I apologise for the delay. It's just rather appropriately going to the
gym in the hottest part of the day with a hangover rather wiped me out
yesterday.
Anyway on Sunday (14/7/13) it emerged that on Saturday (15/7/13) two
British Territorial Army reservists had died of heat exhaustion during a
speed march on the Breacon Beacons in Wales as part of the selection
process for the reserve regiment of the Special Air Service (SAS)
special forces. Along with the almost exclusively loyalist rioting in
Belfast, the big shop fire in Manchester and the attack on the home of
Francis Cory-Wright in Hertfordshire this was meant to contribute to
general confused concern about my personal safety and security while
Rihanna was in the UK. The SAS story would have caused particular
confusion because the UK have been telling the local networks in Croydon
that it's their job to train me up. However a lot of people who've been
looking at the scorecard think it's the other way around. Also a few
years back the UK was trying to convince everyone that my maternal
cousin who is in the army had the same genetic heart defect as my
paternal grandmother. The main bit of evidence for this is that he
reported feeling faint after one of the these speed marches - something
that is clearly not that unreasonable.
Beyond the connections to me the SAS story also touches on some wider
arguments. For example the UK recently announced that it intends to
shrink the size of the regular armed forces and replace the shortfall
with reservists. This is obviously not popular within the regular
military who have long viewed reservists as inferior. Two reservists
failing selection by dying does obviously raise questions about whether
they're up to the required standard.
Mainly though the incident seems to feed into a long running argument
between the UK and France over the operation in Mali. The French are
actually being very professional about the operation simply wanting to
get in, get the job done and get out again. As a result even with a
United Nations (UN) peacekeeping force beginning to deploy France will
be keeping a force of around 1000 in Mali made up mainly for
elite/special forces to carry out raids against Islamist terrorist
bases. The UK on the other hand seems more interested in dragging out
the conflict for as long as possible in order to use it to put pressure
on the predominately African nations that make up the UN force. With
operating temperatures in Mali being almost double what they were on the
Breacon Beacons on Saturday the incident seems to be the UK arguing
that it won't been sending special forces to Mali because African troops
are better acclimatised to the environment. However it must be said I
don't think anyone has been pushing for UK troops to be deployed because
they're viewed as more of a hindrance then a help.
Added to this you have the death on Sunday of Susan Taylor who died in
French waters after trying to swim the English Channel in a effort to
raise money for Hospice Care and Diabetes treatment. That obviously put
immediate pressure on the French authorities who had to take Ms Taylor
into hospital in an attempt at life saving treatment. The inquiry into
her death opens up a bridge of dialogue between the UK and France which
will be quite difficult for the French because Hospice care is the
medical treatment you give to the terminally ill in order to allow them
to die peacefully. It was this type of care the UK controversially gave
to my paternal grandmother over a number of years even though she wasn't
suffering from any form of terminal illness. The UK have of course also
argued for years that I suffer from Diabetes despite there not being
any medical evidence to support that. The incident is also highly
reminiscent of the death of Claire Squires at the 2012 London Marathon
and all the pre-Olympic controversy that involved.
Finally on Sunday the body of Phillpe Verdon was discovered in Mali.
Verdon was a French geologist who kidnapped by Islamic terrorists in
Mali in 2011. In March 2013 Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
announced they'd executed him in response to France's intervention in
Mali. The discovery of the body that had apparently been left out in an
effort to send a message obviously puts immediate pressure on the French
authorities to identify the body and establish a cause of death.
Coinciding with the UK's co-ordinated efforts on Mali it also raises
questions about the strength of the links between the UK and AQIM.
Finally it seemed intent on showing that AQIM have fight left in them in
an effort to get the French to withdraw it's forces from Mali in order
to avoid further causalities.
(Originally Posted) 11:10 on 16/7/13
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