Difference between revisions of "George Zambellas"

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[[File:Zambellas Navy.jpg|thumb|Admiral Sir George Zambellas (left) retired from the Navy in 2016 and now advises a Boeing subsidiary]]'''Admiral Sir George Zambellas''' is a former First Sea Lord and Chief of Staff of the Royal Navy. He retired in 2016.
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{{Template:Revolving Door badge}}[[File:Zambellas Navy.jpg|thumb|Admiral Sir George Zambellas (left) retired from the Navy in 2016 and now advises a Boeing subsidiary]]'''Admiral Sir George Zambellas''' is a former First Sea Lord and Chief of Staff of the Royal Navy. He retired in 2016.
  
 
After leaving the Navy he was appointed a senior advisory board member of [[Liquid Robotics]] in March 2017.  It is owned by US arms firm [[Boeing]].  
 
After leaving the Navy he was appointed a senior advisory board member of [[Liquid Robotics]] in March 2017.  It is owned by US arms firm [[Boeing]].  

Revision as of 08:35, 22 December 2017

Revolving Door.jpg This article is part of the Revolving Door project of Spinwatch.


Admiral Sir George Zambellas (left) retired from the Navy in 2016 and now advises a Boeing subsidiary

Admiral Sir George Zambellas is a former First Sea Lord and Chief of Staff of the Royal Navy. He retired in 2016.

After leaving the Navy he was appointed a senior advisory board member of Liquid Robotics in March 2017. It is owned by US arms firm Boeing.

Pushing post-Brexit military spending

In September 2017 Zambellas told The Sunday Times that Britain risked having a Third World military if it did not increase spending on equipment soon.

After 37 years of cuts, he said the Navy is “at the bottom of the efficiency barrel and we all know that, because the Navy is so hollowed out.”

Zambellas questioned how much more the “post-Brexit Navy” could be stretched in global waters.

You either put more money in or you stop doing serious things and disappear into a Third World nation, security-wise, even though we are spending billions on defence.”

Zambellas recommended 12 hunter-killer submarines to protect the four submarines carrying the UK’s nuclear deterrent, but only three of the promised seven have been built.

DSEI 2017 speaker

Zambellas gave a talk on 'Changing Perceptions in Underwater Defence and Security: Respecting the March of Technology in his capacity as a senior advisor to Liquid Robotics, which makes unmanned boats.[1]

Resources

  • Campaign Against the Arms Trade, George Zambellas, Meetings, Political Influence database.

Notes