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British Military Current Events

British troops are best says US leader David Petraeus

LEGENDARY US military chief General David Petraeus yesterday insisted British troops are the world's best - with the 'Who Dares Wins' SAS "absolutely spectacular".

The elite soldiers hunted down al-Qaeda bombers for the US Central Command boss while he led the victorious surge in Iraq - often renting taxis, removing body armour and driving through Baghdad to get their man. Gen Petraeus said: "They would use extraordinary skill. And your conventional forces demonstrate the same capacity.
"I have always been impressed by the courage, capacity for independent action, skill and exceptional will of your soldiers.
"It's what sets forces in the UK - and I'd argue the US and a handful of other countries - apart from all others in the world.
"22 SAS are absolutely spectacular. We felt privileged to have them in Iraq. Brits should be very proud of all their forces and take special pride in their special forces."
Passing through London, the General also praised the outnumbered UK forces holding off the Taliban in Helmand.
He said: "British troops have been in a very tough place and they have done exceedingly well."
He said he had asked former British SAS commander Lt Gen Graeme Lamb to go out to Kabul, Afghanistan's capital, to advise new Nato boss General Stanley McChrystal on how to win over Taliban defectors.
In a message to all Brits, he added: "It's absolutely natural for those putting their lives on the line to ask, is this worth it?
"It is. It is enormously important we achieve our objective in Afghanistan, and ensure it does not again become a sanctuary for al-Qaeda and other extremists that have carried out attacks on your streets.
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"There has been progress in Helmand province. Expanding the security bubble for example has allowed people to vote today who would not have had that opportunity a few months ago."
He added: "I want to thank the British public... because regardless what they've felt about these endeavours they've always supported our troops and their families.
"They have recognised the sacrifices they have made."
But the General, who has served with the British military since 2001, admitted it's a mistake to go boozing with Our Boys.
He said: "I could never hold my own with them, especially not Scottish paratroopers. That was a losing proposition."
Gen Petraeus meets PM Gordon Brown in Scotland today. He will also visit the new Help for Heroes home in Edinburgh.

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/campaigns/our_boys/2599446/British-troops-are-best-says-US-leader-David-Petraeus.html
 
The terrible price that is paid by the forgotten casualties of war

JONATHAN FOREMAN

WEDNESDAY, 19TH AUGUST 2009

Jonathan Foreman says that the focus upon the death toll in the Afghan conflict obscures the high numbers of soldiers who have suffered catastrophic wounds — and the scandalously inadequate compensation they have been offered once home in a land unfit for such heroes
It is not easy to measure success and failure in counter-insurgency warfare. Modern military establishments have all sorts of ‘metrics’, as they call statistics, but the politicians and the general public tend to focus on one measure alone: fatalities, and our fatalities at that. The deaths in Afghanistan of other Allied forces rarely make the headlines (though the loss of ten French troops in a single 2008 ambush did reach the front pages), and numbers of enemy dead are rarely mentioned at all.
The number of civilian casualties during the recent pre-election allied surge in southern Afghanistan has remained unclear. This is partly because the Nato-led Coalition doesn’t want to be in the business of Vietnam-style body counts, and perhaps because it is not easy to know who counts as a civilian in a conflict where one side eschews uniforms and in which a 14-year-old boy could easily be a combatant. This is frustrating because it makes it that much harder for the public to know ‘how we are doing’ and what, if anything, has been gained by all the sacrifices.
So — is it worth it? Much has been made of the 200th British military death in Afghanistan. However,  those who are committed to the war in Afghanistan might point out that 200 fatalities over eight years works out at a lower death rate than the conflict in Northern Ireland between 1969 and 1977, and obviously at a much lower rate than in the Falklands war where 250 British servicemen died in three months. (We tend to forget that the IRA killed 146 members of British security forces in 1972 alone, about the same number that were killed by enemy forces during the entire Iraq war.) They point out that 200 fatalities is not a vast number in a country with a population of 61 million, and in which 200 young people were killed as a result of knife crime in the past year alone. The Danish contingent has suffered greater losses both in proportion to the size of its force in Afghanistan and in terms of Denmark’s population.
However, the true story is that the war in Afghanistan is taking a far, far greater toll than most people realise. A much more telling statistic than the number of dead is the number of wounded. Even more important than this is the number of severely wounded men and women and the startling ratio of wounded to dead. In the second world war the ratio of dead to wounded was 1:4. During the Vietnam war there were 15 wounded men for every American fatality in theatre. In Afghanistan and Iraq the ratio for British and American troops is between 1:30 and 1:40.
With all the focus on fatalities, not enough attention has been paid to the wounded. Why are so many wounded in Afghanistan? The first answer is to do with our improved technology. The body armour, plus dramatic advances in battlefield medical care (such as fast-clotting bandages and tourniquets that can be applied with one hand) mean that those who would have died in past conflicts are kept alive. And there have been great improvements in transporting critically ill patients by air. The other answer, perhaps the most significant one, is that Improvised Explosive Devices or IEDs —– military jargon for home-made bombs and land mines — wound many more than they kill.
Beginning in the first world war, Allied wounded were sorted into three categories of medical ‘triage’. If you had a level-one injury, it meant you could be patched up and sent back to the front. Someone with a level-two wound might be able to return to the front in a matter of weeks. A level-three wound required long-term medical treatment and if the patient survived, he would be unlikely to return to the front. Today, in Afghanistan, a significant proportion of our wounded soldiers are so-called ‘tier-four’ casualties. That essentially means they have suffered such a combination of catastrophic wounds, say loss of limbs and brain damage, that they would not have survived in any previous war. Many of these broken young men (and so far they are almost all men) will need 24-hour care for the rest of their lives and may never work again. This sort of care is unbelievably expensive and will place an intolerably heavy burden on veteran’s families for decades to come.
For every 30 wounded casualties there is an average of seven men with tier-four injuries. There may already be between 2,000 and 3,000 soldiers grievously wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan who are in this tier-four category. They have come back home to a country that is not prepared to look after them or their families. And their actual numbers, as a senior army officer recently admitted, are unknown. There is a compensation system in place but it is both overwhelmed — thanks to inadequate planning — and cruelly ungenerous. Indeed MoD bureaucrats and lawyers, driven presumably by the Treasury, have put remarkable energy into clawing back paltry sums paid to injured servicemen, including a soldier who suffered a tier-three wound in Iraq who has gone back to fight in Afghanistan.
It does not help matters that there are no longer any military hospitals in the UK. In the early 1990s John Major’s government decided to shut them down, war being a thing of the past. The Labour government completed this policy, closing the last hospital in Gosport in 2007, even though the nation’s single military-run ward at Selly Oak in Birmingham was already overwhelmed, and there is simply no question that military casualties recover better in military hospitals. Perhaps the most arresting statistic of all is an estimate by UK defence experts that puts the financial cost of long-term care for these 2,000-3,000 severely wounded men at between £2.5 billion and £4 billion — even based on a life expectancy of only 15 years after the original injury. Yet neither the Ministry of Defence nor the National Health Service has funds set aside for this purpose. Nor has either institution included the cost of looking after Britain’s severely wounded servicemen in its projected budgets for the years ahead. By contrast the government and MoD account in their operational ‘modelling’ only for the cost of fatalities. Conservative estimates suggest that, including pensions, and one-off grants, the state has paid out between £150 million and £200 million to the relatives of servicemen killed in action. This means that the lion’s share of looking after severely maimed veterans falls on soldiers’ families — people already devastated by the loss of an able-bodied husband, son or father. They are not equipped to bear such a burden and they should not have to.
If the bean-counters at the Ministry of Defence have thought about it all, they surely know that even the £570,000 maximum compensation allowed by the current system — a maximum that was not awarded to Paratrooper Ben Parkinson, the most severely injured British serviceman ever to survive a mine blast — is nowhere near enough to pay for necessities such as modern wheelchairs, lifts, widened doorways and long-term nursing care.
Eventually the state will likely be forced by public outrage to do the right thing by severely injured servicemen. But the fact that neither the MoD nor the NHS has thought to take into account the financial costs of looking after severely disabled servicemen — even after eight years of war — indicates that Britain’s political and military establishments do not understand the realities of modern counter-insurgency warfare. There is certainly something ludicrous about a defence establishment that is fiercely fighting over new procurement priorities but whose projected budgets do not even take into account the £2-4 billion that someone will have to pay if Britain is to maintain the covenant with men and women in uniform.
What military analysts call ‘health-security-economics’ is a key part of modern warfare. Along with ‘information warfare’, it is a field of which our enemies in Afghanistan and Iraq seem to have an instinctive grasp. They know that to make us leave they do not have to defeat us in the field: they merely have to persuade the public that the war is simply too costly in blood and treasure. In the IED they have found the perfect weapon to achieve this aim.
It is a weapon of strategic influence, as the jargon has it, one with the power to affect hearts and minds in the UK. This does not necessarily mean that we should pull out of Afghanistan, perhaps declaring victory in the classic post-colonial style, as the FCO did in Basra. Nor that we should continue fighting but in a more risk-averse way that would inevitably cede control of the country to the Taleban. It does unquestionably mean that all future deliberations about defence spending must take into account the real costs of looking after current and future casualties — in other words the ‘health-security-economics’ of war.
It also means that if the defence establishment wants to diminish the terrible financial as well as human costs imposed by the IED threat, and therefore avoid defeat in Afghanistan, it will have to re-examine its priorities, and think about the Afghan war as a campaign rather than a series of six month operations than can be managed with existing resources.
Among other possible shifts in direction, this could entail making an effort to counter the IED threat by developing the ability to monitor and control Afghanistan’s key highways from the air. You do not need fantastically costly and complex jet fighters flown by expensively trained air force commanders and colonels to perform this task. And you do not necessarily require expensive drones of the kind that have been employed against al-Qa’eda forces in Pakistan. You need relatively light and simple aircraft, with long loiter times, that can be piloted by corporals — and eventually by Afghans — and which can fly slowly enough to distinguish a man with a bomb or gun from a man carrying a scythe on his way to the fields.
Perhaps more radical change is needed, such as adding a large ‘nation-building’ civil affairs component to the military — as suggested by General Dannatt last week — so that it can effectively win hearts and minds in places like Helmand province where DfID, shackled by health and safety restrictions, has failed to have much impact.
Arguably the UK has tried to prosecute the Iraq and Afghan wars while making procurement and deployment decisions as if this were peacetime, with genuine military needs subordinated to industrial policy, gestures of EU solidarity, and some of the more irrational instincts of politicians and the services.
One requirement is certain. If the ‘covenant’ is not to be breached, leading to a collapse in the morale of our troops and their families, we are going to have to rebuild Britain’s military medical institutions.
We could do worse than to look to the United States for inspiration. Though the Department of Veterans Affairs (formerly known as the Veterans Administration) and the Walter Reed Military Hospital have been the target of valid criticism over the past few years, they do an excellent job of looking after America’s wounded GIs and Marines who are maimed in combat and come back to military hospitals where they are surrounded by their fellow servicemen (not civilian geriatric patients), where they are treated with respect and understanding, and attended by staff who are specialists in treating military casualties.
The VA, as it is called, draws its mission statement from Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural address: ‘to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan’. Its founders understood that in a democratic society if you are not serious about looking after your wounded troops then you are not serious about war. If you are not serious about war, then you have no business sending troops into battle. Moreover you are likely to lose.

http://www.spectator.co.uk/the-magazine/features/5275928/the-terrible-price-that-is-paid-by-the-forgotten-casualties-of-war.thtml
 
Soldiers march in largest graduation parade in Europe 14 August 2009

Seven hundred junior soldiers marched on to the parade ground at the Army Foundation College in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, on Thursday 13 August, in the largest military graduation parade in Europe
The seventeen-year-olds were cheered on by thousands of their relatives and friends who had travelled from all over the country to Uniacke Barracks to watch them on their special day.
The parade began with a military parachute drop by the famous Red Devils parachute team and was the highlight of the Junior Soldiers last day at the college.
The parade of Junior Soldiers, who joined the college in Penny Pot Lane in September last year, is only exceeded in size by the Trooping of the Colour held in London.
Major General G W Berragan, the Director General of Army Recruiting and Training, inspected the students and took the salute when they graduated from the college watched by the Commandant, Lieutenant Colonel Steve O'Cock and members of staff. 
The Waterloo, Cambrai and Peninsula Companies marched onto parade led by the Band of the Parachute Regiment. Following the inspection and salute prizes were awarded to the best students.
The parade was led by the college's top student, Junior Regimental Sergeant Major Aaron Marsh from Telford, Shropshire, who escorted the Reviewing Officer and commanded the parade as it marched off the square.

http://www.army.mod.uk/news/16540.aspx
 
CGS Richard Dannatt, and the stretched army (some notes resonate here):

The Army is too small to fight all of the battles facing Britain
We have to decide what we really want from our Armed Forces, argues Allan Mallinson

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/defence/6083306/The-Army-is-too-small-to-fight-all-of-the-battles-facing-Britain.html

As General Sir Richard Dannatt steps down as Chief of the General Staff (CGS) this week, what will be the legacy of his outspokenness; and what lies ahead for his successor, General Sir David Richards?

"I want an Army in five and 10 years' time," said Sir Richard in 2006. It was as urgent as that, for the Army was in his words "running hot", and public disquiet over Iraq and Afghanistan was having an increasingly negative effect on soldiers' morale. It should not have been his fight, though. When New Labour came to power it carried out a strategic defence review (SDR), hailed by senior officers and commentators at the time as a model of strategic thinking, not least because many of them had been flattered into thinking they had contributed in the consultative process. This review stands in retrospect as a model of spin, however, for the then chancellor, Gordon Brown, simply refused to fund it.

The review's ambitions were not even that great. Modified by the 2003 White Paper, the assumptions ran thus: "As a norm, and without causing overstretch, the Armed Forces must be capable of conducting three simultaneous and enduring operations of small to medium-scale." Yet soon we were unable to commit to two, and now even the one remaining, Afghanistan, is grievously straining the Forces. This is not good commentary on the stewardship of successive defence secretaries, nor of their principal advisers.

One of the consequences has been to encourage inter-service rivalry of a damaging kind. The job of individual service chiefs is to fight for the largest share of the cake within the overall defence strategy; but because the SDR was never properly funded, the inescapable conclusion is that the Government – crucially Gordon Brown – never truly believed in it. It ought to have been obvious in the face of operational and budgetary reality that the cake needed re-slicing.

This, successive defence secretaries have been unwilling to do, while massive mismanagement of the equipment programme, to which Bernard Gray's suppressed report into MoD procurement testifies, exacerbates the problem: over-specified and over-budget aircraft and ships continue to take the lion's share of the cake, leaving the Army ever hungrier. Even as we were stepping up the fight in Afghanistan, with troops still in Iraq, the MoD was cutting infantry battalions.

In July the truth could be contained no longer – thanks in no small part to Sir Richard – and the Defence Secretary, Bob Ainsworth, .conceded a new strategic review; but after the next election [emphasis added]. This means that either the 1998 SDR was wrong all along, and its procurement programme based on false premises, or that after the next election Mr Brown can be persuaded to fund it properly; or perhaps that after 2010 the problem will be one for the Tories. Meanwhile the MoD is preparing a Green Paper, in Mr Ainsworth's words "a detailed examination of a range of issues including: the lessons learned from our recent operations; the changing character of conflict; the requirements on and aspirations of our Armed Forces"...

Allan Mallinson's 'The Making of the British Army' is published by Bantam on September 10
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Making-British-Army-Allan-Mallinson/dp/0593064305

Resonance:
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/685977
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/05/australian-defence-white-paper-vs.html
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2008/05/defence-strategy-we-sure-aint-germans.html
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/03/army-really-stretched.html
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/03/chief-of-land-staff-gen-leslie-on-armys.html
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/05/dnds-reports-on-plans-and-priorities.html

General Sir Richard Dannatt: A heroic advocate of the Army
His tenure as Chief of the General Staff has been controversial but as General Sir Richard Dannatt leaves his post he will be remembered as a passionate defender of the Army.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/defence/6062573/General-Sir-Richard-Dannatt-A-heroic-advocate-of-the-Army.html

How can a man in a job that demands courage and probity be too honest for his own good? Ask the outgoing head of the Army, General Sir Richard Dannatt, whose troublesome tenure will be remembered not just by how passionately he defended the welfare, training and proper equipping of soldiers but by how hopelessly he failed to protect his own back in doing so.

Two months into the job, the General was on a kamikaze course, saying the unsayable. He accused the Government of abusing the "military covenant" of mutual protection between a nation and its armed forces. He said troops were stretched to capacity [more here]...

His tendency to speak his mind has discomfited ministers - to the extent that Labour is accused of running a smear campaign against him that will crank up as soon as he has gone.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6802786.ece

This week, on the eve of his departure, Dannatt again tapped into public concern by calling on ministers to improve equipment that will monitor potential attacks from roadside bombs, the scourge of current troop manoeuvres. His demand for more surveillance systems to counter improvised explosive devices may have been his final salvo from office, but there is a suspicion that he will continue to fire broadsides, possibly with a memoir, after his departure...

Resonance:
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/03/cds-retirement-ceremony-internal-war-at.html

Mark
Ottawa
 
British soldiers banned from using live bullets to save money



http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article6814938.ece

British soldiers are being forced to train with blanks rather than live rounds to save money.
The entire Territorial Army (TA) and a number of nonfrontline regular army units will be affected by the ban on the use of real bullets in personal weapons, according to defence sources.
Soldiers bound for Afghanistan will be spared the restrictions, but even they will start training with live rounds only in the last three months before departure. Those learning to shoot as part of basic training will also be allowed to use real bullets.
Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP and a former infantry commanding officer, said: “The idea that our frontline reserves should not be able to use live rounds is quite extraordinary.

“We can’t have a popgun army. The next thing you know we’ll be reduced to Dad’s Army-style training, shouting ‘bang bang’.”
News of the ban emerged as Gordon Brown returned from a surprise visit to Afghanistan to bolster support for the war.
Yesterday a Royal Marine was killed on foot patrol when a Taliban bomb exploded near Gereshk in southern Afghanistan. He was the 208th British serviceman to die in the conflict.
The bullet ban is the result of a £700m cut in the money available to run the army in the UK.
Soldiers are required to maintain basic standards of proficiency in the use of their weapons; the SA80 is the standard issue service rifle, while officers use a Browning 9mm pistol.
They must pass an annual test, demonstrating their ability to clean their weapons, fire at a target to calibrate or “zero” the sights, and then achieve a specific score firing live rounds.
They fire a minimum of 100 live rounds, with the average noninfantry soldier firing about 300 a year. The cost of a single SA80 live round is approximately 30p, compared with 10p for a blank.
The Ministry of Defence conceded that tank and artillery units had also seen a sharp cut in the number of rounds they were allowed to fire on training exercises.
The number of artillery rounds fired in training fell from 20,000 in 2003-2004 to half that figure last year and is even fewer this year.
Computer simulation is being used as an alternative, but it cannot reproduce the experience of live firing.
This weekend one officer said: “We’ve been told we cannot fire live rounds unless we are going to Afghanistan. How on earth is a professional soldier supposed to be able to keep up his skills like that?
“But the situation is so desperate that Land Command [which runs the army in Britain] is already overspent by £50m. It is absolutely wretched. It is a total farce.” The MoD said it “did not recognise” the £50m figure, but senior sources confirmed it was the rough size of the overspend. The MoD said: “The top priority is to train those about to deploy to Afghanistan, but the training of others continues. The ever-improving quality of simulation technology has reduced the need to rely on live-fire exercises, although they still play an important role.” It was unable to say which regular army units were affected by the ban.
The revelation that soldiers are firing blanks follows an admission to MPs earlier this month that British troops had fired more than 12m rounds between April 2006, when they first went into southern Afghanistan, and April this year.
Most of the rounds were from small arms, with about 6m fired from SA80 rifles and 5m from machineguns.
Although the government claims the full cost of operations abroad is funded separately from the defence budget, the Treasury reduces the figure by about half to take into account costs that are not incurred in the UK because the troops are in Afghanistan.
The TA has also been ordered to cut in half the training for its soldiers, with funding for “man-training-days” for reservists cut from 90 a year to 50 for some and 30 for others.
Last week a mother of a soldier serving in Afghanistan revealed that she had spent £1,000 per tour sending her son kit because he was so poorly equipped.
Lorna Daniel, 52, from Looe, Cornwall, has sent Paul, 29, a corporal with the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment, items including a high-quality sleeping bag, vests, gloves and torches.
 
Tough task faces new army chief
By Caroline Wyatt
Defence correspondent, BBC News


Gen Sir Richard Dannatt has handed over his post as professional head of the British army, or Chief of the General Staff, to Gen Sir David Richards.
His appointment comes at one of the most testing times for the west's mission in Afghanistan, amid increasing public scepticism over whether the sacrifices being made in Helmand are worth it.
Providing the necessary military leadership will be no easy task, while the new chief of the general staff faces leadership challenges on many other fronts, too.
He will not only be fighting a growing insurgency in southern Afghanistan, but also battling for resources for the Army back in Whitehall, at a time of increasing financial strain and competition amid all three services for future spending.
'Too outspoken'
The man he has taken over from, Gen Sir Richard Dannatt, often found himself at odds with ministers, and was seen by some as too outspoken on issues ranging from soldiers' pay and accommodation to the number of British helicopters in Helmand.
Gen Dannatt, who retires after 40 years in the Army, is due to take up the post of chairman of the Royal United Services Institute think-tank, as well as becoming constable of the Tower of London.
Gen Richards is seen as a good communicator who is also politically astute, and perhaps more likely to fight his battles behind closed doors.
GENERAL SIR DAVID RICHARDS
Commissioned into Royal Artillery 1971
Nine years in the Far East, Germany and the UK
Four tours in Northern Ireland
Became Assistant Chief of the General Staff in 2002
Commander of the International Stabilisation and Assistance Force Afghanistan between May 2006 and February 2007
Operational awards include a Mention in Despatches, CBE, the DSO and KCB

Profile: Gen Sir David Richards

He has extensive operational experience in East Timor, Sierra Leone, and - crucially - first-hand knowledge of the challenges in Afghanistan gained as commander of Nato coalition forces there between 2006 and 2007, another key period in the battle against the insurgency.
Gen Richards, 57, has called himself "a seat-of-the-pants soldier", and has said that during his time in Afghanistan, the people and the country "entered my bloodstream".
His tour of duty there earned him an operational KCB - a knighthood - while his mission in Sierra Leone in 2000 - during which he persuaded Tony Blair and Robin Cook to allow him to return and run a bigger intervention to finish off the job successfully - saw him awarded a DSO for his leadership and 'moral courage', as well as a CBE for the operation he commanded in East Timor in 1999.
As well as trying to ensure the right resources for Britain's part in the multi-national effort in Afghanistan, Gen Richards must also focus on consultations in Whitehall ahead of the forthcoming strategic defence review.
The review will bring to a head difficult decisions that must be faced by all three services on equipment, capabilities and priorities for the UK's Armed Forces.
However, the long-running campaign that the new professional head of the British Army inherits in Afghanistan is likely to provide some of the greatest of his immediate challenges.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8225884.stm
 
Brown rocked as aide quits over war

Former army officer resigns from Government with savage attack on conduct of conflict in Afghanistan
The British Government's strategy in Afghanistan was thrown into crisis last night after the Defence Secretary's right-hand man resigned in protest about the handling of the war.
Eric Joyce, a former major in the Black Watch, announced that he was standing down as the parliamentary private secretary to Bob Ainsworth. He attacked the treatment of UK forces and protested that Nato allies were doing "far too little", leaving British troops to shoulder more of the strain of combat.
Mr Joyce, who had been regarded as an ultra-loyalist Labour MP, said he could no longer justify the growing death toll in Afghanistan by arguing that the war would prevent terrorism in Britain.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brown-rocked-as-aide-quits-over-war-1781461.html
 
BOMB BUSTERS


http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/125348/Bomb-busters


British special forces have destroyed 500 roadside devices

Sunday September 6,2009
By Stuart Winter

BRITISH Special Forces have dealt a heavy blow to Taliban terrorists responsible for the cowardly roadside bombing campaign against our troops in Afghanistan.

Royal Marines from the Special Boat Service – motto By Strength and Guile – have destroyed 500 of the home-made devices and killed 21 insurgents in an attack on a Taliban bomb factory in an old hill fort.
Among the cache of weapons seized were more than 100 bombs already packed into plastic bags and buckets and primed for use against British soldiers in Helmand province.
The operation, carried out late last month, is being hailed as one of the most brilliantly executed combat offensives in the long war on terror. It has drawn praise from Nato commander General Stanley McChrystal, a former US special forces soldier, who has sent a personal message to the SBS congratulating them on their success.
The SBS has played a vital covert role in the war against Al Qaeda since the early days of the conflict in Afghanistan.
Alongside the more famous Special Air Service, it is believed to have led most of the dangerous operations in the heart of Taliban bandit country, including the plan to snare Osama Bin Laden in the Tora Bora cave complex.
SBS fighting skills are honed for coastal or ocean operations but their training in hand-to-hand combat and high-altitude parachuting has made them equally effective in the arid countryside of Helmand.
Dusty hill forts, some built by the British more than a century ago, still decorate the landscape and it was from one crumbling ruin that Taliban commanders have been directing terror strikes in recent months.
The remote fort, protected by natural rock formations and thought to be long deserted, was pinpointed as a Taliban stronghold from intelligence gleaned from prisoners.


Initially, SBS commanders felt they could be walking into a trap. But a 150-strong team made up of the SBS and British paratroopers from the Special Forces Support Group, along with elite Afghan troops, stormed the fort with deadly effect.
Landing in RAF Chinook helicopters, the combined force used the cover of the Helmand river to advance on their target before using diversionary tactics to confuse the Taliban defenders. By the time the vanguard of 60 SBS men had stormed the ramparts and seized the fort, 21 enemy lay dead. Apache helicopter gunships and RAF Harriers also played a part in the fighting.
A senior SBS source said the destruction of the arsenal was a major blow to the enemy, which would slow them down for weeks, if not months, and will mean the Taliban having to increase efforts to bring in more supplies from Pakistan.
He said: “Be under no illusion, this was a major find, the biggest across Afghanistan, but while we gave the bad guys a bloody nose and messed up their supply chain it will be only a matter of time before they get more resources.
“If we had more operators on the ground we would stand a better chance of crippling their operation, but someone needs to make a decision that we are here to win. At the moment we are doing what we can but we are a very small force.”
Taliban leaders know only too well the effectiveness of British covert troops, who have been conducting so-called “trigger operations” deep in their heartlands wearing native dress and speaking local dialects.
The success in eradicating Taliban commanders has made them the insurgents’ most feared enemy, with one captured fighter telling interrogators: “The only soldiers we fear are the men who look like Afghans and come in the night looking for our special people.”
 
daftandbarmy said:
“The only soldiers we fear are the men who look like Afghans and come in the night looking for our special people.”

I wonder if they are hearing the sound of Clicky  Ba again......  Does the Wolf of Kabul walk those hills?

 
I wonder if we can get Her Makesty on to our Tac Vest issue...


Queen is ‘unhappy over equipment shortages’
Home Staff

The Queen has spoken to Gordon Brown personally to express her anger over equipment shortages suffered by troops in Afghanistan, it was reported last night.

According to Andrew Roberts, a leading historian with close links to the Royal Family, the Duke of Edinburgh and the Prince of Wales have also contacted the Prime Minister about the lack of armoured vehicles, helicopters and other vital equipment needed by British forces.

“The Queen, Prince Philip and Prince Charles are all furious with Gordon Brown over sub-standard equipment in Helmand, principally the underarmoured armoured cars and the lack of helicopters, and have been making their views known to him in no uncertain terms,” he said.

The historian claimed to have been told of the Queen’s anger by three sources — a minor royal, a serving general and a recent former Cabinet minister. “I have it from the horse’s mouth. They take their responsibilities as acting colonels-in-chief of various regiments very seriously,” he said.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article6824320.ece
 
Army makes safe 600lb border bomb

A 600lb bomb has been made safe by an Army bomb disposal team near Forkhill, County Armagh, on the border with the Republic of Ireland.
The device had a command wire running from where it was planted in Northern Ireland to a firing point across the border.
It is suspected that dissident republicans planted the bomb.
Police said that there could have been a "devastating outcome" and that the police were the targets of the bombers.
"The actions of terrorist criminals in planting this device in the Forkhill area put local people and police officers at significant risk," Chief Inspector Sam Cordner said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/8244138.stm
 
Family of soldier killed in raid to free journalist left 'heartbroken'

The family of Corporal John Harrison, the soldier killed during the rescue of a journalist kidnapped in Afghanistan, said they have been left "heartbroken" by his death.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/onthefrontline/6170034/Family-of-soldier-killed-in-raid-to-free-journalist-left-heartbroken.html

 
Well done chaps!

Operational Honours and Awards List: 11 September 2009
11 Sep 09

A total of 145 members of the Armed Forces have received honours and awards in the Operational Honours List dated today, 11 September 2009.

The full list, which recognises service on operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and national operations for the period 1 October 2008 to 30 April

http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/DefenceNews/HistoryAndHonour/OperationalHonoursAndAwardsList11September2009.htm
 
WHAT?

Army to force out wounded soldiers
HUNDREDS of British troops, including many injured on frontline duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, are to be eased out of the army in an efficiency drive being overseen by Kevan Jones, the veterans’ minister.

Jones defended the plan yesterday amid claims from senior military sources that it was designed to remove injured and sick “bed blockers” from the Ministry of Defence (MoD) payroll.

“I don’t want to see anybody forced out. But the question that needs to be asked is this: for some people is it in their interests to actually stay in the armed forces? In some cases I don’t think it is,” Jones said.

The plan, due to be announced this autumn, is targeting between 5,000 and 6,000 service personnel who have been identified as medically unfit but are still on the payroll.

Jones said he was working with General Sir David Richards, new chief of the general staff, to free spaces in the army so they are available for those who are fully fit for duties.

A senior officer in the personnel department said: “Up to now it has usually been possible to find odd jobs for these people. Now they are blocking the recruitment of young, fit soldiers and have to be medically discharged because no extra money can be found to pay them.”

The MoD said yesterday that soldiers injured in combat receive compensation and a pension when they leave. They are also given a maximum £6,000 for three years to spend on training and rehabilitation.

Military figures say these sums are paltry. They fear a cash-strapped MoD will not be able to provide sufficient funds to compensate soldiers for the loss of army pay and benefits.

Colonel Bob Stewart, chairman of Action for Armed Forces, which represents wounded junior ranks after they leave the military, said: “My concern is that this must be properly funded. I fully endorse this scheme if they really do give proper support for [the] long-term injured when they leave ... at the moment it’s abysmal.”

Lance-Bombardier Ben Parkinson, 25, lost his legs and suffered brain damage in a Taliban bomb blast in 2006. He is still in the army and his regiment says a job will be made available for him when he is ready.

His mother, Diane Dernie, said: “These men have done enough to guarantee that if they want to stay and see out their career in the army then that should be open to them. These lads go in as very young men, it’s all they want.”

The MoD admitted last week that 14.6% of the armed forces — 25,400 of the 174,000 service personnel — are unfit for combat duties.

Jones insisted that the move, part of the Welfare Pathway programme, was focused on “looking after people and giving them good opportunities” after they leave the army.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6832363.ece
 
Bill Wolfe's wife... not to be messed with, especially by mincing Guardsmen!

Karate woman knocked out Coldstream Guardsman with one punch in row over soldiers pretending to be gay

A woman martial arts expert knocked out a Coldstream Guardsman and attacked another squaddie's wife at an Army Christmas ball in a row over soldiers pretending to be gay.

Ashley Wolfe, who is 5ft 3ins and was wearing a floor-length red satin dress, assaulted Lance Sergeant Michael Fallows at a party for Sergeants, officers and their wives at Woolwich Barracks in south east London. 

The 24-year-old Canadian flew into a rage when she saw soldiers 'kissing' and 'grinding' on the dancefloor.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1213562/Petite-blonde-knocks-Coldstream-Guard-single-punch-pretending-gay-army-dinner-dance.html#ixzz0RC9VkaV0
 
daftandbarmy said:
Bill Wolfe's wife... not to be messed with, especially by mincing Guardsmen!

Isn't that redundant?

And I can just imagine the ribbing the Coldstream Guards will be taking for the next, oh, generation or so: the unit that was bested by a 5' 3" woman...
 
Outstanding... I'm changing my will tomorrow: fishnets all round

Funeral dress: best friend keeps promise to Private Kevin Elliott

It was a promise neither man would have wanted to keep. Yesterday the funeral of a Black Watch soldier killed in Afghanistan took a bizarre turn when his best friend arrived in a bright green dress and pink leg warmers to honour a pact that the two of them had made.

Private Kevin Elliott and his friend, Barry Delaney, had agreed that whoever survived the other should wear a dress to the dead man’s funeral. Mr Delaney duly fulfilled the pledge as a tribute to Private Elliott, who was killed aged 24 while on foot patrol in the southern province of Helmand on August 31.

Mr Delaney wept on his knees at the graveside in Dundee as shots were fired during the military funeral. His dress plans are believed to have been known about in advance by other mourners.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article6836190.ece
 
daftandbarmy said:
Outstanding... I'm changing my will tomorrow: fishnets all round

Funeral dress: best friend keeps promise to Private Kevin Elliott

It was a promise neither man would have wanted to keep. Yesterday the funeral of a Black Watch soldier killed in Afghanistan took a bizarre turn when his best friend arrived in a bright green dress and pink leg warmers to honour a pact that the two of them had made.

Private Kevin Elliott and his friend, Barry Delaney, had agreed that whoever survived the other should wear a dress to the dead man’s funeral. Mr Delaney duly fulfilled the pledge as a tribute to Private Elliott, who was killed aged 24 while on foot patrol in the southern province of Helmand on August 31.

Mr Delaney wept on his knees at the graveside in Dundee as shots were fired during the military funeral. His dress plans are believed to have been known about in advance by other mourners.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article6836190.ece

Good thing Mrs Wolfe has left the UK, she might not have understood this.

daftandbarmy said:
That pack of raving walts should be... they're next!

Yes would you believe I recently discovered one there so delusional he claims to be a para, a marine and a Canadian.  8)
 
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