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British Military Current Events

Martin McGuiness was ‘probably armed with a Thompson Sub-machine gun’ though… that’s Ok then. Glass half full, any soldiers testifying were granted immunity from prosecution, and if charged, will only be charged with purgery... if you can say that's a good thing!


Bloody Sunday: Soldiers may face prosecution over 'unjustifiable' killings

Prosecutors in Northern Ireland are considering whether to bring charges against British soldiers involved in the Bloody Sunday killings after a damning report by a senior judge concluded the shooting dead of 14 people in Derry 38 years ago was "unjustified and unjustifiable".

David Cameron issued the first formal apology on behalf of the British state as he announced the publication of Lord Saville's long-awaited report into the day that became the catalyst for 30 years of violent conflict in Northern Ireland.



On the actions of Martin McGuiness, now the deputy first minister of Northern Ireland, Saville said that he "was probably armed with a Thompson sub-machine gun" but said that there was no evidence he fired the weapon and that this provided no justification for the soldiers opening fire.



http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/jun/15/bloodysunday-northernireland
 
The following article from The Guardian is reproduced under the Fair Comment provisions of the Copyright Act.
I did a quick staff check and by my math, the Canadian rate over the 4.5 years of combat operations is 11.7%. (4.5 years, 147 deaths and 2800 strong contingent.)


Death rate of UK soldiers in Afghanistan 'four times higher' than US

Rate is also twice that which qualifies as 'major conflict', according to analysis by Medical Research Council

The Guardian
Mark Townsend
Sunday 20 June 2010


The rate at which British soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan is almost four times that of their US counterparts, and double the rate which is officially classified as "major combat".

Analysis by the Medical Research Council's biostatistics unit at the University of Cambridge also found that the death rate of UK troops is twice that of 2006, when they were described as being involved in the fiercest fighting since their involvement in Korea 50 years ago.

The researchers said the "UK could expect at least as many military fatalities in 10 weeks in Afghanistan as in 20 weeks in 2006".

The official classification of "major combat" is a killing rate of six per 1,000 personnel years. For the 12 months up to May, the killing rate for British troops in Afghanistan stood at 13.

During February and May, the death rate of UK military personnel reached 9.9 per 1,000 personnel years compared with 2.7 for US forces in Afghanistan.

During the four previous months, the UK rate reached 12 compared with 3.9 for the US and between May and October last year it peaked at 17.3, twice the figure of 8.4 experienced by American forces during the period.

Of the 299 British soldiers killed during the Afghanistan campaign so far, 265 were killed in action, with the remainder victim to accidents, friendly fire or suicide. There has been a spike in the number of British soldiers killed by gunfire as opposed to roadside bombs, the asymmetric tactics utilised with deadly effect by the Taliban throughout last year. During 2009, fewer than one in five soldiers was killed by small-arms fire.

The average age of British casualties is 22. Two hundred soldiers have been killed in their twenties and 31 teenagers are among the death toll.

Twenty-six of the 299 British casualties are officer class and one female soldier has died. Geographically, they are from a fairly even spread throughout the UK.

 
Bloody Sunday paratroopers attack Saville report as 'fundamentally flawed'

Paratroopers from the battalion involved in Bloody Sunday have attacked the Saville inquiry as “fundamentally flawed” with “cherry-picked evidence”.

By Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent
Published: 7:30AM BST 21 Jun 2010

In an extraordinary fight back against the inquiry’s finding that the shooting of 14 unarmed civilians was “unjustifiable” the Paras accused Lord Saville of coming to “subjective and inaccurate conclusions”.

In a letter passed to The Daily Telegraph on behalf of 35 former members of 1st Bn The Parachute Regiment present on Bloody Sunday they wanted it to be known “that we have no desire that the report’s finding be now buried and forgotten”.



http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/northernireland/7841890/Bloody-Sunday-paratroopers-attack-Saville-report-as-fundamentally-flawed.html

 
16 Air Asslt Bde celebrates the 70th Anniversary of Airborne Forces on 24 July at Merville Barracks Colchester

See poster attached.

Formal events start with a parade at 1145 hrs and culminate with Beating Retreat at 1700 hrs. Afternoon activities will include unit equipment stands, spitfire and freefall displays, museum and cinema displays, unveiling of the new Dakota gate guardian, tug –o-war, pipes and drums, an Aston Martin and Lagonda array and a children’s fairground. Food and beer tents will be open throughout the day. The event is not open to the general public as it is inside the wire, but is open to all former Airborne Forces and families. Entry is free, but by ticket only, obtainable through your local PRA, RHQ PARA (rhq@parachute-regiment.com) or from HQ 16 Air Asslt Bde (dominic.lethbridge759@mod.uk ). Bid now if you haven’t already done so.

An Officers’ Mess cocktail party will follow the Beating Retreat, tickets for this cost £10 a head (through HQ 16 Air Asslt Bde or RHQ PARA).  Alternative entertainment in the shape of the Parachute Regiment Informal band will be available adjacent to the main beer tent. 

 
I'm with stupid

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/scotland/north_east_orkney_and_shetland/10412257.stm
 
Insert appropriate silly comment about the Royal Horse Artillery here _____________________________

Manure helps power new army barracks
Mon Jul 12, 1:26 PM

LONDON (Reuters) - Bio-fuel pellets made from horse manure will help power the new barracks of the Royal Horse Artillery, the Ministry of Defense announced.

Recycled waste and bedding from the regiment's 111 horses will provide enough low-carbon energy to cover the heating and lighting requirements of the ceremonial unit's new base in Woolwich, southeast London.

The MoD said the eco-friendly move was in line with the government's sustainable development agenda and just one of several steps being taken to promote sustainability in the mounted regiment's future home.

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/reuters/100712/odds/odd_us_britain_manure_odd

 
Renegade Afghan kills three British soldiers

Murder of troops, including one senior officer, inside Helmand patrol base deals severe blow to government's exit strategy
The government's Afghanistan exit strategy suffered a severe setback yesterday after three British troops, including a senior army officer, were murdered by an Afghan colleague inside a patrol base in Helmand province.

The soldiers, from the Gurkha Rifles, were killed by a rogue member of the Afghan national army in a "suspected premeditated attack", the Ministry of Defence said. One was a company commander in charge of a British base in Helmand, another was a British-born junior officer and the third a Nepalese Gurkha. The Afghan, who fled the scene, is understood to have shot one man in his bed and killed the other two by firing a rocket-propelled grenade into a control room.

The killings are the latest blow to British efforts to train the Afghan security forces, which is key to government plans to withdraw UK troops by 2015 and raises questions about the extent of Taliban infiltration of the Afghan army.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/jul/13/renegade-afghan-kills-three-british-soldiers
 
This account of the same incident appears in the Daily Telegraph and is reproduced under the Fair Comment provisions of the Copyright Act.

Rogue Afghan soldier murdered senior army officer in his sleep
A senior British Army officer murdered in his sleeping quarters was among the three victims of a rogue Afghan soldier.


By James Kirkup and Thomas Harding
Published: 10:20PM BST 13 Jul 2010

The officer, a company commander in charge of a British base in Afghanistan's Helmand province, was shot dead in the early hours.

Two members of the Royal Gurkha Rifles, one a British-born junior officer and the other a Nepalese Gurkha, were also killed by the Afghan, who fired a machinegun and a rocket-propelled grenade.

The killings happened at a British patrol base in Nahr-e Saraj, just eight months after five British soldiers were shot dead and several others seriously wounded by an Afghan police officer, also in Helmand province.

The Afghan soldier who carried out the latest attack fled the base and was being hunted last night by British units including the Special Forces.

A British general said the killer, a senior non-commissioned officer holding the rank of sergeant or higher, may have been “turned” by the Taliban.

Last night the Taliban claimed the Afghan soldier had joined its insurgency.

In a message on its website, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, the Afghan Taliban spokesman, said that after opening fire on the sleeping servicemen the rogue soldier fled to a location protected by the Taliban.

The incident has raised fresh concerns about the Western strategy for Afghanistan, which is based on training and enlarging the Afghan National Army until its members can secure the country themselves.

Describing the killings as “appalling”, David Cameron insisted that the incident would not alter Britain’s approach or weaken the Government’s resolve.

But one defence expert said that the “betrayal of trust” could undermine British support for the war, which has now lasted nearly nine years and resulted in 317 British deaths.

The incident has also highlighted doubts about the reliability of the Afghan security forces, whose members have carried out at least three attacks on British forces in recent years.

The killings began at 2.40am when the Afghan soldier entered the patrol base commander’s sleeping quarters and opened fire with a PKM medium machinegun.

He then fired an RPG at a shipping container used as the operations room for the base. The blast killed two men and injured four more. The killer then fled from the base, which is less than a mile from known Taliban compounds.

The company commander is the highest-ranking soldier to be killed in the conflict since Lt Col Rupert Thorneloe was the victim of a roadside bomb in July last year.

Condemning the latest killings, Mr Cameron said: “We must not let this change our strategy of building up the army, building up the government of Afghanistan.

“The insurgents want us to change our approach, they want us to abandon our strategy, they want us to lose faith in the Afghan National Army. That would not be the right approach.”

Mr Cameron, who has said he wants most British troops out of Afghanistan by 2015, said that the killer was a “rogue element” and “not typical” of the Afghan forces.

Lt Gen Nick Parker, the deputy commander of Nato forces in Afghanistan, said conclusions about the killer’s motives and affiliations would have to wait until the conclusion of a full investigation.

He said: “I hope that we find that this is a maverick who was behaving disgracefully, despicably, probably turned

in some way by the Taliban. I hope that we find that this is not symptomatic of the ANA.”

Military investigators are understood to be looking at the possibility that the killer’s family were kidnapped by insurgents who forced him to carry out the attack.

Another possibility is that the killer had a grudge against the British or the company commander.

Lt Col James Carr-Smith, a spokesman for British forces in Helmand, said the incident was not symptomatic of deeper problems with the ANA.

He said: “We believe these were the actions of a lone individual who has betrayed his Isaf and Afghan comrades.

“His whereabouts are currently unknown but we are making strenuous efforts to find him. He should know that his actions will not deter us from our task and we will continue to work closely with our Afghan friends to bring security to Helmand.”

Gen David Petraeus, the American overall commander of Nato forces in Afghanistan, also said the deaths must not put a strain on relations between Western troops and the Afghan forces they were training. “We have sacrificed greatly together and we must ensure the trust between our forces remains solid in order to defeat our common enemies,” he said.

But Prof Michael Clarke, the director of the Royal United Services Institute, warned that the latest killings could undermine British commitment to the Afghan deployment. He said: “The betrayal of trust has a very high symbolic value and the danger is that is corrosive of public opinion and public support for the mission. That genuinely worries senior commanders.

“The fact that he [the killer] was a senior NCO is a worry – he was not a raw recruit just out of basic training, he was a senior man, someone who was trusted and respected.”

One British Army source said: “It massively undermines our exit strategy. Without a functioning Afghan police and army there is no way we can begin reducing our forces.”

Questions have been raised about the loyalty of rank-and-file ANA soldiers, who receive only two months of basic training and often go absent without leave.

A Pentagon audit last month found that Nato commanders had exaggerated the quality of many ANA units.

 
Audio slideshow: A Tour of Duty 

In 2007, former Grenadier Guards officer, Capt Alexander Allan, completed a six-month deployment to Helmand province in Afghanistan - photographing many of his experiences while he was there.

The remarkable images, offering a unique insight into life on patrol and in camp, have now been published in a book - Afghanistan: A Tour of Duty - with all profits going to The British Limbless Ex Servicemen Association.

Take a look at Capt Allan's photographs, as he describes what it was like on the front line.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8518479.stm
 
Military top brass fury at plans to cut the Forces by up to 30,000


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1296611/Military-brass-fury-plans-cut-Forces-30-000.html
 
UK soldiers use iPad app to train for Afghan operations

For the first time, UK troops are using a special app developed for the iPad to learn how to handle a fire mission.
That's when artillery is being fired at the enemy from several miles away.

In early trials at the Royal School of Artillery in Wiltshire, troops have learned the jargon and procedures more quickly than before, when they were sat listening to lessons from instructors.

It's hoped smartphone and tablet technology could be used to speed up training across the army.

He told Newsbeat how it works. He said: "I'd be at the HQ - the troops on the ground would call me for fire support and they'd give me the target location and a description of the target.

If we can use this sort of technology, we can probably shorten the amount of training and that is pretty key nowadays when people are so committed to operations in Afghanistan

"We'd use all of that information to come up with a solution.

"This has been designed to let us practise, so that when we get out there into theatre we're a lot slicker.

"It makes it more fun instead of being sat in a classroom looking at a presentation being given information.

"If you're on a course you can take this back to the block and practise with it, even have little competitions with it."

Soldiers back at the CP (command post) have to learn how to communicate with those on the front line, to make sure the right weapons are fired, at the right time and at the right target.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/10813964
 
Marine Calvert, a member of the same Commando unit as Marine Adam Brown who was killed on Sunday, gives a bitter and disarmingly frank view of the front line.

From his remote and exposed operating base, Marine Calvert, of Charlie Company, 40 Commando Royal Marines, fights only for survival and thinks not of victory but only of going home to his girlfriend and young daughter.

Many who have served in Afghanistan would agree with his bitter feelings about the nearly decade-long war on the dusty lanes and sun-baked fields of Sangin in Helmand Province.
The Marine, who is half way through his second tour of duty in the country, says his view is shared by many in his troop which is made up of men from across the regiment – all of whom have seen friends lose their lives.

Only two weeks after this interview, Marine Adam Brown, of Alpha Company, 40 Commando Royal Marines, died in an explosion while on foot patrol in the Sangin District of Helmand province on Sunday

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newsvideo/7922971/Frontline-troops-in-Afghanistan-just-want-to-go-home.html
 
"Unprecedented cuts being proposed at the Ministry of Defence"

RAF to shrink to World War One levels - Telegraph

In the most significant changes to Britain’s defences since the post-Suez review of 1957, ministers and officials plan to scrap large parts of the Armed Forces.

The Services will lose up to 16,000 personnel, hundreds of tanks, scores of fighter jets and half a dozen ships, under detailed proposals passed to The Daily Telegraph.

But the RAF will bear the brunt of the planned cuts. The Air Force will lose 7,000 airmen – almost one sixth of its total staff – and 295 aircraft. The cuts will leave the Force with fewer than 200 fighter planes for the first time since 1914. In addition, the Navy will lose two submarines, three amphibious ships and more than 100 senior officers, along with 2,000 sailors and marines.

The Army faces a 40 per cent cut to its fleet of 9,700 armoured vehicles and the loss of a 5,000-strong brigade of troops.

The Telegraph has also learnt that the “black hole” in MoD finances, caused by orders which have been made but cannot be paid for, is approaching £72  billion over the next decade – double the amount previously suggested.

While the Strategic Defence and Security Review is yet to be finalised, officials have drawn up a series of likely options to meet cuts of 10 to 20 per cent demanded by the Treasury.

By the end of this month the Defence Strategy Group, comprising ministers and military chiefs, will be presented with a number of recommendations that they will refine and pass to the National Security Council, chaired by the Prime Minister, in September.

In October, after agreement with the Treasury, an announcement will be made in Parliament on precisely what cuts the Forces face as part of the comprehensive spending review of Whitehall budgets.

If implemented, the cuts will mean that Britain will almost certainly depart the world stage as a major military power and become what military chiefs call a “medium-scale player”.

The proposed cuts – which are certain to face a critical reception from the public – are being considered without resolving the question of who pays for the Trident replacement. The MoD hopes that once voters realise the scale of the cuts to the Armed Forces, George Osborne, the Chancellor, may spare some parts of the military. The plans will lead to the RAF losing its status as the fifth biggest air force in the world.

The entire force of 120 GR4 Tornado fighter-bombers looks destined for the scrap heap to save £7.5 billion over the next five years. The Tornado was supposed to be in service until 2025, but with a major overhaul due in the next five years costing £10 million for each aircraft, it is now under threat.

The cut will mean job losses as RAF Lossiemouth and RAF Marham totalling almost 5,000 personnel.

Under the plans, the number of Eurofighter Typhoons is likely to be reduced further from 160 to 107 planes based at a single RAF airfield to save £1  billion. The entire fleet of 36 Hercules transport aircraft, the workhorse in Iraq and Afghanistan, is to be phased out and replaced by an order of 22 new A400M planes.

The £3.6 billion project for nine Nimrod MR4 reconnaissance aircraft is also vulnerable, along with a number of other surveillance planes.

The proposals include a swathe of cuts to the Army’s armoured regiments with the loss of Challenger 2 tanks, AS90 guns and Warrior armoured vehicles.

While the Army is likely to lose a few thousand soldiers in the coming year, reducing its numbers to about 100,000, it is braced to lose an entire brigade of about 5,000 when combat troops withdraw from Afghanistan in 2015. It is understood that 7 Armoured Brigade or 20 Armoured Brigade, both based in Germany, are the most vulnerable.

Infantry battalions will be increased from about 600 troops to 750 as a lesson from Afghanistan has been the loss of combat effectiveness through leave and casualties, according to the plans.

The Royal Marines also face coming under direct Army control from Navy command and the possibility of being grouped into a “super elite” unit alongside two Parachute Regiment battalions.

A senior Whitehall source said: “These are not Tory cuts, these are Labour cuts as a result of their irresponsible overspending. However, a lot of this comes down to how much political appetite there is to do this.”

An MoD spokesman said: “The Defence Secretary has made clear that tough decisions will need to be made but the complex process of a Strategic Defence and Security Review will be concluded in the autumn and speculation at this stage about its outcome is entirely unfounded.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/industry/defence/7931465/RAF-to-shrink-to-World-War-One-levels.html
 
Afghanistan: 'Don't get too close - if he goes up you'll go with him'

It is one of the army's most dangerous jobs – finding and defusing IEDs, the homemade bombs that have been used to deadly effect by the Taliban in Afghanistan. Stuart Webb talks to and photographs the men on the frontline

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/07/bomb-disposal-experts-afghanistan
 
Soldier saved by rosary - just like his great-grandfather

A soldier who stood on a landmine in Afghanistan may owe his life to a rosary - just as his great-grandfather did in the Second World War.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/7922172/Soldier-saved-by-rosary-just-like-his-great-grandfather.html
 
Taliban snipers who killed ten British soldiers die in air strike


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1305099/Taliban-snipers-killed-British-soldiers-die-air-strike.html
 
Irish terror groups target Conservative party conference in Birmingham

Irish republican dissident groups are targeting the Conservative party conference this autumn, raising fears of a repeat of the 1984 Brighton attack that nearly killed the then prime minister, Margaret Thatcher.

Sources in Northern Ireland said that the October conference in central Birmingham had emerged as the prize target on a hit list drawn up by resurgent republican paramilitaries. Patrick Mercer, ex-chairman of the Commons subcommittee on counter-terrorism, said former senior police and army intelligence officers had informed him that dissident splinter groups had discussed targeting David Cameron's first conference as prime minister.

He said: "They want to kill by the end of August in order to get themselves poised for whatever operations they can mount in September leading up to the Tory party conference in early October. There are doubts over whether they have the capability, but the aspiration is certainly there and West Midlands police would be crazy not to take the threat seriously." The West Midlands force confirmed it was aware of increased activity by dissident republicans and said its counter-terrorism unit was constantly assessing the threat ahead of the Conservative party conference.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/aug/22/irish-terror-threat-conservative-conference


 
"Disgusting" is the appropriate description for her.

Police hunt 'Britain's most disgusting woman'

Sun Aug 22, 1:49 AM
Agence-France Presse link

LONDON (AFP) - A hunt was on Sunday for the woman branded "Britain's most disgusting person" for urinating on a war memorial after she fled court following a public shaming by elderly veterans.

An arrest warrant is out for Wendy Lewis, 32, who was given a "guard of dishonour" by angry veterans when she appeared at Blackpool Magistrates Court.


She was caught on security cameras relieving herself on the seaside town's Cenotaph, before performing a sex act on a man nearby.


Lewis was found guilty of outraging public decency and was due to be sentenced Friday.


But after turning up 40 minutes late at court, she vanished before her case began.

Veterans wearing smart uniforms and campaign medals lined up outside to give her a slow handclap. They shouted "Disgusting!" at she went inside.

(...)

 
 
Would have to be a Sailor.  She is ugly enough to win "Pig of the Port".  :nod:
 
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