Monday, 15 March 2010

No Equipment, No Training, No Chance

By JOHN COLES
Published: The Sun 10/03/10

A CORONER slammed the Ministry of Defence over equipment shortages and inadequate training yesterday - as he ruled the first woman soldier to die in Afghanistan and three comrades were unlawfully killed.

Corporal Sarah Bryant, 26, of the Intelligence Corps, was chasing escaped Taliban prisoners in 2008 when a 100kg mine wrecked her Snatch Land Rover.

She died with SAS reservists Corporal Sean Reeve, 28, Lance Corporal Richard Larkin, 39, and Trooper Paul Stout, 31.

After a six-day inquest, Coroner David Masters demanded the MoD examine the Army's shortage of Ebex bomb detectors and armoured vehicles.

And he said: "There was an inadequacy of training for this unit.

Killed in action ... from left, Corporal Sean Robert Reeve, Trooper Paul Stout and Lance Corporal Richard Larkin

"The correct proportion of metal detectors must be reviewed. Snatch Land Rovers were not the preferred vehicle for the operation. There was significant disquiet about those vehicles being the only resource available."

The inquest in Trowbridge, Wilts, had been told by the commanding SAS officer, known as Colonel A, that he repeatedly asked for better-equipped WMIK Land Rovers but was declined.
At least 37 have died in vulnerable Snatch vehicles - dubbed "mobile coffins" - since 2005.

The Coroner pledged to investigate the supply and adequacy of its replacement, the Snatch Vixen.

The inquest heard a ditch where the mine was hidden was not properly searched with detectors. Only one soldier had been trained to use one.

Adam Wilson, solicitor for two of the families, said after the hearing: "We hope the MoD heeds the recommendations."

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/campaigns/our_boys/2886221/No-equipment-no-training-no-chance-coroners-devastating-verdict-on-MoD-after-Corporal-Sarah-Bryant-and-three-comrades-killed-in-Afghanistan.html#ixzz0hnmnXn8H

Posted by Michelle Nielsen

Sunday, 14 March 2010

Bikers pay respect

AROUND 15,000 bikers marked Mothers' Day yesterday with a spectacular mass ride through Britain's most patriotic town.

The remarkable display raised £75,000 for the Afghan Heroes charity, set up by a band of mothers who each lost their soldier sons last year.

And the parade through Wootton Bassett, Wilts was a huge roar of support for our frontline soldiers.

Locals have lined the market town's High Street more than 100 times as the bodies of our fallen heroes are repatriated to Britain through nearby RAF Lyneham.

Yesterday thousands turned out to cheer and watch the motorbike display as staggered groups of 2,000 riders passed through the town.

Some 10,000 bikers registered to take part in the event with each paying a £5 entry fee to the charity.

That number is thought to have risen to 15,000 on the day as word spread and riders arrived from all over Britain.

Denise Harris, one of the founders of Afghan Heroes, said she had received dozens of emails from front-line troops backing the event.

She said: "It boosts morale for them. They are so grateful to the general public for their support, and their kindness."

Biker Colin Ainsworth, 62, travelled from Derby on his BMW R1200 GS and said the ride was a chance to pay tribute to those making the "ultimate sacrifice."

The riding instructor said: "It's crucial we show our support for all our soldiers in Afghanistan.

"Today is also a chance to thank the people of Wootton Bassett because they attend the repatriations on behalf of everyone in the country.

"We can't all make it to the town when the coffins are paraded home and this is our way of thanking them for their support.

"All these bikes is quite an incredible sight - there's literally every motorbike you could imagine."

Matt Fairholme, 28, who rode up from Nottingham on a Suzuki Bandit 600, said: "Today is about supporting our boys and girls on the front-line and letting them no we appreciate their sacrifice."

The rally, which attracted motorcyclists from across north Wales, Derbyshire, Yorkshire and the south-east England, was the idea of biker Elizabeth Stevens, 18.

Elizabeth, a mechanics student at the Central Bedfordshire College, had only planned to ride through the town with a few friends.

She said: "Our local bike club was throwing around the idea of a bike run, so I decided to make a Facebook page, and it just took off."

The bikers came on a wide range of machines, including Vespas, Harley Davidsons and high-powered sports bikes.

They met at Hullavington Airfield, just off the M4 near Chippenham at 8am before proceeding to the A429, the B4042 and finally the A3102 to Wootton Bassett.

Wiltshire county councillor Dick Tonge said: "Such an event being organised in Wiltshire recognises the efforts of the people of Wiltshire in honouring the fallen servicemen and women during the repatriation services through Wootton Bassett.

"We worked closely with the police and organisers to ensure the route used by the bikers provides the least disruption possible and is safe for other motorists on the highway."



Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/2891819/BIkers-pay-their-respects.html?OTC-RSS#ixzz0iA8KqyT4

Saturday, 13 March 2010

Potential consumers to contact....

Gary Thompson's wife to climb Mount Kilimanjaro

Wednesday, September 30, 2009, 09:52

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THE wife of Nottingham soldier Gary Thompson, who was killed in Afghanistan last year, is set to climb Mount Kilimanjaro in his memory.

Jacqui Thompson, who was married to Gary for 14 years, is looking to raise funds for the RAF Benevolent Fund, which helped the family after his death.

Gary 51, a father-of-five from Sherwood, was killed in a roadside blast near Kandahar Airfield in southern Afghanistan in April 2008.

The Senior Aircraftman was part of a routine patrol 1.2 miles west of Kandahar Airfield when his vehicle was caught in an explosion.

Mount Kilimanjaro is one of the largest volcanoes in the world.

http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/news/Gary-Thompson-s-wife-climb-Mount-Kilimanjaro/article-1380150-detail/article.html

THE family of a Nottingham soldier who died in Afghanistan have been collecting supplies to send to his fellow soldiers.

Jackie Hill, the auntie of Lance Corporal Kieron Hill, spent Saturday collecting toiletries, food and other items to parcel up and send to soldiers serving in the war-torn country.

L/Cpl Hill, of the 2nd Battalion the Mercian Regiment, was on patrol near the town of Garmsir when he was caught up in an explosion.

The 20-year-old Forest fan, from Clifton, joined the Army when he was 16 and went on his first tour of Afghanistan in 2007 – just two days after his 18th birthday.

L/Cpl Hill was the older brother of 19-year-old Reds defender Aaron Mitchell, now a regular in Forest's reserve side.

http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/news/Family-fallen-Clifton-soldier-send-troop-parcels/article-1094887-detail/article.html

Posted by: Grace Vernon

Friday, 12 March 2010

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

Phil Packer


Published: The Sun 08/03/10
Posted by: Michelle Nielsen

Sunday, 7 March 2010

No Legs Hero: Ill go back to Battle Zone

By ALASTAIR TAYLOR
Published: The Sun 06 Mar 2010

BRAVE James Simpson wants to return to fight in Afghanistan - despite a bomb taking both his legs and part of a hand.

Lance Corporal James, 23, is already walking on prosthetic legs ahead of schedule.
And yesterday he told of his wish to rejoin his comrades on the front line. James, of Guiseley, West Yorks, said: "I love Afghanistan and I would go back tomorrow.

"I enjoy being a soldier. Just because of my injuries my life is not over. It's a new challenge. I am the same person. I lost my legs but I haven't lost my marbles."

James, who met Prince Harry during operations in Afghanistan but didn't recognise him, had a royal reunion at the England-Wales rugby match at Twickenham last month.

He was horrifically injured when a bomb exploded while on patrol last November. His life was saved by colleagues. But James then had to come to terms with losing his limbs and battle an infection because the bomb was smeared with human faeces by the Taliban.

The sniper for First Battalion Yorkshire Regiment had set himself the target of his 24th birthday in July to be walking again. He has also found love with long-standing friend Hannah Naughton, 23. Romance blossomed when she began visiting him during his recovery.

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/campaigns/our_boys/2880984/No-legs-hero-Ill-go-back-to-battle-zone.html#ixzz0hmtkHu0e

Posted by: Michelle Nielsen

Saturday, 6 March 2010

SAS build shrine for Hero Hounds


Posted by Michelle Nielsen

The Iraq Inquiry.. Brown: It wasn't me

By TOM NEWTON DUNN, Political Editor
Published: 06 Mar 2010

GORDON Brown yesterday repeatedly denied ANY blame for the Iraq war and the failings that cost British lives.

The Prime Minister's steadfast refusal to take any responsibility in his evidence to the Chilcot Inquiry provoked fury from the military and grieving families last night.

Prompting the most outrage was Mr Brown's suggestion that Army commanders - NOT him - were at fault over needless deaths in poorly protected Snatch Land Rovers. Lord Guthrie, former Chief of the Defence Staff, told The Sun later: "It is astonishing and offensive to suggest that if officers had had a choice, they would have chosen the Snatch Land Rover."

Mr Brown said he was involved in top-level talks before the Iraq invasion in 2003 - when he was Chancellor - but wanted diplomacy to prevail. When it came to the crunch, he was NOT part of the decision making.

And mistakes in the woeful preparations for nation building of a destroyed Iraq after the war were NOT his either, he said.

He only expressed "regret" that he could not persuade the Americans to do more.

Rubbishing then US President George Bush's post-war reconstruction plans, Mr Brown said: "I never subscribed to the neoconservative position that somehow, at the barrel of a gun, overnight, liberty or democracy could be conjured up."

But he insisted he wrote a blank cheque for Mr Blair to take Britain to war.
Mr Brown's four hours of evidence was the first time he had faced a public grilling over his role on Iraq and its aftermath.

He was heckled by anti-war protesters on his arrival at the hearing, at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, Westminster.

After expressing his regret at the loss of 179 British military lives in Iraq, he told the panel of five that the Armed Forces had been given everything they wanted for the conflict.

He admitted for the first time he put the Ministry of Defence under a cash squeeze in the autumn of 2003 - six months after the mission.

But he said: "Every request that military commanders made to us for equipment was answered. No request was ever turned down."

Mr Brown was asked to respond to a series of questions tabled by families of soldiers - up to 37 - killed in the Snatch fleet. He said:

I have to stress, it's not for me to make the military decisions on the ground about the use of particular vehicles.

It's not for me to make the decision, that's for the military themselves.

But what I can say is that when we were asked to provide the money and resources for additional equipment, we made that money available.

That flew in the faces of senior military figures who had already given evidence to the inquiry.
In January, General Lord Walker told the inquiry that all five of Britain's military chiefs threatened to resign in protest at the cuts, brought in just months after Iraq was liberated in 2003.

Former Army head General Sir Richard Dannatt said last night: "Gordon Brown bears responsibility, claiming credit for increasing funding when actually there was a reduction in value."

Susan Smith, mother of one dead soldier, said: "It's very low of Gordon Brown to blame commanders. He was trying to shift the blame."

Her son, Pte Phillip Hewett, 21, was killed with two comrades when a bomb hit a Snatch in Iraq in July 2005.

Mrs Smith added: "Commanders had no options, they couldn't use anything else."

Tory Shadow Defence Secretary Dr Liam Fox said: "There have been consistent allegations that, as Chancellor, Gordon Brown was so unsympathetic to the Armed Forces that he denied them what they needed."

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/2881055/Gordon-Brown-ducks-blame-at-Iraq-Inquiry.html#ixzz0hmql0ChD

Posted by: Michelle Nielsen

Friday, 5 March 2010

Shot between eyes but pilot saves 20

By DUNCAN LARCOMBE, Defence Editor
Published: The Sun 05 Mar 2010

A HERO Chinook pilot was shot between the eyes by a Taliban bullet - but flew on and saved all 20 aboard.

Flight Lieutenant Ian Fortune, 28, had flown in to pick up casualties as a firefight raged between American and Afghan forces and heavily-armed rebels near Garmsir in Helmand Province.

He circled until troops reported incoming fire had calmed down. But as Ian flew in the helicopter came under attack - which continued as casualties were being loaded. Then as he lifted off Ian was shot.

A bullet hit a metal rail on the front of his helmet which is used to attach night vision goggles.
The round then penetrated his helmet hitting him between the eyes. It knocked his head back and caused severe bleeding.

More bullets followed, hitting the Chinook's controls and shutting down the stabilisation system.
But with blood pouring into his eyes, Ian battled with the controls to stop the chopper from spiralling out of control.

Then with the aircraft lurching from side to side he continued flying for eight minutes before landing at Camp Bastion. Ian was taken to the field hospital and treated for his wound.

It is the first time in the nine-year war in Afghanistan a pilot has been shot while in the air.
One senior RAF source said: "This could have become one of the worst incidents of the conflict.

"If the bullet had hit the pilot a millimetre lower, those on board wouldn't have stood a chance.

"And had it not been for the skill of the pilot the result would have been the same."

TV's Mike, 41, who was with a crew from the Discovery Channel, said: "The courage and heroism of the pilot was beyond belief."

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/campaigns/our_boys/2879290/Pilot-was-shot-between-the-eyes-and-still-flew-to-safety.html#ixzz0hmsGtVED

Posted by: Michelle Nielsen

The reality behind film

I’ve watched a million war movies but the only one that’s made me feel like I’m back there is The Hurt Locker

By NICK FRANCIS
Published: The SUN 05 Mar 2010

IRAQ war film The Hurt Locker is a real edge-of-your-seat thriller and is up for an amazing NINE Oscars this weekend.

It tells the harrowing story of a US bomb disposal team's deadly mission in Baghdad - and the movie's producers were advised by a Brit hero of the campaign, Chris Hunter.

The 37-year-old major is the British Army's most successful bomb disposal expert ever. He has completed multiple tours in Northern Ireland and Afghanistan as well as in Iraq, where he disarmed 45 improvised explosive devices (IEDs), during a single two-month stint.

In The Hurt Locker, lead actor Jeremy Renner - nominated for the best actor Oscar on Sunday - plays Staff Sergeant William James, a reckless and fearless operator addicted to the perils of the job.

The movie - which bagged the best film Bafta last month - makes for compulsive viewing and provides a chilling illustration of the perilous work being carried out by real-life bomb disposal experts in Iraq and Afghanistan, where IEDs now account for 90 per cent of deaths.

Here, in Day Two of The Sun's Oscars Week series, bomb disposal expert Chris tells what he thinks of the film - as well as what life is really like on the front line.

Chris says: "I've watched a million and one war movies, believe me, but the only one that has made me feel like I am actually back out there is The Hurt Locker. It sent a tingle down my spine."

As an ATO - or Ammunition Technical Officer - Chris got so good at foiling bombs in Basra that he became a direct target himself when insurgents left devices intended specifically to kill him.
In one incident, outside a packed hospital in Basra, rebels left a car packed with explosives.
They assumed Chris would open the boot, which would detonate the bomb.

But sensing something was wrong, he sent in a robot to open the boot - and the car blew sky-high.

Chris is one of the lucky survivors of a job which claims many casualties, among them British servicemen Staff Sergeant Olaf Schmid, 30, Warrant Officer Gaz O'Donnell, 40, and Captains Dan Shepherd, 28, and Dan Read, 31.

Chris says: "I knew Olaf, we served together, and Gaz was a good friend. I was with him two days before he was killed.

"The Ammunition Technical Officers are a close-knit community. It's one thing The Hurt Locker gets across very well.

"The camaraderie between all the guys is huge, but there is also a real diversity in character.
"There aren't many of us doing the job and we have to work very closely together.

"It's incredibly competitive but you also have to watch each other's backs. You can take the p*** out of each other, but if anyone else tries to take the p*** you won't stand for it.

"It takes a minimum of four and a half years' technical and on-the-job training to get to the level those lads were at."

Olaf "Oz" Schmid was killed on October 31 last year as he attempted to disarm an IED in the Sangin region of Helmand province in Afghanistan.

He was close friends with Dan Read, the latest ATO to die in the line of duty. He was killed two months ago.

Chris says: "You never know when it is your last time. All four of those lads were experienced, highly trained and extremely professional. It's just the sheer volume of IEDs these days - it becomes a numbers game."

The ATOs have a term - the Long Walk - to describe their perilous approach to a bomb.
It is done entirely alone to minimise casualties and in a protective suit weighing a burdensome 85lb.

Chris adds: "If you do the Long Walk enough times, chances are something will go wrong one day. It's a very lonely but intense walk.

"To handle it you have to have tunnel vision, blocking out everything around you. It's just you and the bomb.

"Every bomb is unique, so every approach has to be considered carefully.

"It can take hours of crawling along the floor, face in the dirt, in case there's any other ordnance around it or it's been booby-trapped.

"At the same time you're under pressure to deal with it quickly. When a patrol is stopped it's a sitting duck, and an IED often goes hand-in-hand with an ambush."

During his 18 years as an ATO Chris has become skilled at developing profiles of the bomb-makers he has been up against. He says: "It's a game of cat-and-mouse. I could recognise a specific bomb-maker's work by the way it was put together.

"The Taliban are so dangerous because they are sophisticated and quick to adapt.
"Most of their bombs used to be made out of metal, using two saw blades which, when stood on, created a circuit and blew up.

"The British Army realised this and started to counter them using metal detectors.

"The Taliban are cunning, and immediately figured out a way to make bombs from non-metal substances.

"Whenever I hear of an ATO dying in Afghanistan, my heart goes out to the family. It is stressful on loved ones, who never know what could happen to you. Every time you leave for a war zone it could be the last time they see you.

"This is the same for any soldier's family. It takes great strength and relationships become strained very easily.

"An official military term for defusing bombs is Explosive Ordnance Disposal, or EOD. Ask an ATO and they'll tell you EOD really stands for Every One's Divorced."

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/film/2879226/Oscars-week-in-The-Sun-Real-life-stories-behind-the-films.html#ixzz0hmoZB9Jw

Posted by: Michelle Nielsen