Friday 17 March 2023

War Stories

If you’ve never woken up in a forest, cold and wet, with blood on your hands…you really haven’t lived.

Thankfully I managed to tick that particular item off my bucket list, in the autumn of ‘92 - long before bucket lists were even a “thing” come to think of it. 

I still take comfort that back then my first thought wasn’t… who have I killed this time?

I’ll get back to the above in a minute or two, but  by way of an explanation I read a recent blog post about red caps, (Military Police) of all things, so in lieu of another load of AWI progress pictures (coming along nicely, thanks for asking) I thought I’d regale you with a few old war stories from my time holding back the might of the Warsaw Pact as a member of the 5th (TA) Battalion - Royal Regiment of Fusiliers. 

The red and white hackle of the RRF

I wanted to join the army straight from school but daddy didn’t want his only son blown up in Northern Ireland so he forbade it. As things were to turn out for him and I later…that was probably a mistake on his part. Anywhoo, the best I could manage, (a decade, two young boys, and a wife later) was to nip down to Stoney Lane in Brum and sign up with the TA. 

I think it’s fair to say that my time with the regiment was not a sparkling success and the only thing I can claim as an achievement was to be jailed by the military police more times than anyone else in my company. Let me give you a few examples so you can have a chuckle at my expense.

On the combat infantryman course in Catterick (oops sorry I meant Strensall - thanks Elenderil) they ran us so ragged that I had trouble remembering my own name - though not it should be noted, my army number (24945892). As part of the “break them down then rebuild them as the Army would like them” system, there was never a free moment to catch your breath. On more than one occasion I was forced to shove pork chops with gravy into my camo jacket pocket at lunch because the time allowed to queue up for scran then get back out on parade was too short for actual eating to take place. The accumulated pocket lint proved to be a lovely little garnish when I could eventually retrieve my meal after lights out. It’s character building I’m told.

Despite the semi ritualised sleep deprivation, and the routine faux outrage from the Corporals as they tossed our “disgusting” barrack hut contents out of the hut door first thing, I was usually turned out pretty well on parade. While the other lads were smoking and drinking into the wee small hours I was applying floor polish to my toecaps and pressing the pre soaped creases of my DPM (disruptive pattern material) until those creases were so sharp you could shave with them. No tram lines for me mate.

The morning of our first big parade I was pretty confident that my turn out would pass muster and I watched as the officer and noncoms came down the line adjusting a cap here and twiddling a button there. Finally they got to me. They looked me up and down but could find no apparent fault. Determined that something had to be wrong the Corporal asked if I had remembered to put my field note pad and pencil in a plastic sandwich bag for protection against the elements. 

Yes Corporal. 

Ahh but was it in my right breast pocket as per daily orders? 

Yes Corporal. 

Disbelievingly he unbutton the pocket and fished it out. Yup correct pocket. Yup, in plastic sandwich bag. But what was this?! With the stage flourish of an amateur sleuth unmasking the mystery killer he held up my pencil for all to see. It was of course sharp and ready for use…but it was not sharp at both ends as stipulated in daily orders.  

Instantly puce (I’m convinced they can do it on command) and almost incoherent with confected rage he introduced me to a whole dictionary full of new swear words. As an eighteen year old I would have ignored his spittle on my cheek and stared into the middle distance, but as a twenty something bloke who saw the whole performance for what it really was I muttered “@#£! off” under my breath. Well, not under my breath enough as it turned out. Big mistake. Before I knew what was happening I was being doubled across the parade ground in the direction of the glasshouse, my progress punctuated by screams of “get those F*%&ing knees up…”

I cant speak for other regiments but in the RRF we called the Military Police “monkeys” and I can assure you that those lads at Strensall certainly fitted the bill. To be fair they were more like gorillas than monkeys, but I digress. With more confected outrage, screams of abuse and slamming of things off things I was introduced to the delights of punishment callisthenics. After six hours of crouching bunny hops and muscle tearing stress positions my tears were no longer of outrage but mostly self pity.


“Hay hay we’re the monkeys…cos people say we monkey around.” 50 MP’s turn up to arrest an old rapper (judging by the bling).

They let me go the next morning after my “Beasting” had finished. The other lads took the piss but they all said I’d been unlucky, that the training team always found someone to dick about a bit, as a warning to everyone else. 

Unlucky…yeah that was probably it. I’d try to be the grey man from there on in. The guy at the back who never achieves much but never attracts undue attention.

In the second week we were issued our SA80 assault rifles. Being constantly stripped and reassembled by a never ending stream of newbs, they were not in a great state of repair. Mine rattled when shook.


The British Army SA80. Crap then. Crap now. Note the change lever by the butt.


On the day of our first full NBC move and shoot, we ran around the firing ranges with our S10 respirators on and full noddy suits. The younger lads seemed okay but I was struggling to draw breath through the respirator and by the time we dropped to the ground at our pre designated firing positions my respirator was completely steamed up and my eyes were full of the anti chemical weapon Fullers Earth powder we’d been instructed to put in our masks. I couldn’t even see the ruddy target I was meant to be aiming at but that was the least of my troubles. 


This is what I should’ve looked like. This is NOT what I actually looked like at all.


I knew we were meant to be putting five individual rounds down range and having gone quickly through my drills I squeezed the trigger when I heard the command to watch and shoot. I didn’t realise it but the change lever on the butt of my SA80 was loose through wear caused by constant stripping and reassembly (later confirmed by the armorers) and in the process of me getting onto my belly it slipped from single shot to full auto. I hadn’t realised you could empty a full mag in 3 seconds, but it turns out you can. I couldn’t hear the nom coms screaming nor see their frantic waving to “end ex” but I felt myself rise from the ground like a toy balloon as two range officers lifted me up bodily by my webbing and Bergan. They were a little cross.

As it turned out I’d just committed the unforgivable sin of an ND (negligent discharge). The monkeys in the glasshouse were very pleased to see me again. Naturally there were tears, as much for the £150 fine as the beasting that followed. I had made the range bods look bad. Over the course of another 12 hours this matter was addressed in full. Before release I was made to write and perform a song of apology to the Staff Sergeant which had to include variations on “I am a total t&£t” in the chorus. Can’t remember the lyrics now (thanks to the counselling) lol, but I based it loosely on ELO’s Mr Blue Sky and I thought it was pretty good. I could’ve resurrected it and gone on X factor I reckon. Simon Cowell would’ve loved it.

Okay, I can see this post is getting a bit “leggy” so I’ll come back to my first paragraph and add a well deserved explanation to finish up.

While on exercise in the Brecon Beacons my company had been tasked with a 20k night march and a dawn assault on another bunch in prepared positions. Being on the Welsh border it rained none stop and I tore the arse out of my issue trousers climbing over a barbed wire fence in the dark. Rather than conducting the dawn assault in my underpants the Corporal gave me his rubberised DPM over trousers which were about three sizes too big. I held them up with some para cord. Man did I look stupid. Being on  exercise at night in the rain we naturally got lost, but bizarrely we somehow took some sort of short cut that saw us arrive several hours early near our assault start position.


The Brecon Beacons. Lovely until you are forced to spend 48 hrs running up and down them. 


The Corporal in charge of our section led us into a large stand of trees and told us to get a brew on and our bivvy bags out. A couple of hours rest was a welcome bonus. After a day tramping up and down hills in the wet we were all knackered. Naturally I was dicked to do the first stag, so with range card in hand I set off for the edge of the wood. Using red light I couldn’t see well and struggling to hold my makeshift trousers up I never saw the branch I tripped over or the rock I cracked my noggin on as I rolled down into a gulley full of wet leaves. 

It was the first rays of dawn sunlight filtering through the trees that woke me. I was frozen cold, wasn’t sure where I was and had blood on my hands - from a cut on my forehead not a killing spree (this time). When I staggered back to my oppos they were all asleep in their bivvy bags…even the Corporal. 

Meanwhile in a nearby field our Colonel and a group of officers were looking irritably at their watches wondering what had happened to the planned attack.

Suffice it to say I was not treated for concussion. 

Another “on exercise” scrape involving military police was as a result of me peeing off the back of a 4 ton truck while travelling up the motorway… (the driver wouldn’t stop)… which I should have received a commendation for to be honest because it’s ruddy difficult, one hand holding onto the truck tonno cover and the other holding onto…well you get the picture. Anyway the road behind the truck was clear of traffic when I started… lol.

Toodleooh for now.

20 comments:

  1. Lol...brings to mind my own (extremely short) military career as a potential officer (obviously, I wasn't!). I don't recall seeing redcaps at SID (G) ...Scottish Infantry Depot, Glencorse....but they had so called Regimental Police...mostly very long serving lance corporals who were too shit to be a full corporal even though they had a decade plus of service....they seemed middle aged to me as a 22 year old but I guess they were only in their early thirties!

    I had a similar experience on a rifle range but with an SLR ( I was obviously the generation prior to you, my number was 24713990 and we had only just missed out on DMS boots and puttees) ....don't really know exactly what I did but during the pre firing disassembly and reassembly process, I had not put something back correctly. I fired off my ten shots or whatever and our officer decided he would have a go and took my rifle with the remaining ten rounds in the mag.....nec minute, a corporal was yelling at me and telling me to do X number of push ups....THEN he asked me if I knew what I was being punished for! According to him, I nearly killed our platoon commander LOL!

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    1. Hi Keith, yeah I missed out on the SLR, but all the old sweats said it was a far superior weapon overall. I remember we still had Brens in the armoury since everyone was in agreement that it was far superior to the so called SA80 / LSW.

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  2. Oh, by the way, the story re peeing out of the truck reminded me of doing the same, but we were in the old style three ton truck, and there were gaps in the back floor whereby, whether by design or luck, one could kneel down and do the business from inside the rear seating area, unobserved by malevolent civilians!

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    1. Lolz. There might have been a hole in the 4 tonner as well but I was too desperate to look.

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  3. Good Lord JBM things were much tougher in your time in the TA than in mine a decade earlier. Your exercises seemed to be tougher too. We still had the good old SLR rather than the truly dodgy SA80 (which I'm reliably informed could shake itself to pieces on full auto). About the worse thing that the Redcaps did during my time is give deliberately dodgy instructions when I arrived at Strensall Camp for basic. After that we never saw hide nor hair of them. Mind you they were probably keeping a low profile as Strensall had SAS training there and I should imagine they would cut up quite rough if faced with the kind of Monkey shines you describe.

    Funny how you can't forget your army number isn't it ...24570660 was mine I think it was the CS gas NBC training drills that really rammed it home. I even knew mine backwards after that session.

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    1. Hi Dave, you’ve jogged my memory for me - the course I was on about was actually at Strensall not Catterick, so same place as you. Catterick was a whole other mess up, lol. Oh crikey yeah, CS gas training! They did the reverse number trick on me too. Nice to see we remember our Army numbers, even after all these years!

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  4. JBM, that sounds dreadful! I hope there was some better times to make up for all that! Not a great reward for volunteering.

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    1. Hence the old adage I guess. Never volunteer for anything! I was just within the permitted age range when I joined which was a mistake. A lot of the bullshit goes over your head when you’re 18 but not when you’ve a few years of civilian life under your belt. I think it’s fair to say that martial glory never came my way. It’s far safer playing with toy soldiers than trying to be one. Lol.

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  5. You have led an interesting life. Great storytelling, as always.

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    1. Thanks Jonathan, I do feel like I’ve crammed a lot in over the last 60 years. These are the sort of stories my grandkids are too young to hear at the moment, but they might find them on here when I’ve shuffled off this mortal coil I suppose. Proof there’s a lighter side to the grumpy old bugger their parents talk about. Lol.

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  6. The ‘program’ of breaking down and building up and ‘character building’ is commonly recognisable to a generation, the merits of which could no doubt fill several volumes - I wonder what memories a present day soldier would be able to regale in forty years time?

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    1. Hi Norm, I suspect little has changed since the first Roman soldiers went on basic training. I watched the younger members of my unit adapt rapidly to the whole process. It works. I was a bit too old and a bit too aware of what was being done to respond positively to it I think.

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  7. I’m suddenly very happy that I never joined the military. I do not think I would like being yelled at for nothing. 😀

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    1. No it’s not nice Stew. They were very rude about my parentage…amongst other things. Lol.

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  8. Very entertaining post as always, like I said on my Gendarmes post my brother always said red caps were squaddies who liked beating up squaddies! You're dad had a different view to mine, when I passed only one O level out of the 12 expected ( I had a great summer although it could be said I fell in with the wrong crowd!) My dad told me I had three choices, the army, the Navy or the air force and in twenty years I might make sergeant! By this point I was holding the phone a long way away but could still hear him, I went to the recruiting office in Finchley and looked at signing up as a boy. My brother, who wasn't long out, in a show of filial affection said he'd break my leg before letting me join, I did have an option as one of the bad crowd had been in the Rhodesian light Infantry and they were recruiting in a pub in Whetstone for the South West African Defence force, at least that way I wouldn't get shot at by my cousins in Ulster like my brother did. In the end my school relented, I got enough O levels to go to art school and did 5 years in art school instead, in hindsight it was beneficial as it gave me a terrific work ethic after something of a close shave!
    Best Iain

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    1. Ahh so it was your post on red caps that triggered my flashbacks eh. Lol. Yeah you had a close shave there all right though Rhodesia would have been interesting. Work ethic eh, yeah I’ve heard about that, though thankfully I’ve never come down with it. Told my eldest not to join up by the way, but he was determined. Three years and he was out again having hated every minute. Kids!

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  9. Your recollections gave me flashbacks! :-D My army number was 2485**** and I joined up as a regular in the GLOSTERS. Did the annual camps with that awful rifle at Brecon. Wore the new highleg boots which absolutely wrecked shins and ankles...how could they get something so simple so wrong! I too had to have a leak on a 4 tonner on the way back from Brecon but I got away with it - found I could push the side tarp open far enough...though some of the other lad's Bergans might have copped some of the jetstream! I am convinced I am totally nuts though as 20 odd years later I joined the RAF as a reservist and decade later I'm still in...weekends at hotels are not as bad as they are cracked up to be...and for some reason they trust me to wear stripes on my shoulders...odd bunch! :-D

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    1. Sorry to give you flashbacks Jason, but thanks for dropping by and leaving a comment. The Glosters eh, now there IS a regiment! Well done on having the courage to dip your toe back in the water all these years on, you’re made of tougher stuff than me that’s for sure!

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    2. They are good flashbacks...I get those happy memories of something really funny that happened at really inappropriate moments. I might at my day job and then suddenly remember something really funny that happened in the barrack room...Like the bored MT driver who threw objects at the metal ceiling fan in Belize. He lay on his bed and watched as random small things, boot brushes, blocks of soap etc, were propelled at speed down the length of the room....and then he threw his combat boot into the fan..just as the CO's driver walked in. The boot caught him square in the face and he dropped like a sack of the proverbial. My god how we all laughed until we couldn't breathe! Even the CO's driver was laughing once he came round!

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    3. You have to laugh about a lot of it don’t you and to be fair it’s a lot easier to do that all these years later. Gives you something to compare any current troubles against that’s for certain!

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