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British Military Current Events

Al Slater was one of my section commanders when I was a Pte. Fierce, fit and funny as hell.


From Times Online
September 13, 2008
Life after war: when the guns fall silent
Special Air Service veteran and writer Andy McNab talks about the internal battle that begins when the fight is over

“The first time I killed a lad,” says Andy McNab, “it was 1979, I was with the Green Jackets in Northern Ireland, I was 19, and he wasn’t far away, I could see his eyes. I was absolutely sh****** myself. But you can’t say you were scared.” Did he talk to anyone about his feelings? “Absolutely not. It wasn’t the done thing, you’re worried about peer pressure and promotion and being down as a fruit. Besides, nobody wants to know about any failings, it’s a success, it’s what you do. It says in the manual, ‘The role of the infantry is to close with and destroy the enemy.’ The Army calls it ‘being kinetic’, which means blowing things up and killing people.”
When McNab passed selection for the Special Air Service in 1984, there was, he says, among his new elite comrades, more honesty regarding the dangers of combat. “You’re older and more confident, so you do talk about it more, mainly, ‘F*** that, I don’t want to do that again.’ But there was no system, no counselling, although a couple of lads used to sneak off to a charity in Wales for help. Delta Force [the US equivalent of the SAS] used to have an in-house psychologist. We would take the p***, but actually, it was a good idea.”
After McNab led Bravo Two Zero, the SAS patrol behind enemy lines during the first Gulf War which later gave rise to his 1994 bestseller, he had a couple of sessions back in Hereford with Dr Gordon Turnbull. “His claim to fame was he’d looked after the mountain rescue teams who were at Lockerbie. He talked to us about post-traumatic stress, what the symptoms were and so on. At the time I didn’t think I got a lot out of it.”
But as McNab has grown older (he is now 48) and wiser, he has become fully converted to the idea that some, not all, soldiers suffer post-traumatic stress and need help. His new book, his first work of non-fiction (many novels have intervened) since Immediate Action, the sequel to Bravo Two Zero, deals with the consequences of such stress on several of his former SAS colleagues, the members of Seven Troop of the book’s title. In particular, McNab tells the story of Frank Collins and Charles “Nish” Bruce, both of whom committed suicide several years after leaving the regiment, in 1998 and 2002 respectively.

The catalyst for the mental deterioration of both men seems to have been the death of their colleague Al Slater at the hands of the IRA in Co Fermanagh in 1984. Collins and Bruce (and McNab) were present the night Slater was shot. But whereas Collins blamed his superiors for his mate’s death, and Bruce blamed himself, McNab didn’t blame anyone. “It’s not a science,” says McNab, standing at Slater’s grave in the SAS plot in St Martin’s Church, Hereford. “It was foggy, we couldn’t see ten feet, we had no comms, you make the best decision you can make at the time.”
He walks further along the row. All the graves have flowers on them, some have bottles of beer or wine too. Another friend, Paul Hill, “Hillbilly”, is buried here. He died on a covert operation in Cambodia in 1988. And here are Bob Consiglio and Vince Phillips, two of the three members of Bravo Two Zero who perished in Iraq in 1991. How does McNab feel, being here? “Just that they’re dead, and obviously it’d be better if they weren’t. But it’s all part and parcel of it.” McNab may sound callous, but what is there to say? But for pure luck, a bullet on a marginally different trajectory, and one of these men would be pouring a tot of rum on his grave rather than the other way around.
Nish Bruce is not buried in this churchyard. Frank Collins is, but not in the SAS plot, because he was not a serving member when he died. “The thing about Nish and Frank,” says McNab, “is they thought about it all too much.” He doesn’t think they were more intelligent, or introverted, or indeed extroverted, than others, but they were probably more sensitive, more likely to dwell.
“My wife reckons I’m all right because I only ever think about the next three hours,” says McNab. He isn’t joking. “Today’s today. If it works it works, if it doesn’t it doesn’t. You control what you can and the rest, f*** it.”
McNab believes both his friends suffered from post-traumatic stress, yet their condition was more complicated than guilt over Slater’s death or clichéd flashbacks to other battlefield horrors. Both men were involved in the SAS siege of the Iranian embassy in 1980. Both served in the Falklands war. Bruce told McNab he felt guilty about “killing a young [wounded] Argentinian lad, he’s dying, it was like a mercy killing”. And yet, says McNab, their real problems began when they left the forces. Indeed, “post-career anticlimax” may pose as big a problem for ex-soldiers as post-traumatic stress.
“From the day he left, Frank regretted getting out, but he couldn’t admit it. He was always looking for something, but everything was a disappointment.” Collins found religion, becoming an ordained Anglican priest, wrote a book, then asphyxiated himself with exhaust fumes in a friend’s garage. Bruce threw himself, literally, into skydiving, and then one day opted to jump out of a Cessna 5,000ft over Oxfordshire without his parachute. “I hope he was smiling all the way in,” says McNab.
Neither had prepared properly for leaving the Army’s embrace, but that itself is common. “Blokes know it’s coming but they ignore it,” says McNab. “They don’t realise the military is a tribe, a little clan that nobody understands, a very small part of our culture, and once you’re out nobody gives a f***. People don’t understand your language, your humour.”
McNab has studied the problems faced by ex-servicemen. They are massively over-represented among the homeless, in prison, in the divorce courts, among alcoholics and in the suicide statistics. Besides Bruce and Collins, two of his other close-ish colleagues have also killed themselves, and another tried to. “We’re not dropping like flies, but it’s well above average.” Several years ago, it was discovered that the number of Falklands veterans who have killed themselves far exceeded the number killed in the actual conflict (more than 400 as against 255). When an ex-serviceman takes his own life, the average length of time between his doing so and having left the Forces is 13 years.

http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/the_way_we_live/article4703333.ece
 
Bomb discovered in border village

A bomb has been discovered concealed in a hedge in a border area of County Armagh, the police have said.
A security alert has been ongoing in Jonesboro since Saturday afternoon, following reports of a device being left in the village.
On Sunday, police said that Army bomb experts were removing what is understood to be "a viable device".
Finnegans Road and Molly Road have been cordoned off while the device is removed.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/foyle_and_west/7615093.stm
 
£60m contract joy for world beating Coventry firm
Sep 9 2008 By Andy Hutson

WORKERS at a world-beating Coventry firm were today celebrating after landing a £60 million contract to supply life-saving equipment to British troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Defence secretary Des Browne announced the £60million contract for NP Aerospace to deliver the next generation Mastiff 2 armoured vehicles.

The move will create 100 new jobs.

During a visit yesterday to the firm, based on the Central City Industrial Estate, Red Lane, Foleshill, Mr Browne praised the company for its outstanding job in transforming basic Cougar vehicles into the sophisticated Mastiffs.

The next generation vehicles will feature improved axles and suspension to cope with the harsh terrain, better thermal imaging for drivers, explosive attenuating seats providing better protection to the soldier on impact, improved armour and greater crew capacity.

"The Mastiff is already a hero in Iraq and Afghanistan," he said.

"Today's contract for Mastiff 2 will deliver a vehicle that is even better - improved thermal-imaging for the drivers, increased armour and specially designed seats that will give the soldiers that extra protection - it is the next generation of vehicles for our commanders on operations."

Mr Browne also praised the firm for providing Osprey body armour plates and MK 6A helmets to British Armed Forces, undoubtedly saving numerous lives in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He added: "NP Aerospace and its workforce are to be congratulated on the support they are providing to our Armed Forces.

"The equipment they deliver from body armour plates to helmets is saving lives on a daily basis."

NP Aerospace is a world-leader in the production of personal equipment and armoured vehicles designed to protect military personnel in combat environments.

The firm also manufactures state-of-the-art full body armour suits worn by bomb disposal operators. They feature integral air conditioning which allows wearers to operate in high temperatures.

Yesterday's announcement was also welcomed by workers at the firm's Red Lane site.

Steve Thomas, a quality engineer who has been with the company for 18 months, said: "It's good for the company and good for us, especially with all the automotive downturn in the city.

"It's nice to know when you go to work every day you are saving lives. That's the ultimate goal at the end of the day."

Team leader Stuart Winn, who has been with the company for five years, said: "I've worked on a couple of projects and this is the best one."

About 70 new jobs will be associated with the manufacturing of the Mastiff 2 with 20 or 30 more being created in support functions.

NP Aerospace will then employ a total of 300 people across its two sites in Red Lane and Foleshill Road.

The base vehicles will be supplied to NP Aerospace for it to apply its armoured technology to the sides, the top and inside to give soldiers better protection.

http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/tm_headline=163-60m-contract-joy-for-world-beating-coventry-firm&method=full&objectid=21708580&siteid=92746-name_page.html


 
Service appointments: Army
From The Times  September 16, 2008
Colonels
Colonel G. T. E. Banner (Late Int Corps) to be Colonel Force Development, Headquarters Director Intelligence Corps, with effect from June 2008;
Colonel R. J. Rawdon-Smith (Late Int Corps) to be Commander Defence Human Intelligence Organisation, Defence Intelligence Staff, with effect from August 2008;
Colonel K. I. Chafer (Late AAC) to be Head of Joint Improvised Explosive Device Analysis Centre, with effect from May 2008
Colonel A. R. Blackwell (Late R Signals) to be Joint Electronic Surveillance Integrated Project Team Leader, with effect from June 2008;
Colonel J. S. S. O’Sullivan (Para), to be Assistant Director Land, Directorate of Joint Commitments, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel I. J. Cave (Mercian), to be Deputy Assistant Chief of Staff Operations / Commitments, Headquarters Land Forces, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel P. A. E. Nanson RRF, to be Chief of Staff, Headquarters 1st (United Kingdom) Armoured Division, with effect from April 2009;
Colonel G. P. Hill (Para) to be Deputy Assistant Chief of Staff J5 (B), Permanent Joint Headquarters, with effect from August 2009;
Colonel F. G. Gedney (Scots DG), to be Deputy Assistant Chief of Staff Future Plans, Headquarters Land Forces, with effect from January 2009;
Colonel I. J. Gibb RTR, to be Colonel General Staff, Directorate of the General Staff, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel A. J. Botterill (R Signals) to be Director Defence Crisis Management Centre, Assistant Chief of the Defence Staff (Operations), with effect from November 2008;
Colonel S. W. Carver (R Anglian), to be Commander, British Army Training Unit Suffield, with effect from September 2009;
Colonel C. R. J. Sloane (Late RE) to be Chief of Staff, Headquarters 4th Division, with effect from October 2008;
Colonel D. F. Capps (RLC) to be Deputy Chief of Staff, Headquarters 1st (United Kingdom) Armoured Division, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel S. J. Shirley (Late RLC) to be Assistant Director Logistic Policy and Plans (Army), Headquarters Land Forces, with effect from January 2009;
Colonel A. P. Duncan (RLC) to be Assistant Director Combat Service Support Operation, Headquarters Land Forces, with effect from January 2009;
Colonel I. G. McKend (RLC) to be Deputy Assistant Chief of Staff J4 Movement and Mounting, Permanent Joint Headquarters, with effect from September 2008;
Colonel P. G. Mitchell (Late REME) to be Deputy Chief of Staff, Headquarters 4th Division, with effect from August 2009;
Colonel W. R. Wieloch (Late QRL) to be Director of Defence Studies (Army), Directorate General Staff, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel F. J. Grundy (AGC(SPS)) to be Assistant Director Support, Headquarters Land Forces, with effect from September 2008;
Colonel M. Cuthbert-Brown (Late AGC(RMP)), to be Director Corps of Army Music, with effect from March 2009;
Colonel A. Brown (Late AGC(SPS)), to be Assistant Director Future Contracts, Service Personnel and Veterans Agency, with effect from March 2009;
Colonel G .H. L. Baxter (RE) to be Assistant Director Manning Policy / Manpower Planning, Directorate Manning (Army), with effect from July 2008;
Colonel J. S. Grinstead (Late RLC) to be Colonel Military Secretary Officers Combat Service Support, Army Personnel Centre, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel J. H. O’H. Pollock (Late IG) to be Team Leader Defence Requirements Organisation, Headquarters Land Warfare Centre, with effect from August 2008;
Colonel I. G. Standen (Late R Signals), to be Deputy Director Command and Battlespace Management, Directorate of Command and Battlespace Management, with effect from April 2009;
Colonel M. J. Gamble (RA) to be Bowman and Tactical Communication and Information Systems Deputy Team Leader, Defence Equipment and Support, with effect from August 2008;
Colonel A. K. Robinson (RLC) to be Commander Logistic Support, Headquarters 1st (United Kingdom) Armoured Division, with effect from August 2008;
Colonel P. J. Bates (RLC) to be Commander Logistic Support / Colonel Infrastructure, Headquarters 2nd Division, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel C. A. Ford (R Signals) to be Assistant Director Operations and Plans, Directorate General Information Systems and Services, with effect from October 2008;
Colonel D. A. McAvoy (Late REME) to be Chief Engineer / Colonel Force Development, Headquarters Directorate of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering (Army), with effect from April 2009;
Colonel H. A. S. Russell (AGC(ETS)) to be Assistant Director Operations, Headquarters Directorate of Education and Training Services (Army), with effect from September 2008;
Colonel J. C. Campbell (Late RA) to be Chief of Staff and Commander Larkhill Garrison, with effect from January 2009;
Colonel M. C. Ross (RA) to be Colonel Capability, Headquarters Director Royal Artillery, with effect from April 2009;
Colonel D. J. Hudson (RA) to be Assistant Chief of Staff Fire Co-ordinator, Headquarters North Atlantic Treaty Organisation Rapid Deployment Corps — Italy, with effect from February 2009;
Colonel G. K. Gibbs (Late RE) to be Chief of Staff, Headquarters Engineer in Chief (Army), with effect from October 2008;
Colonel M. C. Whiteside (Late AAC) to be Commandant School of Army Aviation, with effect from May 2009;
Colonel M. R. H. Burrows (Late RE) to be Branch Head, Defence Planning Land, Headquarters Supreme Allied Command Transformation, with effect from December 2008;
Colonel R. W. Currie (Late QRH) to be Defence Attaché Bogotá, with effect from August 2008;
Colonel C. M. Hainge (Late RE) to be Military and Air Advisor Canberra, with effect from November 2008;
Colonel S. L. C. Diggins (Late RRF) to be Defence Attaché Kabul, with effect from July 2008;
Colonel M. V. Pemberton (Late RAMC) to be Chief of Staff, Headquarters Joint Medical Command, with effect from July 2008;
Colonel I. B. F. Lane (Late RADC) to be Deputy Commander, Headquarters 2 Medical Brigade, with effect from October 2008;
Colonel J. W. Murray (Late RAMC) to be Commanding Officer, 212 Field Hospital (Volunteers), with effect from November 2008;
Colonel I. Amberton (Late RADC) to be Assistant Director Plans, Headquarters Defence Dental Services , with effect from June 2009;
Colonel J. Etherington (RAMC) to be Director Defence Rehabilitation, Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre, with effect from August 2009;
Colonel D. A. Ross (RAMC) to be Assistant Director Health Policy, Headquarters Army Medical Directorate, with effect from September 2009;
Colonel A. C. Boreham (RAMC) to be Colonel Army Medical Services Division, Army Personnel Centre, with effect from October 2009;
Colonel D. Williams (RAMC) to be Deputy Director, British Forces Germany Health Service, with effect from September 2009;
Colonel P. J. Sokolow (Late QARANC) to be Regional Clinical Director, Scotland and North East Region, Army Primary Health Care Service, with effect from November 2009;
Colonel J. P. Owen (Late RAMC) to be Regional Clinical Director, Wales and West Midlands Region, Army Primary Health Care Service, with effect from June 2009;
Colonel D. Bates (QARANC) to be Regional Clinical Director, Wessex Region, Army Primary Health Care Service, with effect from April 2009;
Colonel M. C. M. Bricknell (Late RAMC) to be Medical Director, Headquarters Regional Command (South), with effect from July 2009.
 
UK owes Gurkhas 'a special debt'


Retired Gurkhas have launched their High Court battle for the right to live in the UK.

The test case is being brought by five ex-Gurkhas and the widow of another veteran. Their lawyer said Britain owed "a special debt" to all Gurkhas.
Gurkhas who retired from the British Army after the regiment moved its main base from Hong Kong to the UK in 1997 have automatic permission to remain.
But those who left earlier must apply and can be refused and deported.
The outcome of the case could affect more than 2,000 retired Gurkhas who have been denied the right to settle in the UK.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7619295.stm

 
Well, ECM isn't the only answer to a safe patrol I'm afraid.

Troops killed in Afghanistan had no electronic protection

Two British soldiers were killed because troops did not have enough bomb jamming equipment, an inquest heard.

By Thomas Harding Defence Correspondent
Last Updated: 8:06PM BST 16 Sep 2008

A coroner has now called on the Ministry of Defence to fit all vehicles with Electronic Counter Measures (ECM) as a result of the deaths in Helmand, Afghanistan.
An electronic umbrella of protection extended only as far as two British vehicles but not to a third, familes have been told.
As the third weapon-mounted Wimik Land Rover passed the detonation point an insurgent set off the remote-controlled bomb. It killed Ptes Damian Wright, 23, and Ben Ford, 18, the youngest British soldier to lose his life in Afghanistan.
The inquest also heard that British vehicles without ECM were instructed to drive close to Danish vehicles so they would be covered by their bomb-jamming range.
But Wiltshire coroner David Masters Mr Masters said that for vehicles to rely on others for protection was "very difficult" and everyone should be fitted with ECM, adding: "It's as simple as that."
Adrian Hinchcliffe, an expert on ECM from the Ministry of Defence, said it was a position the MoD was "working towards."
The coroner replied: "It's a bit late for that."
Mr Masters, recording verdicts of unlawful killing, said: "If this vehicle had been equipped with ECMs, that device would not have detonated and these two soldiers would not have died."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/onthefrontline/2971454/Troops-killed-in-Afghanistan-had-no-electronic-protection.html
 
Prince William to train as RAF search and rescue pilot
Valentine low From The Times September 16, 2008

Stranded hillwalkers who need to be rescued by the RAF should in future pay close attention to the pilot flying them to safety: it could be Prince William. He has decided to become a full-time helicopter pilot with the RAF’s search-and-rescue force.

The Prince will begin the 18-month training next year and, once qualified as a Sea King pilot, will take part in the full range of operations, from rescuing sailors in trouble to airlifting people from flood areas.

The Prince’s decision to transfer to the RAF for the next stage of his military career is a compromise between his desire to see active service and the need for the second in line to the throne not to be exposed to unnecessary danger by serving on the front line in Afghanistan or Iraq. His father, the Prince of Wales, is said to be delighted with the move.

Clarence House insiders say that, by joining the search-and-rescue force, Prince William will be able to combine his desire to help people with his love of flying, which he developed while training as a pilot with the RAF this year. It can be safely assumed that he will not be using his Sea King for personal jaunts. The Prince was heavily criticised during his training for landing a helicopter on a field belonging to the parents of Kate Middleton, his girlfriend.

Since being commissioned as an officer in the Blues and Royals, the Prince has tried land, sea and air, with attachments with the Royal Air Force, the Royal Navy and other units: now he has decided that what he likes best is flying. He will be following in the footsteps of his uncle, the Duke of York, who flew Sea Kings during the Falklands conflict.

Prince William said: “I now want to build on the experience and training I have received to serve operationally – especially because, for good reasons, I was not able to deploy to Afghanistan this year.

“Joining search and rescue is a perfect opportunity for me to serve in the Forces operationally, while contributing to a vital part of the country’s emergency services.”

The Prince will learn to fly Sea Kings at RAF Shawbury, in Shropshire, before going on to RAF Valley in North Wales for search-and-rescue training. On completing the course, he will become a fully operational pilot in mid-2010. He will be based at one of the force’s six bases. A typical tour for a pilot is 30 to 36 months, during which he could spend a six-week detachment in Cyprus or the Falkland Islands.

It will probably not be unexpected that, once he is operational, there may be a number of questionable calls for assistance from those who hope to meet him (in a princely hero coming to rescue them fantasy) or to take his picture. 
 
Yelp for Heroes

by TOM NEWTON DUNN Defence Editor The Sun Published: Today September 18, 2008

HUNDREDS of the Army’s hero hounds are forced to live in squalor, a shock Sun probe has found.

More than 300 labradors, spaniels and alsatians have been locked in needlessly cruel conditions for 20 hours a day over the last two years.

And because they are so unhappy it takes longer to train them for frontline duties such as sniffing out bombs and weapons.

The scandal is so bad two of the three major kennel sites in the UK have been condemned by MoD vets.

The Veterinary Standards Inspection Team said the largest — the Defence Animal Centre in Melton Mowbray, Leics — is so bad a “complete rebuild is the only viable solution”.

One insider said: “The dogs sleep in ancient sheds with concrete floors covered with a thin layer of hay.

“The staff keep the kennels as clean as they can, but it’s like polishing a t**d.

“There is no heating and with the rotting wood letting the wind whip through it’s just horribly cruel.

“You wouldn’t keep your lawnmower in them.”

Another said: “It’s disgusting to keep these animals like this. They are fantastic, intelligent animals fighting for Queen and country.”

The kennels, where up to 200 dogs are kept at any one time, are run by private Contractors Realm Services.

Repairs have been stalled for three years because defence officials and Realm can’t agree who pays.

The firm’s licence to keep dogs was revoked in April by Melton Borough Council because of the way it ran the site.

Some dogs were moved, but others are still kept there. Realm has refused to comment.

At 101 Military Working Dog Support Unit at Buller Barracks in Aldershot, Hants — where 30 or so dogs are kept before frontline duties — the animals live in temporary cages because kennels are so bad.

The site was branded “unfit for animal habitation” by the MoD’s Veterinary Standards Inspection Team in June.

Royal Army Veterinary Corps insiders blame the faults on underfunding.

One senior NCO said yesterday: “The animals are vexed and unhappy, which makes them more dangerous and unpredictable, and means they take longer to train.

“There is a great demand for them and we can’t train enough.

“They’re precious in combat and often do the work of ten men.”

The MoD said all dogs had access to vets, and said training for dogs and handlers “meets operational requirements”.
 
Army trainers 'bullied recruits'

Five training instructors based at Britain's biggest army base have been suspended, a military source has said.
It comes as the BBC prepares to screen a report on an undercover investigation into bullying of recruits at the Catterick Garrison in North Yorkshire.
A reporter who spent six months as an infantry recruit at the base uncovered evidence of physical abuse.
The Ministry of Defence said bullying was "fundamentally at odds with the Army's core values".
The incidents came despite promised changes after four recruits died after bullying at Deepcut Barracks in Surrey.
A military source was reported as saying three instructors were suspended before the authorities were made aware of the BBC programme.
But another two were suspended after the Ministry of Defence (MoD) received further evidence from the BBC, the source said.
BBC reporter Russell Sharp secretly filmed life at the infantry training centre on his mobile phone and recorded his thoughts.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7622102.stm
 
MoD accused of covering up injuries to troops
Defence chiefs have been accused of covering up the severity of injuries to troops wounded in combat in Afghanistan.

By Sean Rayment, Defence Correspondent
Last Updated: 2:32PM BST 20 Sep 2008

Soldiers, MPs and lawyers representing injured servicemen and women claim the real cost to those fighting on the front line in Helmand province, southern Afghanistan, is being hidden from the public for political reasons.

The Sunday Telegraph has learnt that every week dozens of soldiers are being injured, some severely, yet details of the nature and severity of the wounds are never made public.

While the Ministry of Defence argues that details of injuries are not released to protect the soldiers' families from media intrusion, many within the military believe the policy is designed to keep secret the attrition rate being suffered by the Army in Afghanistan.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/onthefrontline/3021973/MoD-accused-of-covering-up-injuries-to-troops.html

 
Saw the program,pure bullshit!, nothing but he said,she said,unsubstantiated
accusations.The BBC should be ashamed they even aired such junk and the
reporter should be charged with some offence,it shouldn't be hard to do as
he lied his way in and lied his way out.I suppose the Guardian agreed with
every lie he told.
                      Regards
 
time expired said:
Saw the program,pure bullshit!, nothing but he said,she said,unsubstantiated
accusations.The BBC should be ashamed they even aired such junk and the
reporter should be charged with some offence,it shouldn't be hard to do as
he lied his way in and lied his way out.I suppose the Guardian agreed with
every lie he told.
                       Regards

See? It works. All the controversy sells advertising quite nicely. And the BB Communists don't care either way.

We had similar BS foisted on us during 'The Paras' TV program, but at least it wasn't an undercover op.
 
Army recruit found hanged at barracks

An army recruit was today found hanged at an army camp just a mile away from Deepcut barracks, police said.
The 29-year-old man, who has not been named, died despite attempts by paramedics to resuscitate him just before 8am.
He was found at Alexander barracks at the Pirbright army camp in Surrey, close to Deepcut where four young recruits died as a result of bullet wounds in separate incidents between 1995 and 2002.
A spokeswoman for Surrey police said: "The Ministry of Defence is fully cooperating with the inquiries being made by police."
Recruits Sean Benton, 20, of Hastings, East Sussex; James Collinson, 17, of Perth; Geoff Gray, 17, of Seaham, Co Durham, and Cheryl James, 18, of Llangollen, Denbighshire, all died at the Deepcut training camp.
An investigation into their deaths by Nicolas Blake QC found no evidence for families' claims that they had been "bullied to death".
Alexander barracks at Pirbright opened earlier this year and was designed to offer modern, comfortable accommodation for new recruits.
As part of the army's efforts to improve conditions for new recruits the 12 man dormitory-style rooms are partitioned into four areas to provide a degree of privacy.
A "duty of care" office and a member of training staff is located on each floor. Specific policies to identify and prevent bullying and improve the mental health of the recruits have been in place for some time at the barracks.
Surrey police said a post-mortem is expected to take place later today.
It is understood that the man had arrived at the training centre just days ago.
A MoD spokesperson said: "It is with deep sadness that the MoD confirms the death of a new recruit at Pirbright training centre in Surrey on 21 September 2008.
"Next of kin have been informed and our thoughts and sympathies are with the deceased individual's family and friends at this difficult time.
"Surrey police are conducting an investigation so it would not be appropriate to comment further at this stage."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/sep/21/military



 
Labour Party 'must appreciate British troops more', says Des Browne
The Labour Party should do more to respect and appreciate the work of Britain's Armed Forces, Des Browne, the Defence Secretary, has said.


Speaking to Labour's annual conference in Manchester, Mr Browne appeared to suggest that some Labour members have not fully supported British troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"Special service deserves special treatment," Mr Browne said, outlining recent Government moves to improve the welfare of service personnel, including pay rises, free university places and better health care.

He added: "There is one other thing that they want. They want you to understand what they have achieved and are achieving."
The 2003 invasion of Iraq remains intensely unpopular with many Labour members, but Mr Browne insisted that the party must accept that British troops in both Iraq and Afghanistan are making "a positive difference"
He said: "They deserve your recognition and thanks."
Britain has 4,000 troops in Iraq and 8,000 in Afghanistan.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/3061175/Labour-Party-must-appreciate-British-troops-more-says-Des-Browne.html
 
Overstretched and over there (long article)
Prospect Magazine, October 2008, by James Fergusson
http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10369

Britain's armed forces are still formidable in battle, but undermanning and public indifference point to an institution under strain. It is too soon to declare the military covenant broken, but repair work is certainly needed.

Until two years ago, when the army's senior soldier, chief of the general staff Richard Dannatt, popularised the phrase in a now famous interview in the Daily Mail, most people had never heard of the "military covenant." Considering that the military covenant does not, technically speaking, exist, this is forgivable. The legal definition of a covenant is a sealed, written contract. Yet apart from an oblique reference or two in army doctrine, the military covenant does not exist in writing, and has no basis in law. Despite this, since 2006 an important national debate about the military's role in society has coalesced around the phrase.

The covenant means different things to different people but its primary meaning is clear enough: the compact of trust, honour and respect between the government, the armed forces and the public whose interests they serve. Dannatt worries that the military covenant is "out of kilter," and argues that unless balance is restored, the armed forces could eventually "break," with potentially huge consequences for Britain, Europe and the world. This summer he renewed his attack, with a stinging comparison between the basic salary of a traffic warden (about £20,000) and a private soldier (£16,277). "I think, given the insecurity in the world today and what the armed forces of this country are being asked to do, then probably a slightly increased share of the national wealth going to defence would be appropriate," he said. He may have a point. Our military haven't had to fight on two fronts at once—southern Iraq and Helmand—for more than half a century, and they have been continuously engaged in Afghanistan for longer than the whole of the second world war.

The theme of military "overstretch" has become a media staple since the start of the Helmand campaign two and a half years ago. Meanwhile, all three services are struggling to retain their talent or to recruit replacements. Latest figures show that, with a trained strength of 173,000, the armed forces are collectively undermanned by 6,000 personnel. More than 20,000 quit last year, a modern record. Exit rates for officers have increased in each of the last five years. The air force (40,000 people) and the navy (35,000) both have major shortages, although not as significant as the army, which at 98,000 is short of 3,500 personnel: a whole brigade's worth. The only regiment that is truly up to strength is the Gurkhas.

Are things as bad as these figures suggest? Could our forces really "break"? With British troops dying on an almost weekly basis in Afghanistan—August was the deadliest month since the campaign began—the debate has become emotional, and is often distorted. Yet there is no smoke without fire. Stuart Tootal, the battle group commander during Operation Herrick 4—Britain's initial, spectacularly violent deployment to Helmand in the summer of 2006—resigned last November after attacking the ministry of defence (MoD) over poor pay for soldiers, lack of equipment, the standard of army housing and poor medical treatment afforded to his soldiers. I recently spent some months interviewing troops who took part in Herrick 4, and found that while problems were often exaggerated—the squaddie's capacity for whingeing is legendary, after all—the complaints were seldom without some justification...

British troops in the field still feel, and look, invincible. In year three of the southern Afghan campaign, morale at Camp Bastion, their billion-pound Helmand headquarters, remains extraordinarily high. Magnus Linklater, the former Scotsman editor, who recently spent time with Scottish soldiers in Helmand, was amazed not just by their "phlegm," but by their physical prowess. The average squaddie is a seriously fit human being. At Bastion, Linklater reported, many men's idea of rest and recreation was to strip to the waist and pump iron in the glare of the summer sun.

Appearances can be deceptive, though. The "breakage" that Richard Dannatt worries about is seldom visible during a combat tour. Action and adventure, after all, are what most soldiers join up for. The problem, often, is what comes after. Six months after their return to barracks, eight of the 128 Fusiliers who went to Helmand on Herrick 4 had reported to the medics with symptoms of suspected post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)—and the company major feared there were more to come...

What is not disputed is this: of Britain's 98,000 ground troops, 6,600 have been recruited from Commonwealth countries—up from just 300 a decade ago [emphasis added]. The British army is not as British as it once was, a change that worries Richard Dannatt so much that last year he considered limiting the intake of Commonwealth recruits to 10 per cent of the total. This summer, nevertheless, a new recruitment drive was reportedly under way in Jamaica...

Government can only do so much to rebalance Richard Dannatt's covenant. There is unlikely to be much more money. And any proposals Forsyth puts forward have to be "affordable and feasible." Since, by his calculations, the army needs "an extra £4bn to £5bn," the only option, he says, is to reallocate funds earmarked for the other services. This would mean fewer Eurofighters for the RAF, or fewer new destroyers or submarines for the navy. Such a reallocation would bring a bitter three-way fight between the services, but Forsyth, despite his RAF background, is convinced it is necessary: "For the kind of wars we're fighting now, the future is the army."

Mark
Ottawa



 
Lesbian soldier accuses British Army of trying to silence her over sex case

September 23rd, 2008 - 2:11 pm ICT by ANI -

London, Sep 23 (ANI): A lesbian soldier has claimed that senior British Army officers ordered her to keep quiet about being pestered for sex by a male sergeant at Army stables.

Kerry Fletcher, a former lance bombardier in the Royal Artillery, is seeking 400,000 pounds in compensation from the Ministry of Defence over her experiences, The Telegraph reported.

An employment tribunal in Leeds has already found that she was the victim of direct sexual discrimination and harassment.

Fletcher, 32, described the sergeant, who cannot be identified until completion of the remedy hearing in Leeds, as a known womaniser.

She said he asked her to join in a threesome with another woman and boasted in a text message: Look, I might be able to convert you. You dont know what you are missing.

Fletcher also claimed that the sergeant and other male colleagues tried to destroy her career because she spurned his advances, and that she was signed off sick with stress as a result.

The sergeant insisted he had legitimately enforced discipline at the Royal Artillery stables in Topcliffe, North Yorkshire, after Fletcher had been regularly late for work and insubordinate.

Fletcher told the resumed hearing: I went to those stables and did a good job. I was having quite a bad time with a senior officer. It was not so much the Army, but it was that one person who was making my life a misery. I was depressed and having panic attacks.

I was very disappointed because I was going through a rough time with this guy. I told my regiment and I was basically told to keep quiet. I was having a hard time and felt I was losing my career, she said.

Fletcher is now a member of the Territorial Army in Redditch, Worcs, and is seeking 381,000 pounds in lost earnings plus 25,000 pounds for injury to her feelings.

Despite MoDs denials of any wrongdoing, the tribunal panel found in Fletchers favour on the basis of her powerful evidence.

It found that the stress of coping with persistent and trivial disciplinary allegations that were trumped up into formal charges meant she was unable to continue working. (ANI)
 
Who's next?

We have a Canadian lesbian suing the government twenty five years after the fact.

We have a British lesbian suing the British government for the same thing basically.

Any American.............Australian.............Mexican.............French............Danish...........whatever lesbians suing their governments for mistreatment in their military?

Looks like we are seeing a rash of these things today.
 
Sounds like that boy's bucking for a second star!

Double force in Helmand, says British commander
The senior British commander in Helmand has called for a major troop reinforcement in the war-torn province of Afghanistan to deal with the growing Taliban insurgency.

By Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent


In a highly unusual step Brig Mark Carleton-Smith, commander of 16 Air Assault Brigade, said he could use "an additional brigade" of up to 4,000 troops to deal with the Taliban reinforcements crossing the border from Pakistan and to provide greater stability.
It is the first time a British military commander has openly called for more troops to tackle the growing violence in southern Afghanistan.
The officer's words come after the American defence secretary Robert Gates said last week that the British force in Afghanistan was set to increase despite denials from the Ministry of Defence.
It is believed that the Americans might be trying to pressure the British into redeploying the 4,000 troops expected to leave Iraq next spring straight into Afghanistan.
The Daily Telegraph reported in the summer that a "division light" would be sent to Afghanistan with numbers rising form the current 8,000 to possibly as high as 14,000.
"Currently, we've got deployed in the region of 4,000 troops, supporting 4,000 Afghan soldiers," Brigadier Mark Carlton-Smith said in an interview with Sky News.
"I think we could probably easily consume in Helmand another brigade. And I think that probably forms part of wider ISAF planning as to what the future lay down for southern Afghanistan might look like."
Asked if he would like to at least double the size of the military in Helmand the brigadier said: "I could certainly find sufficient tasks in Helmand today to use an additional brigade."
He added while the Taliban could not change the government it was "strong enough" to "keep the insurgency going" in a conflict that could last up to 15 years.
Extra troops are desperately needed in Helmand if the coalition forces are to tackle the rampant opium problem which supplies the Taliban with a significant income and severely restricts economic and farming development.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/onthefrontline/3074147/Double-force-in-Helmand-says-British-commander.html
 
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