
ROBERT HARDMAN: A night raid on a police station using the IRA's most deadly gun, an SAS team facing mortal danger - and 30 years on, a monstrous threat to haul them to court
For more than three hours, on a freezing February night, the 12 men from the Special Air Service had been lying behind a low, threadbare bit of hedge on the edge of a rural chapel car park near the Northern Irish village of Clonoe.
According to intelligence reports, this was where the East Tyrone Brigade of the Irish Republican Army were going to assemble the largest and deadliest weapon in the IRA's very considerable armoury and mount it on the back of an open lorry.
At which point, the SAS would jump out and apprehend the gun and the terrorists red-handed before they could set off to reduce their intended target – the local police station – to Swiss cheese.
For this was not just any old machine gun. Firing more than 600 armour-piercing 12.7mm rounds per minute, the Russian-made DshK (known as the 'Dushka') can stop a plane or armoured vehicle at a range of more than a mile.
Just one problem. At 10.40pm, the SAS realised that the intelligence they had received was not entirely accurate. Yes, the target was Coalisland police station.
But as the distant sound of heavy gunfire made clear, the gun was already in full working order and battering the building (its occupants, forewarned, were down in the basement).
It seemed likely, therefore, that the chapel car park was now the place where the IRA would come to dismantle the 'Dushka' rather than put it together. The 12 soldiers steeled themselves for the arrival of this horrific killing machine.
A few minutes later, the soldiers could see headlights coming up the lane next to Clonoe chapel.
A Vauxhall Cavalier was leading the lorry at great speed and both came careering into the car park – with three gunmen plus the Dushka clearly on the back of the lorry – followed by two more cars. Suddenly, the Vauxhall's headlights were illuminating the hedge.
Had the SAS been spotted? If so, they were dead unless they reacted instantly. Jumping to their feet and opening fire, the soldiers ran forward and all hell broke loose.
Moments later, four terrorists lay dead, a wounded gang member was captured and another three escaped in the other vehicles, one of which was found abandoned and ablaze at a nearby sports ground.
The only SAS casualty was one walking wounded. A soldier had been shot in the face but the bullet had passed through his cheek and out again. The Dushka would never fire another shot in anger, with an untold number of lives saved as a result.
It was a major defeat for the East Tyrone Brigade but due process then kicked in. The Royal Ulster Constabulary conducted an eight-month investigation in to the deaths, and the Director of Public Prosecutions summoned the SAS commanding officer for interview. After statements were taken from all the soldiers, the DPP issued a direction that there would be no prosecutions.
That was October 1992 and the matter was closed. Or at least it was until 2024 when the soldiers were ordered to give evidence to a 'legacy inquest' into the four deaths. The SAS veterans exercised their right to silence, leaving the coroner with their signed statements from three decades earlier.
The men then waited another year for the coroner, a senior Northern Irish judge called Sir Michael Humphreys, to produce his findings. He ruled that the shooting of the terrorists was 'not justified' thanks to Article 2 of the European Court of Human Rights whereby the state has 'a positive duty to protect life'.
He ruled that 'the soldiers did not have an honest belief that it was necessary in order to prevent loss of life' and that the SAS's use of lethal force was, therefore, 'not reasonable'.
The soldiers, he declared, could have waited until the IRA had started dismantling the gun and then informed them that they were under arrest.
However, because they stood up and opened fire on the terrorists, he refused to believe that this was an arrest mission at all. He made great play of the fact that, during the original investigation, the soldiers had referred to the operation as an 'ambush'. Because they may, therefore, have committed a criminal offence – up to and including murder – Sir Michael was handing the case over to the DPP. The 12 soldiers, now all veterans, some of them in their seventies, must wait to hear if they are to be arrested and charged.
'It is, simply, beyond belief,' says George Simm, Regimental Sergeant-Major of the SAS at the time of the operation. 'There was no new evidence, none, And here we have a judge who presumes to know what to do in that split second when your men might be about to be killed.'
That is why Mr Simm (a holder of the Distinguished Conduct Medal, which sits just one rung below the Victora Cross) is talking to me over a cup of coffee in a London café. A year ago that would have been beyond belief, too. After 25 years in the SAS, he is marinaded in its codes of discretion and loyalty. He was a rigorous enforcer of regimental codes, once expelling a retired general from a funeral wake at the SAS barracks in Hereford. Top brass he might have been, but the general had broken the code by including clandestine SAS operations in his memoirs.
Last year, however, the advent of the 'legacy inquest' prompted Mr Simm to put his name to a letter in the Times attacking the 'incremental supremacy' of the ECHR and the way in which successive governments have given Legal Aid to fund 'vexatious compensation cases' against British troops. Now, the naivety of the Clonoe verdict has led Mr Simm – and others – to step out into the open on behalf of those comrades who face a potential prosecution.
'The Government need to know that if this legal madness is allowed to continue unchecked, beyond the reach of Parliament, then this will defenestrate any security process in this country,' he says. 'Because human rights law, as it stands, now supercedes the rights of the security operator to do his job.'
Meanwhile, as Labour dismantles a law which was supposed to give veterans some sort of historic protection, more of these cases seem inevitable.
For many like Mr Simm, the Clonoe result is, therefore, a tipping point, a fork in the road, call it what you will. And not just for past and present members of the SAS. It threatens all those units involved in the very dangerous, thankless and yet vital covert operations combatting Northern Irish terrorism over three decades. It is why both the veterans and the Ministry of Defence are seeking a judicial review to overturn the Humphreys ruling.
It is why the Conservative MP and ex-SAS reservist Sir David Davis is now leading a parliamentary campaign to bring in new legal protections which stop old soldiers from being dragged out of their retirement to be investigated under laws which did not even exist at the time and which were not passed by the UK Parliament in the first place.
And it is why today the Daily Mail is proudly launching a new campaign with two overarching aims: protect the Special Forces veterans and stop rewriting history. For make no mistake. This is not just about compensation-chasing, publicly-funded lawyers running rings round a weak Northern Irish government, led, for the first time, by a Sinn Fein politician, and propped up by a seemingly bottomless Legal Aid budget.
According to its own data, handling 'legacy' issues has cost the police £126million over the last seven years while £18million has been handed to lawyers – versus just £7million to victims. The bill for the Clonoe hearing currently stands at £1.3million, according to the court, and that does not include the cost of police time.
This is also a case of hardline nationalists painting every IRA defeat and humiliation as a British crime. And that has dire implications for our future national security. 'Clonoe was a great defeat for the IRA and Sinn Fein want to rewrite history and turn that defeat into a black operation,' says Sir David Davis.
A senior Royal Ulster Constabulary veteran from the Clonoe era puts it to me: 'The IRA can never look good. They shot people in their beds. But if they can make the SAS and the RUC look as bad as them, then they can justify their use of the bomb and the bullet.' Having wearily dismissed television dramas like 'SAS Rogue Heroes', the veterans are now determined to correct the impression of fearless brigands tumbling out of the pub in search of a battle.
As all the Special Forces veterans I have spoken to in recent days point out, their activities were the most rigorously scrutinised in Northern Ireland, with every proposed operation pushed right up the chain of command and signed off at the highest level – even by the Secretary of State.
Recent allegations by the BBC's Panorama about possible war crimes committed by British Special Forces in Afghanistan have only added to something of a siege mentality among SAS men past and present.
The SAS can cope with abuse, of course – and they are famously good at sieges. What is far more damaging is the corrosive effect on morale and reputation.
'Right now, the chief topic of conversation in every mess in Hereford is: where does this go next?' says Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton, a former SAS squadron commander at the time of Clonoe and former private secretary to Princes William and Harry. Like Mr Simm, he is another who is prepared to break cover and speak out for the good of the regiment.
'Soldiers forfeit their rights to employment law, freedom of speech and all those other things we take for granted as long as they know that someone is watching their back. But who is watching it now?'
Mr Simm finds himself uttering words which he could never imagine saying before and which pain him greatly. When I ask him what a parent should tell a son (it remains an all-male unit) who might be thinking of joining the regiment, he grimaces. 'I'd say to him: 'Hell, no'.' [His words are rather stronger than that]. Because it's not the enemy you need to worry about now. It's the lawyers.'
He points to the way that the last Tory government tried to halt the judicial over-reach of the lawyers and the ECHR with its Legacy Act to protect veterans. However, the courts have ruled that this Legacy Act is, guess what, in breach of the ECHR. The Labour government agrees and so Sir Keir Starmer and his Northern Ireland Secretary, Hilary Benn, have pledged to repeal the Act. Meanwhile, the number of Troubles-related civil cases has shot up from 150 ten years ago to a current backlog of 1,100 – and rising.
It helps explain the phenomenal response to the recent petition on the parliamentary website under the heading 'Protect Northern Ireland Veterans from Prosecutions'. Submitted in response to the Clonoe ruling, it demands 'that the Government should not make any changes to legislation that would allow Northern Ireland Veterans to be prosecuted for doing their duty in combating terrorism as part of 'Operation Banner'. (1969-2007)'.
If a petition receives 10,000 online signatures, the Government has to respond. After 100,000 it is supposed to be debated at Westminster. This petition sailed past both criteria in a week and a debate has been fixed for July 14. The more people who click on the petition, however, the harder it will be for the Government to bat away so many awkward questions. In his current response to the petition, Mr Benn says meekly that the Legacy Act 'has been found to be unlawful' and 'any Government would have to repeal unlawful legislation'.
'Do they think we're children?' asks Mr Simm. 'It's only unlawful because a law passed by the UK Parliament has been declared unlawful by a law in Europe. I don't want this to become a debate about leaving the ECHR but for God's sake...'
A few days after my coffee with Mr Simm, I meet him again in London at what feels like a council of war. We are in a flat near Victoria Station where four very senior and experienced SAS veterans are discussing the best way to ensure the public understand the regiment's case. 'Any secret organisation has to have 'omerta' or discretion,' , says Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Williams, a Military Cross-holder who commanded the regiment in Iraq. 'You have to have discretion.
The ethos in the regiment has always been humility and humour. It's quite an awkward thing if you've been in special forces being asked to talk about everything you've done. It's not good for teamwork.
But if there isn't any presentation of our point of view in the public domain, those who have got the critical view of us will be the only one that fills the space. And that's very, very dangerous.'
So the old soldiers who are now speaking out under the banner of 'justiceforveterans.uk' are also taking great care to liaise with the regimental association, which represents all SAS veterans.
For many, one of the most irksome elements of inquests like Clonoe is the way in which so many regimental secrets have been dragged into the public domain through compulsory legal disclosure. There is nothing questionable about their tactics but it pains them greatly to have to place closely-guarded details about operational procedures into the public domain – and thus available to future foes.
'An inquest is supposed to establish who has died and ask when, where and how,' says Aldwin Wight, former SAS commanding officer (who won the Military Cross in the Falklands). 'But now under Article 2 it has widened out massively into 'who planned it', 'what was their state of mind' and so on and you've got judges being tactical commanders.'
I hear the same despair among RUC veterans who worked right alongside the SAS. Visiting Northern Ireland last week, I heard time and again how blundering officials and politicians have risked lives with careless talk. One former senior RUC officer still winces at the memory of former Northern Ireland
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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Survivors recall Tunisia terror attacks 10 years on
On 25 June 2015, a gunman shot dead 38 people, including 30 Britons, in a Tunisian holiday Rezgui, a Tunisian student, opened fire on tourists staying in Port El Kantaoui, just north of Sousse, in an attack for which the jihadist group Islamic State claimed was shot dead by police shortly afterwards but his actions shocked the world and changed lives for years on, survivors of the massacre have been recalling their horrific experiences and reflecting on how it changed their lives. 'I actually say I was saved for two reasons' Holidaymakers Christine and Stuart Cullen, from Lowestoft, Suffolk, were caught up in the Cullen remembers it clearly."He [Rezgui] threw a bomb with nails and things and then I looked up and I saw Stuart and, unfortunately, a piece of metal from the bomb had severed his artery. He bled out in my hands."Mr Cullen was killed. Already hit by shrapnel, Mrs Cullen thought she was going to be next. "He [Rezgui] came up to me, probably only a few feet away, pointed and shot. so I threw myself back and thought this was it."Then I suddenly realised that actually I hadn't been hit... then I played dead and watched him go off."I shouldn't be here - I don't know how I'm here, but I shouldn't be here. At the inquest, there were two statements that say they saw him shoot me. "I actually say I was saved for two reasons: to plan my daughter's wedding and look after my grandchildren."She says the attack has given her a new outlook on life."If anything, I live in the moment more now. I am more appreciative of things now, and if there's an opportunity to go and do something I haven't done before, why not? You feel a bit invincible, really." 'When I got the call, I just knew I'd lost one of them' Mrs and Mrs Cullen's daughter, Emma-Jayne Herbert, was at home in Lowestoft at the time of the attack. "When I got the call - it was off a family member - I just knew I'd lost one of them, and I had a feeling it was Dad," she says.A decade on, she is now expecting her first child - and her parents' first grandchild - two years after her mum gave her away at her wedding. And although her dad was not physically there, she says she felt his presence."There was this rain that came over that almost felt like maybe his tears, and then it just washed away after 10 minutes."The wedding started a little bit late and the sunshine just beamed out as I was coming down the aisle, and it just felt like 'Yeah, that's my dad.'"They are holding a family festival in her dad's memory at The Plough, Blundeston, on Saturday in aid of Nelson's Journey, a charity that supports bereaved children."He'd be very proud that we're not just sitting in a hole in darkness, that we are coming together with others in our family and... remembering the good and being positive. He would definitely be very happy and proud with that." 'The worst day of my life and a living nightmare' Allison and Phil Heathcote, from Felixstowe, Suffolk, had been in Tunisia, celebrating their 30th wedding Heathcote describes the day of the attacks as "the worst day of my life, and a living nightmare".She says: "I would say, probably within about five minutes of it starting, we'd both been shot."I tried to see if Phil was alive but he wasn't responding and there were just people all around you, dead." With the gunman on the rampage, she laid still in the sand, despite having been shot five times."Most of my injuries were in my right arm; also my stomach. I've got another one just underneath the breast there and I've also still got another bullet still in me."Mr Heathcote, a cricket lover, was killed in the attack and a memorial match in his honour is being held at Felixstowe and Corinthians Cricket Club on 10 will raise money for Fisher House, which provided accommodation for Mrs Heathcote's family while she was in hospital in Birmingham after the her horrific experiences, she considers herself lucky."I've still got my son, and he means the world to me, and I've still got the rest of my family," she says."I didn't want die. I'm glad I'm still here, but I wish [my husband] was here, too." 'You really did think that was your last day' Andy and Nicki Duffield, from Watton, Norfolk, were in Tunisia to celebrate Mr Duffield's took refuge in a gardener's shed while the attacks took place."I hid behind a door with an aerosol spray and a pair of garden shears," he recalls."I thought, 'If someone's coming through that door, at least I'm going to go with a fight.' You know, we survived it but a lot of people didn't."Yeah, we were lucky. A lot of nice people lost their lives there that day."Mrs Duffield remembers running and hiding for her life."The terror, the fear - you really did think that was your last day," she credits her husband with saving her life by encouraging her to keep running and by asking the gardeners to hide them in their shed."We knew that the gunfire was getting closer and closer. Andy was shouting at me to keep running, and at one point I told him to just go and to leave me and he wouldn't."The couple are defiant and say they will not let their experiences stop them from continuing to holiday abroad."If it wasn't for my husband, I wouldn't be here. It's changed my life completely," says Mrs Duffield. Follow East of England news on X, Instagram and Facebook: BBC Beds, Herts & Bucks, BBC Cambridgeshire, BBC Essex, BBC Norfolk, BBC Northamptonshire or BBC Suffolk.


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
ROBERT HARDMAN: A night raid on a police station using the IRA's most deadly gun, an SAS team facing mortal danger - and 30 years on, a monstrous threat to haul them to court
For more than three hours, on a freezing February night, the 12 men from the Special Air Service had been lying behind a low, threadbare bit of hedge on the edge of a rural chapel car park near the Northern Irish village of Clonoe. According to intelligence reports, this was where the East Tyrone Brigade of the Irish Republican Army were going to assemble the largest and deadliest weapon in the IRA's very considerable armoury and mount it on the back of an open lorry. At which point, the SAS would jump out and apprehend the gun and the terrorists red-handed before they could set off to reduce their intended target – the local police station – to Swiss cheese. For this was not just any old machine gun. Firing more than 600 armour-piercing 12.7mm rounds per minute, the Russian-made DshK (known as the 'Dushka') can stop a plane or armoured vehicle at a range of more than a mile. Just one problem. At 10.40pm, the SAS realised that the intelligence they had received was not entirely accurate. Yes, the target was Coalisland police station. But as the distant sound of heavy gunfire made clear, the gun was already in full working order and battering the building (its occupants, forewarned, were down in the basement). It seemed likely, therefore, that the chapel car park was now the place where the IRA would come to dismantle the 'Dushka' rather than put it together. The 12 soldiers steeled themselves for the arrival of this horrific killing machine. A few minutes later, the soldiers could see headlights coming up the lane next to Clonoe chapel. A Vauxhall Cavalier was leading the lorry at great speed and both came careering into the car park – with three gunmen plus the Dushka clearly on the back of the lorry – followed by two more cars. Suddenly, the Vauxhall's headlights were illuminating the hedge. Had the SAS been spotted? If so, they were dead unless they reacted instantly. Jumping to their feet and opening fire, the soldiers ran forward and all hell broke loose. Moments later, four terrorists lay dead, a wounded gang member was captured and another three escaped in the other vehicles, one of which was found abandoned and ablaze at a nearby sports ground. The only SAS casualty was one walking wounded. A soldier had been shot in the face but the bullet had passed through his cheek and out again. The Dushka would never fire another shot in anger, with an untold number of lives saved as a result. It was a major defeat for the East Tyrone Brigade but due process then kicked in. The Royal Ulster Constabulary conducted an eight-month investigation in to the deaths, and the Director of Public Prosecutions summoned the SAS commanding officer for interview. After statements were taken from all the soldiers, the DPP issued a direction that there would be no prosecutions. That was October 1992 and the matter was closed. Or at least it was until 2024 when the soldiers were ordered to give evidence to a 'legacy inquest' into the four deaths. The SAS veterans exercised their right to silence, leaving the coroner with their signed statements from three decades earlier. The men then waited another year for the coroner, a senior Northern Irish judge called Sir Michael Humphreys, to produce his findings. He ruled that the shooting of the terrorists was 'not justified' thanks to Article 2 of the European Court of Human Rights whereby the state has 'a positive duty to protect life'. He ruled that 'the soldiers did not have an honest belief that it was necessary in order to prevent loss of life' and that the SAS's use of lethal force was, therefore, 'not reasonable'. The soldiers, he declared, could have waited until the IRA had started dismantling the gun and then informed them that they were under arrest. However, because they stood up and opened fire on the terrorists, he refused to believe that this was an arrest mission at all. He made great play of the fact that, during the original investigation, the soldiers had referred to the operation as an 'ambush'. Because they may, therefore, have committed a criminal offence – up to and including murder – Sir Michael was handing the case over to the DPP. The 12 soldiers, now all veterans, some of them in their seventies, must wait to hear if they are to be arrested and charged. 'It is, simply, beyond belief,' says George Simm, Regimental Sergeant-Major of the SAS at the time of the operation. 'There was no new evidence, none, And here we have a judge who presumes to know what to do in that split second when your men might be about to be killed.' That is why Mr Simm (a holder of the Distinguished Conduct Medal, which sits just one rung below the Victora Cross) is talking to me over a cup of coffee in a London café. A year ago that would have been beyond belief, too. After 25 years in the SAS, he is marinaded in its codes of discretion and loyalty. He was a rigorous enforcer of regimental codes, once expelling a retired general from a funeral wake at the SAS barracks in Hereford. Top brass he might have been, but the general had broken the code by including clandestine SAS operations in his memoirs. Last year, however, the advent of the 'legacy inquest' prompted Mr Simm to put his name to a letter in the Times attacking the 'incremental supremacy' of the ECHR and the way in which successive governments have given Legal Aid to fund 'vexatious compensation cases' against British troops. Now, the naivety of the Clonoe verdict has led Mr Simm – and others – to step out into the open on behalf of those comrades who face a potential prosecution. 'The Government need to know that if this legal madness is allowed to continue unchecked, beyond the reach of Parliament, then this will defenestrate any security process in this country,' he says. 'Because human rights law, as it stands, now supercedes the rights of the security operator to do his job.' Meanwhile, as Labour dismantles a law which was supposed to give veterans some sort of historic protection, more of these cases seem inevitable. For many like Mr Simm, the Clonoe result is, therefore, a tipping point, a fork in the road, call it what you will. And not just for past and present members of the SAS. It threatens all those units involved in the very dangerous, thankless and yet vital covert operations combatting Northern Irish terrorism over three decades. It is why both the veterans and the Ministry of Defence are seeking a judicial review to overturn the Humphreys ruling. It is why the Conservative MP and ex-SAS reservist Sir David Davis is now leading a parliamentary campaign to bring in new legal protections which stop old soldiers from being dragged out of their retirement to be investigated under laws which did not even exist at the time and which were not passed by the UK Parliament in the first place. And it is why today the Daily Mail is proudly launching a new campaign with two overarching aims: protect the Special Forces veterans and stop rewriting history. For make no mistake. This is not just about compensation-chasing, publicly-funded lawyers running rings round a weak Northern Irish government, led, for the first time, by a Sinn Fein politician, and propped up by a seemingly bottomless Legal Aid budget. According to its own data, handling 'legacy' issues has cost the police £126million over the last seven years while £18million has been handed to lawyers – versus just £7million to victims. The bill for the Clonoe hearing currently stands at £1.3million, according to the court, and that does not include the cost of police time. This is also a case of hardline nationalists painting every IRA defeat and humiliation as a British crime. And that has dire implications for our future national security. 'Clonoe was a great defeat for the IRA and Sinn Fein want to rewrite history and turn that defeat into a black operation,' says Sir David Davis. A senior Royal Ulster Constabulary veteran from the Clonoe era puts it to me: 'The IRA can never look good. They shot people in their beds. But if they can make the SAS and the RUC look as bad as them, then they can justify their use of the bomb and the bullet.' Having wearily dismissed television dramas like 'SAS Rogue Heroes', the veterans are now determined to correct the impression of fearless brigands tumbling out of the pub in search of a battle. As all the Special Forces veterans I have spoken to in recent days point out, their activities were the most rigorously scrutinised in Northern Ireland, with every proposed operation pushed right up the chain of command and signed off at the highest level – even by the Secretary of State. Recent allegations by the BBC's Panorama about possible war crimes committed by British Special Forces in Afghanistan have only added to something of a siege mentality among SAS men past and present. The SAS can cope with abuse, of course – and they are famously good at sieges. What is far more damaging is the corrosive effect on morale and reputation. 'Right now, the chief topic of conversation in every mess in Hereford is: where does this go next?' says Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton, a former SAS squadron commander at the time of Clonoe and former private secretary to Princes William and Harry. Like Mr Simm, he is another who is prepared to break cover and speak out for the good of the regiment. 'Soldiers forfeit their rights to employment law, freedom of speech and all those other things we take for granted as long as they know that someone is watching their back. But who is watching it now?' Mr Simm finds himself uttering words which he could never imagine saying before and which pain him greatly. When I ask him what a parent should tell a son (it remains an all-male unit) who might be thinking of joining the regiment, he grimaces. 'I'd say to him: 'Hell, no'.' [His words are rather stronger than that]. Because it's not the enemy you need to worry about now. It's the lawyers.' He points to the way that the last Tory government tried to halt the judicial over-reach of the lawyers and the ECHR with its Legacy Act to protect veterans. However, the courts have ruled that this Legacy Act is, guess what, in breach of the ECHR. The Labour government agrees and so Sir Keir Starmer and his Northern Ireland Secretary, Hilary Benn, have pledged to repeal the Act. Meanwhile, the number of Troubles-related civil cases has shot up from 150 ten years ago to a current backlog of 1,100 – and rising. It helps explain the phenomenal response to the recent petition on the parliamentary website under the heading 'Protect Northern Ireland Veterans from Prosecutions'. Submitted in response to the Clonoe ruling, it demands 'that the Government should not make any changes to legislation that would allow Northern Ireland Veterans to be prosecuted for doing their duty in combating terrorism as part of 'Operation Banner'. (1969-2007)'. If a petition receives 10,000 online signatures, the Government has to respond. After 100,000 it is supposed to be debated at Westminster. This petition sailed past both criteria in a week and a debate has been fixed for July 14. The more people who click on the petition, however, the harder it will be for the Government to bat away so many awkward questions. In his current response to the petition, Mr Benn says meekly that the Legacy Act 'has been found to be unlawful' and 'any Government would have to repeal unlawful legislation'. 'Do they think we're children?' asks Mr Simm. 'It's only unlawful because a law passed by the UK Parliament has been declared unlawful by a law in Europe. I don't want this to become a debate about leaving the ECHR but for God's sake...' A few days after my coffee with Mr Simm, I meet him again in London at what feels like a council of war. We are in a flat near Victoria Station where four very senior and experienced SAS veterans are discussing the best way to ensure the public understand the regiment's case. 'Any secret organisation has to have 'omerta' or discretion,' , says Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Williams, a Military Cross-holder who commanded the regiment in Iraq. 'You have to have discretion. The ethos in the regiment has always been humility and humour. It's quite an awkward thing if you've been in special forces being asked to talk about everything you've done. It's not good for teamwork. But if there isn't any presentation of our point of view in the public domain, those who have got the critical view of us will be the only one that fills the space. And that's very, very dangerous.' So the old soldiers who are now speaking out under the banner of ' are also taking great care to liaise with the regimental association, which represents all SAS veterans. For many, one of the most irksome elements of inquests like Clonoe is the way in which so many regimental secrets have been dragged into the public domain through compulsory legal disclosure. There is nothing questionable about their tactics but it pains them greatly to have to place closely-guarded details about operational procedures into the public domain – and thus available to future foes. 'An inquest is supposed to establish who has died and ask when, where and how,' says Aldwin Wight, former SAS commanding officer (who won the Military Cross in the Falklands). 'But now under Article 2 it has widened out massively into 'who planned it', 'what was their state of mind' and so on and you've got judges being tactical commanders.' I hear the same despair among RUC veterans who worked right alongside the SAS. Visiting Northern Ireland last week, I heard time and again how blundering officials and politicians have risked lives with careless talk. One former senior RUC officer still winces at the memory of former Northern Ireland


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Stop Labour's betrayal of our SAS heroes: Ex-Special Forces chiefs and MPs demand veterans who battled IRA are protected from prosecution
SAS veterans are being hounded with the threat of prosecution decades after their service thanks to a shameful betrayal by Labour. The Mail today launches a major campaign with ex-Special Forces commanders and senior MPs to protect the soldiers who bravely defended this country. We are demanding that ministers U-turn on their bid to repeal the Tories ' Legacy Act, which shielded Northern Ireland veterans from historical 'witch hunts', or else produce a proper alternative. It comes as former SAS soldiers face possible murder charges after a judge in Northern Ireland ruled that the shooting of four IRA terrorists in 1992 was not justified. Those behind the campaign have warned of a dire threat to national security if this process is permitted to continue. One ex-SAS commanding officer said ministers had to wake up to the need to protect serving and retired personnel from 'this creeping lawfare' or it would prove 'calamitous' by hobbling operations and hitting recruitment. The campaign has already generated £250,000 in fighting funds in a single donation from ex-SAS soldier-turned-entrepreneur Sir Mike Gooley, founder of travel company Trailfinders. A petition on the Parliament website demanding protection for Northern Ireland veterans has, meanwhile, reached 136,290 signatures, meaning a parliamentary debate will be held on July 14. The campaign team includes two former SAS commanding officers and a Regimental Sergeant Major. Other senior soldiers involved in the call for action served in undercover roles and faced being murdered by IRA terrorists every time they deployed. The political dimension of the campaign is being led by Conservative MP Sir David Davis, a former SAS reservist. He said last night: 'What we have seen so far has been a travesty of justice. This is not just about those who served in Northern Ireland. 'It is about giving protection and certainty to the entire Armed Forces family. Our veterans deserve our respect, not relentless legal pursuit decades after the events in question.' At a press conference at the Nato summit in The Hague, the Mail yesterday asked Keir Starmer why he was opening veterans up to a possible legal witch hunt by repealing the legislation. The PM replied: 'I worked in Northern Ireland for five years so I know just how important and significant these issues are. We are in talks and discussions about how we resolve this issue.' SAS veterans have suffered emotional trauma from their hounding by lawyers. This included a suicide attempt by a former Special Forces soldier last year. Former SAS Regimental Sergeant Major George Simm said: 'As a result of these evidence-free accusations, soldiers are realising they have no legal rights. This has to change, out of necessity, for national security reasons. They have never been so exposed. 'On operations, to be compliant with the Human Rights Act, soldiers need their own lawyer on speed dial to advise them if there's a chance they might have to kill someone. The situation is beyond absurd. Soldiers didn't sign up to defend activist judges or a European legal system.' The case at the centre of the campaign involves the 1992 shooting of four IRA terrorists by SAS soldiers in Clonoe, County Tyrone. Following a police investigation and inquiries by the coroner, the RUC concluded at the time that there should be no prosecutions. The soldiers stated their use of lethal force was reasonable due to the threat posed by the IRA. However, last year they were ordered to appear before a new 'legacy inquest'. Coroner Mr Justice Humphreys ruled in February the soldiers' use of force was excessive, despite the terrorists having a heavy machine-gun and other guns. He claimed there was no attempt to arrest the four IRA men and determined, more than 30 years after the incident, that the soldiers should have waited for the IRA gang to disassemble the machine gun. The Ministry of Defence has vowed to challenge his verdict. But in the meantime, files have been passed to the Director of Public Prosecutions in Northern Ireland. This could trigger a criminal investigation. Last night, former SAS CO Aldwin Wight said it was absurd that the soldiers who confronted the IRA at Clonoe 'should have to face the possibility of criminal action based on a subsequent flawed inquest three decades later, under a law that didn't exist in 1992.' He said it 'will prove calamitous for national security. Nobody is going to volunteer to expose themselves to this sort of legal nonsense. 'When are ministers going to wake up to the need to protect serving and retired personnel from this creeping lawfare?' Relatives of the IRA terrorists brought the 'legacy inquest' citing Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights and the 1998 Human Rights Act. The previous Tory government brought in the Legacy Act to protect Northern Ireland veterans from prosecution and endless investigations. But Labour's manifesto included a pledge to repeal the 'unlawful' Act. The Northern Ireland Office has pledged to replace it 'in a way that is lawful, fair and that enables families, including military families, to find answers'.