. ''The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war,no matter how justified,shall be directly proportional as to how they perceive the veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their nation'' --George Washington--
Tuesday, 17 July 2007
SAS chief criticised for joining action quits
The head of the SAS has resigned from the elite army regiment “for personal reasons”, defence sources said last night.
The commanding officer of 22 Special Air Service Regiment, who cannot be named for his own security, has been involved in covert operations in Iraq and Afghanistan where he gained a reputation for leading from the front.
However, this has drawn criticism from the army hierarchy, which believes that commanding officers, whether they are in the SAS or in conventional regiments, need to be less involved in frontline combat and more concerned with the “big picture”, sending their men out to do the fighting, according to a report in The Sun.
The commanding officer of the SAS — a lieutenant-colonel in his early forties — has served in the Army for more than 20 years and is planning to end his military career when he hands over the special forces role to his successor. The head of the SAS normally stays in the job for about three years and he will have completed his full appointment period by the time he leaves.
Defence sources were anxious to emphasise that the commanding officer was leaving the SAS for “personal reasons”, but acknowledged that the reports of his style of leadership were not far off the mark. The regiment’s motto is “Who Dares Wins”.
Previous SAS commanders have included General Sir Michael Rose, who fought with the regiment in the 1982 Falklands conflict, and General Sir Peter de la Billière, who led the British force in the Gulf War in 1991 after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
In the past, commanding officers of 22 SAS have often gone on to become Director Special Forces with the rank of brigadier.
The present head of the special forces — the SAS and the Special Boat Service, the Royal Marines’ equivalent — served as a senior commander in Iraq.
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(RG) Well this officer seems ok to me willing to do himself what he asks his men to do, not content flying a desk he has told the MOD where to go. He would be better off using his skills in the private security industry which I’m sure he will think about and where he will be much better paid and better thought of and have plenty of his old troopers around him, I wish him well.
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