3 Para. Patrick Bishop

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3 Para - Patrick  Bishop


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Martin Taylor. © Major Will Pike

      WO2 Zac Leong. © Captain Martin Taylor

      Captain Matt Taylor. © Lieutenant Martin Hewitt

      SECOND PLATE SECTION

      Captains Alex Mackenzie and mate Piers Ashfield having a brew at

      Sangin. © Lieutenant Martin Hewitt

      Corporal Jay Jackson on stag in Sangin. © Corporal Dave Salmon

      Regimental Sergeant Major John Hardy.

      © Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Tootal

      Lieutenant Ollie Dale gets his head down in Sangin.

      © Corporal Dave Salmon

      The Pathfinders at Musa Qaleh. © Nick Wight-Boycott

      Sergeant Major Mick Bolton in front of the Sangin district centre.

      © Captain Euan Goodman

      A mortar section at Sangin fires in support of patrols on the

      ground. © Captain Euan Goodman

      A Chinook takes off from Sangin under fire. © Corporal Carl Tees

      Private Pete McKinley recovering from shrapnel wounds in the

      base hospital. © Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Tootal

      Corporal Bryan Budd on patrol in Sangin. © Captain Hugo Farmer

      Rifleman Nabin Rai after a contact with Taliban in Now Zad.

      © Major Dan Rex

      Major Huw Williams, Captain Nick French and a signaller at Musa

      Qaleh. © Captain Martin Taylor

      A .50-cal heavy machine gun inside a well-reinforced sangar at

      Sangin. © Major Jamie Loden

      Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Tootal in the desert near Musa Qaleh.

      © Captain Nick French

      Heading out to the helicopter landing site after a successful

      resupply operation at Musa Qaleh. © Crown copyright

      ‘Giving the Taliban the good news’. Watching an air strike go in

      outside Musa Qaleh. © Crown copyright

      Sergeant Christopher ‘Freddie’ Kruyer. © Staff Sergeant Pete Joiner

      Dinner at Bastion. © Crown copyright

      Major Adam Jowett, OC of Easy Company, chats with local elders.

      © Gaz Faulkner

      Captain Hugo Farmer on patrol in Gereshk in full kit.

      © Captain Emma Couper

      Private Dave Prosser and other members of Mortar Platoon.

      © Sergeant Freddie Kruyer

      A shura in Sangin.

      While every effort has been made to trace the owners of copyright

      material reproduced herein, the publishers would like to apologise

      for any omissions and will be pleased to incorporate missing

      acknowledgments in any future editions.

       List of Maps

      Afghanistan

      Helmand Province

      Sangin

      Gereshk

      Musa Qaleh

      Now Zad

       1

       Day of Days

      At about 8 a.m. on the morning of 6 September 2006 Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Tootal rolled out of his cot, pulled on his uniform and boots and set off along the duckboard walkway to catch up on overnight events.

      The sun was already high and a pale, malevolent haze hovered over the talcum-powder dust of the Helmand desert. He reached a tent bristling with radio antennae and pushed aside the door flap. Inside it was warm and stuffy. The gloom was pricked with little nails of green and red light, winking from stacks of electronic consoles. It was quiet except for the occasional squawk from the radios. This was the Joint Operational Command, the ‘JOC’, where the synapses of the battle group he led came together.

      Tootal was slight, wiry and driven. He was as interested in the theory of soldiering as he was in the practice, and had as many degrees as battle honours. His enthusiasm for his job was matched by his concern for his men. There would be much to be concerned about before the day was over.

      The 3 Para battle group had arrived in Helmand five months earlier. Its task was to create a security zone within which development agencies could get to work on projects to develop an area barely touched by progress and lay the foundations for a future of relative prosperity.

      The plan had always been aspirational. The religious warriors of the Taliban, who were struggling to reassert their power in the province, were certain to oppose the arrival of the British.

      Everyone had expected some trouble, but not the relentless combat the soldiers were now immersed in. The reconstruction mission had become a memory. 3 Para and their comrades were fighting a desperate war of attrition. Most of them were besieged in bare mud-and-breeze-block government compounds – ‘platoon houses’, as they had become known – scattered over the north of the province, fighting off daily attacks from an enemy who, despite taking murderous losses, kept on coming. They spent their days pounded by the sun as they took their turn at ‘stag’, crouching in sandbagged, rooftop gun positions, or standing by to run to their posts when the shooting started. They slept on floors, washed rarely and lived off ration packs and sterilised water. They were gaunt, bony and rough looking. Their sunburned faces were fuzzed with beards, just like those of the men they were fighting.

      They were on their own out there. Beyond the walls of the compound and the shattered towns lay tawny, sun-baked mountains and vast stretches of desert, ridged with dry watercourses. The mother base at Camp Bastion was far away and they were connected to it by the slimmest of links, the helicopters whose vulnerability to the insurgents’ fire made every sortie heart-stoppingly tense.

      The morning started calmly. The previous day, most of the fighting had been around the base at Musa Qaleh, a broken-down fortress in the middle of a ghost town, now inhabited only by men trying to kill each other. It was held by the soldiers of Easy Company, some of whom had been there for thirty-one days. In the morning, the insurgents had lobbed five mortars into the compound from concealed positions in the maze of alleyways and walled


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