Lament for what should not have been.
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Lament for what should not have been.
As some of you are aware I am in the military and, as such, cannot tell you how relieved I am that this has finally happened:
Please turn on Javascript. Media requires Javascript to play. emp_load.getEmpEmbeddedParams("emp_8026931"); 20 Armoured Brigade's 'flagdown' ceremony A ceremony has been held in Basra to mark the official end of the six-year British military presence in Iraq. UK combat operations ended as 20 Armoured Brigade took part in a flag-lowering ceremony with a US brigade. In London, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said a new chapter in relations between the two countries had begun. Earlier, a memorial service attended by Defence Secretary John Hutton took place in Basra for the 179 UK personnel who have died during the conflict. The focus was a memorial wall featuring the names of the 234 UK and foreign troops and civilians who lost their lives under British command in Iraq.
Mr Brown, who held talks with Iraqi counterpart Nouri Maliki at Downing Street, said: "Today Iraq is a success story. We owe much of that to the efforts of British troops. Our mission has not always been an easy one, many have said that we would fail. "Britain can be proud of our legacy that we leave there." Mr Maliki said: "There are people in Iraq who want the government to fail but our army and armed forces are ready to face these challenges." 'Ultimate sacrifice' The names of those who died on the UK's Operation Telic were read out at the memorial service, which included Italian, Dutch, Danish, American and Romanian troops. The last post was sounded by a bugler and prayers were said. There was also a roar overhead as a lone Tornado aircraft conducted a fly-past in tribute. Please turn on Javascript. Media requires Javascript to play. emp_load.getEmpEmbeddedParams("emp_8026613"); Gordon Brown: 'Today Iraq is a success story' Lt Col Edward Chamberlain, commanding officer of Iraq-based battalion 5 Rifles, said: "We've been slowly working, as part of a coalition together over the six years, to achieve an end-state which is an Iraq which is secure, happy, at peace with itself and its neighbours. "We're slowly but surely transitioning towards that." Mr Hutton said the UK should be proud of what its troops had achieved. "It's been a long and hard campaign. There's been no question about that, and we've paid a very high price," he said. "And the families of those who've lost loved ones here today will be thinking very hard about that - and we should all as well. "But I think when the history is written of this campaign, they will say of the British military 'we did a superb job', as we would expect them to, and we should be very proud of what they have done here." Inquiry call Opposition leader David Cameron has called for an immediate full inquiry into the Iraq war, similar to the one carried out by the Franks Committee into the Falklands conflict.
"There are vital lessons to learn and we need to learn them rapidly and the only justification for delay can, I'm afraid, be a political one." British forces began their official pull-out last month when the UK's commander in the south of the country, Maj Gen Andy Salmon, handed over to a US general. Asked about the UK presence in Iraq, the country's president, Jalal Talabani, told BBC News: "This is a mission of liberation. For the first time British forces in Iraq are playing this role. Please turn on Javascript. Media requires Javascript to play. emp_load.getEmpEmbeddedParams("emp_8026450"); A bugler played the Last Post before a fly-past tribute was made "In the past the British forces came to occupy against the will of the Iraqi people. This time they came here to liberate Iraqi people from the worst kind of dictatorship." BBC News defence correspondent Caroline Wyatt says there is a sense of relief for many British servicemen and women that their final tour of Iraq was ending. Some were serving on their fourth tour, taking them away from home for two years out of the last six. Our correspondent says Southern Iraq is more peaceful than it was a year ago but when British forces invaded Iraq as part of the US-led coalition in 2003 few people imagined troops would still be in the country six years later. |
iRoppa- Clan
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Number of posts : 1494
Age : 46
Location : Wiltshire
Gamertag : iRoppa
Re: Lament for what should not have been.
One down, one to go.
iRoppa- Clan
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Number of posts : 1494
Age : 46
Location : Wiltshire
Gamertag : iRoppa
Re: Lament for what should not have been.
Big respect for the fallen in our armed forces a friend of mine is the army and came back safe.
This in the long run will do great things over there and they have a great job!!!
This in the long run will do great things over there and they have a great job!!!
J D- Clan
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Number of posts : 1927
Age : 42
Location : Where ever my truck takes me
Gamertag : SPARTAN JOHN 26
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