mikepara
Practically Family
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Gongs! British Cold War Service Good or Bad?
I know this isn't WW2 but where else would be better to post it? Bartender please feel free to move it if you think of a more suitable area.
Nowadays in my Regimental Magazines I see young Soldiers proudly wearing up to 10 operational medals...and counting. [Not including Gallantry medals.]*
*PLEASE don't turn this into a debate on the politics of the Gulf, WOT etc.
In recent years there has been roughly about 10 different UN tours, 4 Nato tours, 2 Gulf Wars, 3 Occupation / War on Terror operations, Accumulated General service medals. All earned and reflecting a dangerous time to be a Serviceman [/woman]. Oh! and a Queens Golden jubilee medal for everyone still serving.
It seems most of my generation of Soldiers missed out on all the medals. I have some great friends who served over 22 years during the Cold War in the British Army and like me, came out of it with three medals, if they were lucky. These usually being:
GSM 1962 with clasp Northern Ireland.
UNFICYP United Nations Medal for Cyprus.
Long Service & Good Conduct Medal.
Queens Silver Jubilee Medal 1977. Issued one per rank per regiment. So all the Commanding Officers really and a token few.
The Falklands (South Atlantic) War 1982 was only really 3 Commando Brigade with a handfull of attached Guards, Para units. The vast majority of units where sitting still as BOAR in West Germany.
UNFICYP was the only real option for a UN tour then.
GSM N. Ireland one medal regardless of how many tours.(It was all very much bomb and bullet then.)
LSGC. 15 years Exemplary service. So quite hard to get really.
Sadly No Cold War, NATO, or BAOR Medal was issued regardless of how when or where you faced down the Soviet threat. [Which was quite real then.]
My point? Was the Cold War a good time to be a soldier? Or was it like the between the war's soldier who 'missed out' on WW1 and was too old for WWII? Is having a good service only defined by going to War?
Well I personally had a good Cold War with Multiple Tours of Cyprus, Tours of NI and a good crack at digging in awaiting the Red Army Advance in (West) Germany. A big whack of it in Aldershot and a score of adventure and career courses and loads of Parachuting. I earned my meagre medals but loved every second of it.
Would I like to be in the Service now? Oh yes! I'd join again tomorrow and wouldn't give a hoot for the medals. After all there just souvenirs right?
I know this isn't WW2 but where else would be better to post it? Bartender please feel free to move it if you think of a more suitable area.
Nowadays in my Regimental Magazines I see young Soldiers proudly wearing up to 10 operational medals...and counting. [Not including Gallantry medals.]*
*PLEASE don't turn this into a debate on the politics of the Gulf, WOT etc.
In recent years there has been roughly about 10 different UN tours, 4 Nato tours, 2 Gulf Wars, 3 Occupation / War on Terror operations, Accumulated General service medals. All earned and reflecting a dangerous time to be a Serviceman [/woman]. Oh! and a Queens Golden jubilee medal for everyone still serving.
It seems most of my generation of Soldiers missed out on all the medals. I have some great friends who served over 22 years during the Cold War in the British Army and like me, came out of it with three medals, if they were lucky. These usually being:
GSM 1962 with clasp Northern Ireland.
UNFICYP United Nations Medal for Cyprus.
Long Service & Good Conduct Medal.
Queens Silver Jubilee Medal 1977. Issued one per rank per regiment. So all the Commanding Officers really and a token few.
The Falklands (South Atlantic) War 1982 was only really 3 Commando Brigade with a handfull of attached Guards, Para units. The vast majority of units where sitting still as BOAR in West Germany.
UNFICYP was the only real option for a UN tour then.
GSM N. Ireland one medal regardless of how many tours.(It was all very much bomb and bullet then.)
LSGC. 15 years Exemplary service. So quite hard to get really.
Sadly No Cold War, NATO, or BAOR Medal was issued regardless of how when or where you faced down the Soviet threat. [Which was quite real then.]
My point? Was the Cold War a good time to be a soldier? Or was it like the between the war's soldier who 'missed out' on WW1 and was too old for WWII? Is having a good service only defined by going to War?
Well I personally had a good Cold War with Multiple Tours of Cyprus, Tours of NI and a good crack at digging in awaiting the Red Army Advance in (West) Germany. A big whack of it in Aldershot and a score of adventure and career courses and loads of Parachuting. I earned my meagre medals but loved every second of it.
Would I like to be in the Service now? Oh yes! I'd join again tomorrow and wouldn't give a hoot for the medals. After all there just souvenirs right?