red flags".
"In high-intensity warfare, you can't blithely stop and conduct myriad other checks. Or we accept crew wastage rates," he said.
Users commenting on BFBS Forces News post on X also questioned Ajax's viability in a battle situation.
One said Ajax is "basically made of glass in a real war," while another added: "So, we can only use a War-Fighting equipment within certain parameters. Can someone guarantee the next war will only contain those parameters?"








