As part of restructuring in the
British Army, the Royal Regiment of Scotland's creation was announced by the
Secretary of State for Defence,
Geoff Hoon in the
House of Commons on 16 December 2004, after the merger of several regiments and the reduction in total regular infantry battalions from 40 to 36 was outlined in the defence
white paper,
Delivering Security in a Changing World, several months earlier. The regiment consisted originally of a total of seven battalions: one of these was formed by the amalgamation of the
Royal Scots and
King's Own Scottish Borderers, while the others are each formed from one of the remaining single-battalion regiments of the
Scottish Division. Of all of the new regiments formed following the announcement of 16 December 2004, the Royal Regiment of Scotland is the only one where the former regimental titles have been prominently retained with the new numbered battalion designations as subtitles. There is however a common regimental cap badge,
tactical recognition flash (TRF), tartan,
stable belt and
Glengarry headdress but distinctively coloured
hackles are also worn by each separate battalion on the
Tam o' Shanter headdress to maintain their individual identity and the pipes and drums of each battalion continue to wear the ceremonial uniforms and tartans of their former regiments. Along with
the Rifles, the Royal Regiment of Scotland is also one of only two line infantry regiments to maintain its own regular
military band within the
Royal Corps of Army Music, which was formed through the amalgamation of the Highland band and Lowland band of the Scottish Division. In addition, there are two Army Reserve bands, the Highland Band and the
Lowland Band of the Royal Regiment of Scotland, which are administered by the regiment's two Army Reserve battalions. The regiment also has previously had its own
Parachute Display Team called the
Golden Lions (disbanded in 2011) and
shinty team,
the Scots Shinty Club. In 1948, every regiment of line infantry was reduced to a single battalion. The subsequent process of reducing the overall number of infantry regiments in the Army through disbandment or amalgamation of the traditional
county regiments that were formalised in the
Childers Reforms of 1881 to form larger multi-battalion regiments, has continued to affect most of the
British Army Infantry since the
1957 Defence White Paper outlined the first mergers. The creation of the Royal Regiment of Scotland encountered considerable opposition amongst
former soldiers, and
nationalist groups. The new regiment is also primarily a
kilted one and there are concerns that the much older
Lowland units, which traditionally wore
trews, will be effectively absorbed into a
Highland tradition. However, the Ministry of Defence's case that change was necessary to enhance operational efficiency through
economies of scale, improve and create more flexible conditions of service and to resolve chronic recruiting and retention problems amongst the eight single-battalion Scottish regiments was endorsed by the then
Chief of the General Staff,
Sir Mike Jackson. Jackson delegated the decision on how the reduction of battalions would be achieved to the Council of Scottish Colonels. The Council recommended that the
Royal Scots should be amalgamated with the
King's Own Scottish Borderers reflecting the former regiment's long term poor recruiting record and high reliance on Commonwealth recruits. The status of the
Black Watch was particularly controversial. When the confirmed plan to amalgamate the regiments was announced, 1st Battalion The Black Watch was deployed away from Basra at Camp Dogwood in a
relatively dangerous region of
Iraq. Hoon was accused by the
SNP of "stabbing the soldiers in the back" and being motivated purely by political and administrative concerns, with little regard to the effect on morale. This controversy was further exacerbated in the minds of some by the fact that the
Colonel of the Black Watch,
Lieutenant-General Alistair Irwin, was a member of the Army Board at the time that the options to change the size and structure of the infantry by forming large regiments, including to amalgamate regiments of the Scottish Division into a single regiment, were being considered in the Ministry of Defence and final decisions taken. In 2012, as part of the
Army 2020 programme, it was announced that the 5th Battalion, while not losing its name, connection and history as the
Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, would be reduced to the status of an incremental company, similar to the three
companies in the
Guards Division, and be transferred to become a permanent
public duties unit in Scotland. in 1871. The Royal Scots Borderers, 1st Battalion, Royal Regiment of Scotland was disbanded in 2021.On 1 December 2021, as part of the
Future Soldier programme, the 1st Battalion (Royal Scots Borderers), was disbanded and subsequently reformed as part of the new
Ranger Regiment and based in Northern Ireland. ==Organisation==