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British Military Current Events

Soldiers honoured for bravery in Afghanistan

Medals awarded to more than 100 service personnel for their actions during the war

A soldier who has cleared twice as many roadside bombs as any other bomb disposal specialist in history is among more than 100 service personnel honoured for bravery in Afghanistan.

Sgt Maj Karl Ley, from Sheffield, is awarded the George Medal for making safe 139 improvised explosive devices (IEDs) planted by Taliban-led insurgents. His citation praises his "sheer determination, guile and awesome bravery". On one operation he defused 42 IEDs within 72 hours.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/sep/24/soldiers-honoured-bravery-afghanistan-medals
 
Tributes paid to recently married soldier killed in Afghanistan

A recently married soldier killed by a suicide bomber in southern Afghanistan was ''everything that the man who killed him was not'', his comrades said.

The 22-year-old, who was raised in a Nepalese hill town, was only recently married to his wife, Permila, and earned himself the nickname ''netboy'' for time he spent contacting her on the internet at night.



http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/8041299/Tributes-paid-to-recently-married-soldier-killed-in-Afghanistan.html
 
daftandbarmy said:
Sgt Maj Karl Ley, from Sheffield, is awarded the George Medal for making safe 139 improvised explosive devices (IEDs) planted by Taliban-led insurgents. His citation praises his "sheer determination, guile and awesome bravery". On one operation he defused 42 IEDs within 72 hours.

Well Done ! :salute:
The George Medal

an interesting note is the following:

[The medal is primarily a civilian award; however The George Medal may be awarded to military personnel for gallant conduct which is not in the face of the enemy. As the Warrant states:

The Medal is intended primarily for civilians and award in Our military services is to be confined to actions for which purely military Honours are not normally granted.]

Would that make it a possible medal for domestic operations where warranted ?
 
Two police officers were injured after a car bomb exploded in Londonderry on Monday night.

The Real IRA has admitted responsibility for the device which was left close to the Ulster Bank on the Culmore Road.

The police said the bomb was more than 200lb, bigger than the car bomb attack on the city in August.

The officers received neck and ear injuries when they were knocked to the ground.

The details were revealed by the police commander for the area, Chief Superintendent Stephen Martin, at a news conference on Tuesday.

He said that police believe the Ulster Bank and the local hotel were not the intended targets and that the bomb may have been left because of a police presence in the area.

He also confirmed that up to 200 people were in the hotel when the warning was received.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-11479594
 
'Mothball' huge chunks of the Army, says top Parliamentary adviser

Thousands of troops should be forced into the reserves and hundreds of weapons mothballed for Britain to make defence savings, an influential report written by a senior Parliamentary adviser has said.

Thousands of troops should be forced into the reserves and hundreds of weapons mothballed for Britain to make defence savings, an influential report written by a senior Parliamentary adviser has said.
Because there is “no silver bullet” to make efficiency savings in the MoD Britain should adopt a radical strategy based on the premise that the chances of an attack from another state are very slim, according to Prof David Kirkpatrick’s report.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/defence/8050940/Mothball-huge-chunks-of-the-Army-says-top-Parliamentary-adviser.html
 
What huge chunks would they mothball? Seriously the British army and the royal marines have probably seen more operational tempo than any other service! I think mothballing more fighter jets and and extra navy ships would be more ideal.
 
....The report from Prof Kirkpatrick admits the move would reduce Britain’s ability “to resist a largescale surprise attack by a rival nation” but this was considered “extremely unlikely within the next decade at least”.

If the "surprise attack" were considered "likely" would it still be a "surprise attack"?

And how much wood could a woodchuck chuck?

I do like think tanks.... you get what you pay for.
 
I find it odd that a nation of 60 million, on a small island located in such a strategic part of the world and with such far flung interests, continues to angst over whether or not it should maintain a large and viable military. There are always better ways to do things, but you can't do much on the world stage these days if you mothball most of your combat power.
 
Combat Stress appeal: David Cameron says helping veterans with PTSD is a "priority"

David Cameron, the Prime Minister, has met veterans suffering the mental scars of battle and said helping them was a “priority”.

http://forums.army.ca/forums/index.php?action=post;topic=64325.1125;num_replies=1127

 
If I am not mistaken, there is not too many places in England where armoured units can conduct live fire maneouvre training? I am betting Suffield stays. Maybe ditching their Germany forces would be more ideal?

Than again, my crystal ball is pretty foggy on this issue.
 
Not too many places in the UK to conduct parachute training either, it would seem:

RAF 'grounding SAS’ over parachute training

Covert SAS missions are under threat of being cut back after a dispute with the RAF that has led to a drastic drop in the number of troopers trained to parachute.

Officers are furious that only a few SAS recruits are gaining their wings and have accused the RAF of “taking the 'Air’ out of Special Air Service”. They are threatening to move their training permanently to America.

In the past 18 months, approximately 90 new SAS troopers have failed to pass a complex parachute course due in part to Britain’s poor weather and a lack of aircraft. Meanwhile, the RAF Falcons, the freefall parachute display team, are about to start a six-week selection course in Arizona, America.

The next four-week special forces parachute course is in November, when — the SAS says — the RAF ought to know that the weather is likely to be unfavourable.

“The RAF are going out of their way to get their display team trained up but when it comes round to sending Hereford [the SAS] out they say they cannot afford to do it in the US,” said a special forces source.

“All the RAF Falcons do is just drop into football stadiums. What this policy is doing is putting operational capabilities below that of their display team.

“It’s an extravagance, not a necessity.”

The lack of parachute-trained soldiers is beginning to have an impact on operations — the SAS is increasingly using a technique developed in Baghdad in which troopers jump from a static line BT80 parachute from above 12,000ft to land silently at night next to a target’s home.

The tactic is said to have been used by the SAS in Helmand.

To pass the parachute course at Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire, SAS soldiers are required to complete five jumps on a low-level parachute, 10 on a square parachute and eight on a BT80.

“The Blades [SAS troopers] need to qualify for operational reasons,” said an Army source.

They are also losing the extra £5 a day paid to those qualified to parachute. Some troopers are serving for two years without being qualified.

In addition, more than 100 soldiers from 18 Signals Regiment, who provide communications for the SAS on operations, have not completed their jumps course over the past two years.

The SAS is now threatening to take its soldiers to qualify in Fort Bragg, America, and could also look at courses in South Africa or Oman.

A senior officer in the Parachute Regiment claimed: “The RAF retains an inordinate amount of control over military parachuting and have this strange idea that the Falcons take priority learning freefall, which is not the type of parachuting used on today’s operations.”

An RAF spokesman said: “Training for the RAF Falcons does not impact on Forces parachute training.”
 
Former SAS officer says rescue missions are always dangerous

Rescue missions are always fraught with danger, not just for the special forces but also for the hostage, and success can never be guaranteed.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/8052952/Former-SAS-officer-says-rescue-missions-are-always-dangerous.html
 
Hundreds of Northern Ireland 'terrorists' allege police torture

Hundreds of men and women found guilty of terrorism offences in Northern Ireland during the Troubles are attempting to have their cases reopened, alleging that the confessions that led to their convictions were beaten out of them by police.

The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC), the body that investigates alleged miscarriages, has received applications from more than 200 people who argue that they fell victim to miscarriages of justice at the province's non-jury courts.

So far the court of appeal in Belfast has heard 26 cases referred by the commission, and has overturned convictions in 24 of those. Solicitors in Belfast and Derry say they believe many more people will be applying to the commission in the near future.

As the appeals mount, a number of men who served as detectives with the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) have told the Guardian how senior officers encouraged the systematic mistreatment of suspects at Castlereagh interrogation centre in east Belfast, and elsewhere, after the establishment of the Diplock courts in 1973.

They say they took full advantage of the vague wording of emergency legislation in Northern Ireland which allowed the courts to admit confessions as evidence, providing there was no evidence they had been obtained through the use of torture, or inhuman or degrading treatment. One retired detective commented: "Do repeated slaps around the face amount to torture? What about an occasional kick in the balls?"

In a sign that the courts are now accepting that such tactics were an integral part of policing during the Troubles, a number of people who pleaded guilty on legal advice after signing so-called confessions have succeeded in having their convictions overturned.

In addition to the 26 cases heard by the court of appeal, a further seven cases are waiting to be heard, and 80-odd are still being considered by the CCRC. These include 47 people who were juveniles at the time of their conviction.

A number of those whose convictions have been overturned have been able to establish that there were grounds to suspect that the police officers who they alleged were responsible for their own mistreatment had beaten other suspected paramilitaries.

Two men from Belfast, who were arrested in 1976 as boys aged 14 and 16, served nine years in jail after being advised to plead guilty to the murder of a Catholic accountant who was shot dead in his bed. They were able to show that their confessions did not fit with the crime scene, or the pathologist's report on the victim's injuries, or with statements by witnesses who heard the shots.
Another man, from Derry, confessed to a series of terrorism offences after being arrested in 1978 at the age of 16 for questioning about the murder of an RUC officer, and says he was then instructed by his lawyer to plead guilty. He has been able to show that the court ignored alibi evidence that proved he was 75 miles away inside a secure children's home at the time that most of the crimes were committed. He had also confessed to an attempted hijacking which, a subsequent police reported showed, had never taken place.

At this man's appeal, the court heard that after he had been sentenced to a period of borstal training his lawyer advised him against lodging an appeal on the grounds that he had received a "good result".

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/oct/11/northern-ireland-terrorists-miscarriages-justice
 
Air base evacuated after live missile arrives in post

A military airbase had to be evacuated after engineers in Afghanistan posted a live missile back to Britain.
Technicians based at Camp Bastion failed to spot the warhead in a launcher on at least four occasions.

The live missile was posted 3,500 miles using regular military mail back to Wattisham airfield, in Suffolk, without any warnings of its deadly contents. 

It was only when workers at the airbase opened the package that they discovered the 70mm Flechette rocket and evacuated the hanger.

The rocket, fired by Apache attack helicopters, splits into hundreds of razor sharp metal pieces on impact.
Military chiefs have admitted the blunder was ''wholly avoidable and potentially dangerous'' and blamed staff at Camp Bastion for taking ''short-cuts''.

Findings of an investigation released following a Freedom of Information request revealed engineers failed to spot the missile on four occasions.

A military report said: ''It is unfeasible to imagine that a rocket could have been left in the launcher following a download in accordance with the relevant procedures.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/defence/8058755/Air-base-evacuated-after-live-missile-arrives-in-post.html
 
David Cameron appoints personal military adviser

David Cameron has become the first prime minister since Sir Winston Churchill to appoint a personal military adviser, sparking new claims of a rift with Liam Fox.

No 10 said the appointment of Col Jim Morris of the Royal Marines reflected Mr Cameron’s personal commitment to defence during the war in Afghanistan.

But, coming amid heated talks over next week’s defence cuts, Mr Cameron’s move sparked claims that he has lost faith in Dr Fox, the Defence Secretary, and wants to take personal responsibility for defence.

Col Morris, a former commanding officer of 45 Commando, will work in Mr Cameron’s private office and work with General Sir David Richards, the Chief of the Defence Staff.

Mr Cameron said the appointment “reflects the very high priority I attach to ensuring the needs of the Armed Forces are heard right at the centre of Government.”

In recent years, only defence ministers have had military assistants, senior officers who serve on their personal staff, advising on Armed Forces issues and sometimes acting on their behalf.

The appointment came shortly after No 10 confirmed that Mr Cameron – and not Dr Fox – will present next week’s defence review to Parliament.

Labour said Mr Cameron “humiliated” Liam Fox by taking personal control of the defence review. Government sources dismissed the claim.

Mr Cameron and Dr Fox have had several disagreements since entering Government. Mr Cameron has admitted he was unhappy when Dr Fox wrote to him complaining about “draconian” cuts in defence, in a letter leaked to the Daily Telegraph.
Jim Murphy, the shadow defence secretary, said the Prime Minister was undermining his defence secretary and trying to control the agenda on defence.

He said: “Everyone knows that Liam Fox is deeply unhappy about this spending review masquerading as a defence review, and now he has been relieved of his duty.”

Aides to Mr Cameron and Dr Fox said that two men are work well together and insisted Dr Fox was happy in his post.
In a statement, Dr Fox described the arrival of Col Morris in No 10 as “an excellent appointment”.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/defence/8062516/David-Cameron-appoints-personal-military-adviser.html
 
Quote
"and now he has been relieved of his duty.”

Sounds pretty familiar  ::)
It must be some sort of new government policy going around, if anybody balks at the system....
Fire them.

 
"Hundreds of Northern Ireland 'terrorists' allege police torture"

Wouldn't it be police that would be directed to the torture? Once captured i thought IRA where handed to the RUC.
 
canada94 said:
"Hundreds of Northern Ireland 'terrorists' allege police torture"

Wouldn't it be police that would be directed to the torture? Once captured i thought IRA where handed to the RUC.

Yep, the RUC (or PSNI as they're called) arrested and handled the prisoners, then off some of them went to Castlereagh, the detention centre where alot of the interrogations were carried out by other RUC officers/detectives.  The reality is that most of these people were definitely 'bad guys', even if only 16 years old. The problem is the methods used to extract confessions, which were very unsophisticated in 'the bad old days', especially when timely info meant the difference between another 1000lb bomb going off in a crowded shopping district, or not.

Later on the police got better, but it's not a skill they had from the get go, which is why I think alot of these complaints are from the 70s and early 80s.

Oh, and you can bet that these complaints weren't lodged by concerned citizens on their own inititaive. The IRA have people who run around to make sure that these complaints get lodged officially, to clog up the courts etc, and it looks like they've been very busy lately!

Personally, I always thought that the RUC did a good job of administering justice from where the rioter was arrested to the back of the Paddy Wagon, but that's just me.  ;D
 
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