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Rob
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Just got back in after another two-day patrol down near Shawqat with the Queen's Coy of the Grenadier Guards, hot on the heels of the two-week sojourn to Nowzad with the US Marines...

Even more bizarrely we had more 'contact' yesterday afternoon than in that whole operation...

Sadly, some of the Wily Taleban fell foul of an £88,000 Javelin Missile fired at the compound they were using to pin down some of the lads trying to extricate a US Army mine-clearance vehicle which had fallen into an irrigation canal after another vehicle had it's back wheel taken off by an IED. The narrow canal-side tracks are horribly slippery after the recent rains and it's impossible to stop the slide after a heavy vehicle starts to 'go'...

Including those taken down by heavy machine-gun and sniper-fire from the convoy and the Patrol-Base sangars, we reckon to have assisted in 14 martyrdoms yesterday.
No friendly casualties at all apart from some wet boots of the guys who had to post guard overnight on the stranded vehicles.

I also spoke to a US Air Force radar technician who'd grabbed the Barratt .50-cal sniper rifle when the contact began...
He was looking for a medic to check his ears as the percussion of the damn thing firing had almost blown his left eardrum...

"Did he get the guy?" I asked his mate after I'd pointed him in the direction of the medical centre at the FOB.
"Oh yes..."
"Takes the sting off the tinitus then, I suppose?" we laughed.

And then we all watched 'Back to the Future' and 'Nacho Libre' with Jack Black (which I'd heard bad things about, but which made me laugh my damp socks off) on BFBS in the Shawqat cookhouse while drinking Lapsang Souchong Tea (I have some tea-bags that I travel with).

It's a funny old war...
 
Funny you should mention M*A*S*H...the Senior medic in Nowzad had a small patch on his sleeve with the single word "Infidel" on it...
Way to go Marines - that'll really help win the locals over...
 
Glad to here you're keeping alright Rob and there's nothing better than the military humour. I'ts one of the few things I miss.
 
I really love my Job...I'm going to be well adrift come next December...
 
great little story, us civvies can't imagine what its like to be out there. Keep the spirits and the good work up. you are doing an awesome job out there.

Nacho Libre is a fantastic film! who ever said bad thing about it !

Al
 
Cool story!

On these patrols, both the 2 week and the 2 day, do you go out as Photographer with a gun or Soldier with a camera?

Also - in the conflict in the 2 day patrol, was your task to photograph the soldiers attacking the Taliban or Shoot them along with the 'regular' soldiers?

James
 
Cool story!

On these patrols, both the 2 week and the 2 day, do you go out as Photographer with a gun or Soldier with a camera?

Also - in the conflict in the 2 day patrol, was your task to photograph the soldiers attacking the Taliban or Shoot them along with the 'regular' soldiers?

James

I'm an Army Photographer with weapons for self-defence. If I'm the only one with 'eyes-on' the enemy I will engage, likewise if I feel my life, or the lives of others are threatened and I'm the only one who can do the shooting - but my primary role is to record the events on camera.

Plus, it was the Taleban attacking us, not the other way round; we were defending ourselves after an IED attack on a vehicle followed by an ambush using small-arms fire - in line with General McChrystal's guidelines, our aim is to convince rank-and-file Taleban to put down thier weapons and do something more productive...the best outcome is they bury their weapons and go back to farming - that way no more people on either side get killed or maimed.
 
Just out of interest, Does the above mean then that you have to Prove why you shot a certain amount of rounds?
Or is this something that is not looked upon.
 
Just out of interest, Does the above mean then that you have to Prove why you shot a certain amount of rounds?
Or is this something that is not looked upon.

Not out here - I fired until the threat was no longer apparent - in the case of last Friday, until they were out of effective range and no longer posing a direct threat...
US ROE are different to ours, the US Marine I was with continued firing even though the Taleban were obviously running away. I had to stop as soon as that happened as I was satisfied they were no longer an immediate threat.
Plus at 600m, I'd be wasting ammunition...lol
 
Another amusing yet serious read there Rob :thumbs:

You all got back safely, that's the main thing :)
 
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