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Jobs & Education0 min ago
I will follow this with interest - if he is suspected to have killed someone outside of the remit of his duty and there is evidence then it is only right that action is taken.
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And therein lies the problem.
I knew a fair few blokes that were in NI, later than this though, and things really were not clear cut. Plus everyone was on edge as they could be shot by anyone pulling a gun or and explosive. They did not wear uniforms so it really could be anyone.
They only had a split second to decide.
NI is a knotty problem.
For British soldiers in identifiable uniforms the stress levels must have been through the roof - every resident was a potential 'enemy'. I have no doubt that genuine mistakes were made and it throws no good light on the British Army to deny that this was so.
The Irish combatants, however they wish to decribe themselves, played their part in the misery inflicted in NI - on the population not just the BA.
Covert information-gathering units are a feature or warfare and always have been. If one of these units used that cover to kill innocent people then that must be addressed. If they acted as assassins of known fighters then I don't have much sympathy for those they killed.
As an act of amicable reciprocity perhaps we could be told the identity of the Guildford, Birmingham, M62 and Hyde Park bombers?
All soldiers serving in Ulster were issued with a Yellow Card which spelt out exactly when and how we could open fire. Obviously we could do so immediately if 'contact' was made, but some instances required 3 warnings.
The instructions on the Yellow Card did not aply to the Military Reaction Force to which these soldiers were attached. A former member of the MRF took part in a Panorama programme back some years back and he says the unit was more or less given carte blanche in hunting down IRA members and killing them. Another former MRF member told the programme that the MRF's brief was to "draw out the IRA and minimise their activities. If they needed shooting, they were shot." Yet another was quoted as saying, "We were not there to act as an army unit, we were there to act as a terror group."
It doesn't look good for this ex-squaddie given McVeigh was shot in the back.
remember this?
https:/
two British soldiers accidentally drove into the location of an IRA funeral. They were both armed but fired in the air rather than defend themselves. They were murdered.
Let's let it go.
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