http://www.nypost.com/seven/04032007/po ... htm?page=0
Bloody Jounos.

(no offence intended to Jacko)
Moderators: Aladinsaneuk, MartDude, D-Rider, Moderators
And the Royal Marine company to which those wankers belong should be disbanded and stricken from the rolls.
Peters was born in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, but grew up in Schuylkill Haven. His father was a coal miner and unsuccessful businessman. Peters has written "I am a miner's son, and my father was a self-made man who unmade himself in my youth."
Peters enlisted in the Army as a private, and spent ten years in Germany working in military intelligence. Years later, during the 2004 Killian documents controversy, Peters pointed out that in his front-line division in 1977, five years after the memos in question were allegedly written, only the general's secretary had an electric typewriter. It was, he says, too primitive to produce the documents in question, and moreover, National Guard units "…got the junk we didn't want."
After returning from Germany, Peters attended Officer Candidate School and received his commission, eventually attending the Command and General Staff College. His last assignment was to the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence. He retired in 1998 with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
Peters has appeared on PBS, FOX News, CNN and other networks with commentary on military issues and current affairs.
Peters's first novel was Bravo Romeo, a spy thriller set in former West Germany. His novels progressed from futuristic scenarios involving the Red Army to contemporary terrorism and failed state issues. His characters are often presented as military mavericks who have the clairvoyance and courage to tackle problems others can't or won't.
They certainly seemed very happy to tell the Iranians what they wanted to hear but maybe they would be a bit more up for it in their own barracks!Kwackerz wrote:
Ferry ticket to Lympstone? Im sure a few of my webfooted mates'd like a chat with him
Finally got round to reading what he has written and I agree with him.. But perhaps more to the point, thats what a foreigner thinks of what has happened. Do you believe that he is the only one to think like that? Do you think that the French would have a different idea. Or the Germans? Or the Iranians? Or do you think that is an increasingly common view of us abroad.D-Rider wrote:What a tosser!
yeah mate - why don't we just career in gung-ho, inflame the situation and set middle east relations back even further ....... and maybe send christmas cards to the still-unreleased captives a couple of years down the line.
Trouble is, we've seen his nation do this time after time ......
lazarus wrote:They certainly seemed very happy to tell the Iranians what they wanted to hear but maybe they would be a bit more up for it in their own barracks!Kwackerz wrote:
Ferry ticket to Lympstone? Im sure a few of my webfooted mates'd like a chat with him
Like it or not Kwaks, most British people seem to think that the Marine's behaviour in captivity was sycophanitc at best.
The Falklands war started as much as anything because the Argentinians thought that we were a nation of poofs and cowards - and this was literally the info fed back from their military attache prior to the invasion. They were astonished when we fought back. Sadly, the result of this recent farce is that conflict is made more likely not less - the average man in the souk is likely to regard our low key response as cowardice on our part.
According to a Navy officer I spoke to today, the likely culprit is the rules of engagement combined with a feeling that they would not be backed up back home had they fought back, and would have been thrown to the lawyers. Seems likely to me when soldiers in Iraq get investigated for unlawful killings yet nothing whatever happens when plod kills an unarmed man yet again.
You have to contrast all this with the much more robust approach of the yanks. Would they have allowed the men to be captured? And when they do nothing about friendly fire incidents by their forces, how likely are they to worry about a few dead Iranians if their soldiers fought back.