Showing posts with label 1st Battalion Welsh Guards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1st Battalion Welsh Guards. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Guards home from 'demanding' tour



Soldiers from the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards are returning to base in Hampshire after what a senior officer called a "demanding" Afghanistan tour.

The battalion suffered the loss of seven of its soldiers, including its commanding officer, during six months duty in Helmand province.

Family members are expected as the 650 troops arrive back in Aldershot.

Major Dai Bevan said it had been "a very anxious six months for all the families".

The Welsh Guards' commanding officer, Lt Col Rupert Thorneloe MBE, 39, became the most senior British army officer to die in action since the Falklands War when he was killed by a roadside bomb in Helmand province in July.

An 18-year-old trooper from the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment, Joshua Hammond, from Plymouth, died in the same explosion when an improvised explosive device was detonated under their Viking armoured vehicle.

Six other Welsh Guards have also been killed during the tour.

'Completely heartbreaking'

The Welsh Guards are based at Lille barracks in Aldershot.

Maj Bevan said: "Clearly everyone is extremely excited about the return of the battalion.

"The last six months has been an incredibly successful tour for the Welsh Guards but equally it has been an extremely challenging and demanding tour."

He said the Guards had been part of a coalition helping the people of Helmand build peace and stability in a troubled region.

"The Welsh Guards have faced the challenges with typical professionalism and determination and earned the respect of local and Afghan population," said Maj Bevan.

"However, the Welsh Guards have suffered significant losses during the tour and our thoughts and prayers are with their families at this difficult time."

He said the 650 soldiers formed part of a larger battle group with coalition troops, mostly notably Estonians.

For the rest of the story click here for the BBC website

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Lance Corporal Dane Elson killed in Afghanistan


It is with deep regret that the Ministry of Defence must confirm that Lance Corporal Dane Elson from the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards was killed in Afghanistan on 5 July 2009.

Lance Corporal Elson was killed while on patrol in Babaji as part of Operation PANCHAI PALANG in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. He was part of a Fire Support Group from 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, attached to the Light Dragoons Battle Group.

On 5 July Lance Corporal Elson was a team commander in his Fire Support Group. Attached to B Company, 2 MERCIAN, their mission was to clear the enemy from positions South of Malgir. Having provided Fire Support for an attack onto an enemy held compound, the Fire Support Group began to move off. As they did so an Improvised Explosive Device exploded, killing Lance Corporal Elson instantly.

Lance Corporal Dane Elson

Lance Corporal Elson was born on 28 September 1986 in Harare, Zimbabwe. Having joined the Army, he completed his training in Guards Training Company, Catterick, in 2004 and joined 1st Battalion Welsh Guards when they were based at RAF St Athan, near Cardiff.

He served in Iraq in 2004-2005, and in Bosnia in 2006-2007. He passed a promotion course and was promoted to Lance Corporal during the pre-deployment training for Afghanistan.

Lance Corporal Elson was a keen rugby player and he lived for the mates he had around him in the Welsh Guards. He had a very bright future ahead of him, and stood out as a Guardsman destined for the higher ranks of the Battalion.

Lieutenant Colonel Gus Fair, Commanding Officer the Light Dragoons Battle Group, said:

"Lance Corporal Elson was part of a small band of Welsh Guards attached to the Battle Group. Despite being small in number, they have made a huge impact with their professionalism, drive and determination to take the fight to the enemy. Lance Corporal Elson was one of the best of these. It is typical of the man that he died while providing cover to the rest of his platoon. Though Lance Corporal Elson is no longer with us, his fellow Welsh Guardsmen, and the Battle Group, will remember this talented and popular soldier."

Friday, July 3, 2009

Lieutenant Colonel Rupert Thorneloe killed in Afghanistan



It is with deep sadness that the Ministry of Defence can confirm that Lieutenant Colonel Rupert Thorneloe MBE, Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, and Trooper Joshua Hammond of the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment were killed yesterday, Wednesday 1 July 2009, in Afghanistan.

They were killed by an explosion whilst on convoy along the Shamalan Canal, near Lashkar Gah, in Helmand province, Afghanistan.

On 1 July 2009 Lt Col Thorneloe left the Battle Group Headquarters on a resupply convoy so that he could visit his men, because they were conducting a major operation in hostile territory.

He was travelling in a Viking armoured vehicle, but at 1520hrs local time an improvised explosive device was detonated under this vehicle. Lt Col Thorneloe and Tpr Hammond were killed by the blast.

Lieutenant Colonel Rupert Thorneloe, 1st Battalion Welsh Guards

Lt Col Thorneloe was the Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, which is currently working as Battle Group Centre South in Helmand province.

The Battle Group is responsible for improving the security situation in the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, and the surrounding areas - a formidable area of responsibility, containing about half the province's population.

As a mark of the challenge faced, the number of soldiers in the Battle Group he was commanding had grown to well over 1,000.

Lt Col Thorneloe was commissioned into the Welsh Guards in 1992. At regimental duty he served as a Platoon Commander and Company Second-in-Command both in the UK and on operations in Northern Ireland, as Adjutant in London, and as a Company Commander, again in the UK and on operations in Northern Ireland.

Extra-regimentally he spent a year as an Intelligence Liaison Officer with the Royal Ulster Constabulary Special Branch (in South Armagh); a year as an Intelligence Analyst at the Permanent Joint Headquarters (Northwood); two years as the Operations Officer of 1st (UK) Armoured Division (in Germany and Iraq); and two years in the MOD as Military Assistant to the Assistant Chief of Defence Staff (Policy) and, latterly, Military Assistant to the Secretary of State for Defence.

He assumed command of the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards on 28 October 2008. He was a very keen polo player until the age of 28. Since then his primary interests have been sailing and game shooting.

Lt Col Thornloe leaves behind his wife, Sally, and their daughters Hannah and Sophie. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family at this very difficult time.

His wife Sally said:

"Rupert was my very best friend and his death is a devastating blow. Our daughters Hannah and Sophie will have to grow up without their beloved Daddy, although I will see a part of him in them every day.

"I could not have asked for a more caring, adoring and loving husband and father. While he was with us our lives were filled with joy and happiness, they will never be the same again. Hannah always said the best bit of Daddy was his coming home and that will never happen again.

"Rupert loved the Army. He was a born soldier - an inspiration. I know he felt privileged to command his battalion on operations and thought so highly of them and their families left behind. I know he led from the front and would not have had it any other way. He cared deeply about his men as he did about so many.

"His charisma, compassion and enthusiasm for all in life will be so sorely missed by his family and many friends but most of all by me who loved him so much."

Brigadier Tim Radford, Commander Task Force Helmand, said:

"Rupert Thorneloe was, quite simply, a superb Commanding Officer. He was an inspiration to his men, and they loved him for it.

"He cared deeply for them and the whole Welsh Guards family. He died as he lived his life, leading from the front. As his Brigade Commander, I valued his leadership, his honesty and his enormous moral and physical courage.

"He was destined for greatness in the Army. As a friend for 12 years, I will remember him as a devoted husband to Sally and a most wonderful father to Hannah and Sophie. I shall miss him dreadfully."

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Shot soldier's body armour praise - BBC


A soldier has survived being shot in the back by a high calibre bullet while on patrol in Afghanistan.

Welsh Guard Daniel Collins said he was left in agony but credits his body armour with saving his life.

The 26-year-old from Cardigan was taking part in operations in southern Helmand Province when he and colleagues came under fire from insurgents.

He said it was like "being hit by a sledgehammer" but escaped with major bruising to his lower back.

Lance Sergeant Collins of the 1st Battalion, Welsh Guards, is on a six month tour of Afghanistan.

He said they were coming under sporadic fire from insurgents at the end of a day's clearance operation.

"I knelt down in an irrigation ditch in partial cover when I was hit in the back by a single shot. It must have been from about 200-300 metres away," he said.

"The round knocked me down in an instant, it felt like being hit by a sledge-hammer at full swing. I slammed into the dirt face down."

He said he shouted to his platoon sergeant that he had been shot.

"At this point everybody was on their belt buckles in the ditch. The shot had initiated very accurate machine gun and small arms fire onto our position. We were pinned down.

"I was in agony, I certainly couldn't walk on my own. But they had to get me out of the ditch. I was pulled out by some of the other lads, and stumbled between two of them to the helicopter landing site."

The bullet had passed straight through the day-sack he was carrying on his back.

"I was expecting the worst," he added.

But when a colleague unclipped his body armour for a full inspection he could not find any blood.

"I was in shock and replied, 'what are you talking about!?'

"He lifted up my shirt, 'you've got a massive bruise on your back' and then continued with a grin, 'I can't believe you said you'd been shot!"

He was air-lifted to Camp Bastion hospital.

"The bullet hit the very bottom right-hand side of my ceramic body armour back plate, literally right at the edge.

"Any lower and the doctor said that it would have gone straight through me, hitting my kidneys.

"I think it was a 7.62mm round. That's a high calibre bullet to be hit by, but it shows you that the body armour works.

"I wouldn't be sat here now if I wasn't wearing one. Thank you to whoever designed the body armour. If I ever meet them, I'd like to buy them a pint.

"I hope to be back with my section and the lads at the patrol base by the end of the month."

Lance Sergeant Collins has served with the Army for almost 11 years.

A former pupil of Ysgol Gyfun Emlyn in Newcastle Emlyn, his mother, Deana, and sister, Megan, still live in Cardigan, while he is based at Lille Barracks in Aldershot.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Laura Jones on a mission which is much more than fighting Taleban


Laura Jones travelled to the troubled Helmand province in Afghanistan not only to meet our troops but to gain an understanding of the violent and volatile situation and of what the future holds for the Afghan people.
Last week the Leader published her daily diary from the country which is a crossroads between the Middle East and Asia.

Today she reflects on her time and experiences there.

AFGHANISTAN and its people have suffered three decades of unrest.

Since the country became a key battleground in the Cold War, the people of the landlocked nation have been subjected to a series of conflicts, and there is still no end in sight.

After the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001, the country, then led by the Taleban, was seen as a 'cradle of terrorism', and US attacks ensued.

After only three months of fighting the Bonn Agreement was drawn up on December 5, 2001, and the ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) began its mission of re-creating the state of Afghanistan in a bid to give power and security back to its people.

The moment I arrived at Camp Bastion, the military hub of Operation Herrick, it was clear to me that the people of Afghanistan will not be without war for a long time to come.

As foundations are laid and permanent structures are constructed, as roads are surfaced and the airfield stretches to capacity, the longevity of the campaign becomes apparent.

Soldiers I spoke to had already been booked for tours in 2011 and 2013, as the ISAF's mission for Afghan security becomes larger, more serious and more intense each day.

The 550 1st Battalion Welsh Guards arrived at Camp Bastion a little over a fortnight ago and I met commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Rupert Thorneloe, the man responsible for battle groups currently occupying five of the remote forward operating bases across Helmand province.

The Welsh troops arrived at a key period in the Afghan calendar, as insurgent activity hotted up.

Not only was it the end of the harvest season, it was also the last week for candidates to put themselves forward for the presidential elections, and fighting was set to increase tenfold in the next few weeks.

But Lt Cnl Thorneloe told me he has confidence in his troops and in the ISAF mission to suppress insurgents and to increase security in Helmand.

Lt Cnl Thorneloe said: "The Welsh Guards are the best trained for the mission they have ever been and in my 17 years in the army we have never been this well focused and prepared for what we are doing.

"The Welsh Guards battle group operate in the centre south of Helmand and there is obviously a limit to what we can do. Our area where we patrol has half of the population of Helmand in it, which is significant in terms of how we operate here.

"Providing security is challenging, and we are a busy battle group. There is some demanding fighting but that is just the nature of the beast."

With little known about the numbers of insurgent fighters, the 550 Welsh Guards out on regular patrols are being stretched to capacity as the scale of the operations increases every day.

More than 8,000 British troops have been trying to secure the population centres either side of the Helmand River that cuts through the province.

But because of insufficient troop strength, brave men in their modest numbers often conduct operations only to pull back to their base, leaving the population exposed.

Lt Cnl Thorneloe admitted to me that more US forces will be 'really helpful' to 'spread the footprint' within Helmand and increase the security of 60 percent of the population in the south of Afghanistan even further.

It is hoped that the new US troops will make it possible to expand that to 90 per cent by the end of the summer fighting season.

In between, they expect a 'bloody summer' as the huge new US contingent deploys into southern areas firmly under the sway of militants.

Before the ISAF forces came into Afghanistan, two million people had been killed in the fighting and six million of the 30 million population were forced to flee their homes and become refugees.

When the British were first sent to Helmand three years ago, it was billed as a humanitarian mission to protect development projects. But since then they have been involved in some of their most intense fighting since the Korean War 50 years ago.

Soldiers must live out on the front line and put their lives in their comrades' hands.

In these small bases, they face some of the toughest living conditions for British soldiers anywhere in the world. They sleep in 12 man tents, cope with primitive outdoor washing facilities and eat boil-in-a-bag rations.

And with temperatures soaring above 44 degrees C the day I arrived, the men face a harsh battle, not only with the enemy, but with the elements.

Captain John Bethell, intelligence officer for the Welsh Guards, said: "This is the nature of a counter-insurgency campaign – foot patrols are the most effective way to combat the enemy.

"But when we talk about insurgency we are not talking about an informed army, we are talking about hardcore foreign fighters who take part in terrorist acts.

"We have seen a small backlash from small arms attacks but the majority of the attacks are now improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

"The aim of our patrols is to gather information about their activity and their plans. They are a credible enemy, not a ragtag militia and we are aware of this and are acting effectively towards it."

Patrolling in these conditions, wearing heavy body armour and carrying machine guns, radios, batteries and ammunition, is hard enough without having to worry about the Taleban.

While I was out in Afghanistan, I had the opportunity to break from the security and go out on one of these patrols with Four Mercian Company and even though I was in an armoured vehicle, the heat, which topped 112 degrees F, pushed my body to the limit.

As I drove out of the gates of Camp Bastion, over the barren desert lands of southern Afghanistan and into the sweltering villages of Helmand, I started to gain an understanding of the scale of the mission here and the immediacy of the aim.

As I stood, surrounded by vast poppy fields and mud compounds, I realised that with the battle against insurgents came a battle against the drugs trade, tribalism and religion, all of which seemed far out of even the Afghans' hands because of years of built-up tradition and pride.

Since it began seven years ago, Operation Herrick has been costly in both the lives lost and the money spent here. But Lt Cnl Thorneloe is positive the mission is not in vain.

He said: "The Taleban have a saying, 'you may have the watches but we have the time' and I really don't sense that with Herrick.

"They can offer brutal stability in a country which is tribalistic but the reason we are here is to create and maintain security. I am confident that in our time here we will continue the upward trajectory progress.

"We are grateful for the support from home and we are aware of the sacrifice our families make back home and we miss them terribly.

"The people of Wales have embraced what we are doing here tremendously, and facing these enormous hardships and dangers is nothing without their support.

"They should be hugely proud of what these people have achieved out here - they really hit the ground running. We have had some difficult situations and everybody, no matter who, have stood up to the test, and there is a great sense of camaraderie about the whole thing. The Welsh Guards still face a considerable threat here and we have to be prepared for that.

"But morale is sky high and this is a mission people believe in.
"They say that war brings out the best and the worst in people, but it has certainly brought out the best in the Welsh Guards."

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Lance Sergeant Tobie Fasfous killed in Afghanistan


It is with deep regret that the MOD must confirm that Lance Sergeant Tobie Fasfous from 1st Battalion Welsh Guards was killed in Afghanistan on 28 April 2009.

Lance Sergeant Tobie Fasfous was a specialist mortarman, responsible for directing and controlling the mortar fire used to support friendly troops, an essential role in suppressing the insurgents trying to attack patrols, and in enabling the Afghan National Police and Army to bring stability to the region.

He was taking part in a reassurance foot patrol alongside the Afghan National Army in the vicinity of Forward Operating Base Keenan, north east of Gereshk in Helmand province, when he was killed as a result of an explosion.

Lance Sergeant Tobie Fasfous, 1st Battalion Welsh Guards

Tobie was born on 4 February 1980. Having joined the Army, he completed his training in Guards Training Company, Catterick, in 2001 and joined 1st Battalion Welsh Guards when they were based in Aldershot. He qualified as a sniper, and served with distinction in Bosnia and Iraq, where his grasp of local customs and language quickly endeared him to the local community. His partner, Kelly, lives in Bridgend and his mother works in the Middle East.

Tobie was a bright, popular individual who proved his flexibility in operational theatres as far apart as Bosnia, Iraq, and, most recently, Afghanistan.

Each time, he showed himself undaunted by unfamiliar environments, and quickly demonstrated the compassion, understanding and professionalism of the British soldier on operations. He had intended to continue his career in the Army, and was interested in attempting pilot selection with the Army Air Corps to fly helicopters.