Soldier U: Bandit Country
Page 1
Brought to you by KeVkRaY
SOLDIER U: SAS
BANDIT COUNTRY
Peter Corrigan
This book is respectfully dedicated to the officers and men of C Company, 4th/5th Battalion the Royal Irish Rangers.
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Epilogue
Discover other books in the SAS Series published by Bloomsbury
Prologue
South Armagh, 3 July 1989
The foot patrol moved quietly down the starlit street. There were four of them, forming a ‘brick’. They made up a single fire team. The point man kept his SA-80 assault rifle in the crook of his shoulder, eyes glinting in his darkly camouflaged face as he scanned surrounding windows, doors and alleyways.
Behind the point came the fire team’s commander, a corporal. Hung on the left side of his chest was a PRC 349 radio. It had a range of only a few kilometres, but the patrol was not far from home. The corporal had the 349 set on whisper mode. Its twin microphones were strapped to his throat and he edged a finger in between them, silently cursing the way they irritated his skin.
Behind the corporal came the gunner, armed with a Light Support Weapon. Similar to an SA-80, it had a longer barrel and a bipod to steady it.
The rear man was walking backwards, checking the street the patrol had just walked through. The men were in staggered file, two on each side of the road, covering each other as they made their way back to the safety of the Security Forces Base. It was pitch-dark, and they avoided the few street-lights that still worked in that part of the village. All of them had the needle in the sights of their weapons turned on so that it was a luminous line, helping them to pick out targets at night.
They were near the centre of the village now. The locals had whitewashed all the walls so that a patrolling soldier would stand out more clearly against them. That was the worst part.
A dog barked, and they all paused to listen, hunkering down in doorways. Nothing worse than a restless fucking dog; it told the locals they had visitors.
The barking stopped. The corporal waved a hand and they were on their way again.
The centre of Crossmaglen had a small, open square. Crossing it was the most dangerous part of any patrol. It had to be done quickly as the whitewashed house walls offered no concealment. As the brick paused on the edge of the square the point man looked back at his commander. The corporal nodded and took up a firing position, as did the other two men.
The point man set off across the square at a sprint. He was halfway across when there was a sharp crack, startlingly loud in the still night air. The point man seemed to be knocked backwards. He fell heavily on to his back and then lay still.
For a second the rest of the fire team was frozen, disbelieving. Then the corporal began shouting.
‘Sniper! Anyone see the flash?’
‘Not a fucking thing, Corp.’
‘Ian’s out there – we’ve got to go and get him! Gunner, set up the LSW for suppressive fire. Mike, we’re going to run out there and bring him in, OK?’
When the gunner was on the ground, with the LSW’s stock in his shoulder, the other two soldiers dashed out into the open.
Immediately there was the sound of automatic fire. Tarmac was blown around their legs as the bullets thumped down around them. The point man lay in a pool of shining liquid. His chest looked as though someone had broken it open to have a look inside. Behind them, the LSW gunner opened up on automatic. Suddenly the little square was deafening with the sound of gunfire. Red streaks sped through the air and ricocheted off walls: the tracer in the LSW magazine. A series of flashes came from an alleyway opening off the square, and there was the unmistakable bark of an AK47, somehow lighter than the single shot that had felled the point man.
‘Come on, Mike. Grab his legs.’
‘He’s dead, Corp!’
‘Grab his fucking legs, like I tell you!’
They staggered back across the square with their comrade’s body slung between them like a sack. The firing had stopped. All around, lights were flicking on at windows. There was the sound of doors banging.
‘Get a fucking field-dressing on him, Mike. Gunner, did you see where that bastard is?’
‘Saw the muzzle flash, Corp. But I think he’s bugged out now. The locals will be all over us in a minute though.’
The corporal swore viciously, then thumbed the pressel-switch of the 349.
‘Hello, Zero, this is Oscar One One Charlie. Contact, over.’
The far-away voice crackled back over the single earphone.
‘Zero, send over.’
‘One One Charlie, contact 0230, corner of …’ – the corporal looked round wildly – ‘corner of Hogan’s Avenue and Cross square. One own casualty, at least two enemy with automatic weapons. I think they’ve bugged out. Request QRF and medic for casevac, over.’
’Roger, One One Charlie. QRF on its way, over.’
‘Roger out.’
The corporal bent over his injured point man. ‘How is he, Mike?’
The other soldier was ripping up field-dressings furiously and stuffing them into the huge chest wound.
‘Fucking bullet went right through his trauma plate, Corp – right fucking through and went out the other side. What the hell kind of weapon was that?’
The soldiers all wore flak-jackets, and covering their hearts front and rear were two-inch-thick ‘trauma plates’ of solid Kevlar. These stopped most normal bullets, even those fired by a 7.62mm Kalashnikov AK47.
‘It’s that bastard sniper. He got us again.’ The corporal was livid with fury. ‘The bastard did it again,’ he repeated.
There was a loud banging in the night, the metallic clatter of dustbin lids being smashed repeatedly on the ground. Crossmaglen’s square was filling up with people.
The sound of engines roaring up other streets. A siren blaring. The flicker of blue lights. A Quick Reaction Force was on its way.
‘He’s gone, Corp. Poor bugger never had a chance.’
Armoured Landrovers, both green and slate-grey, powered into the square, scattering the approaching mob. The locals were shouting and cheering now – they had seen the little knot of men on the corner, the body on the ground. They knew what had happened.
‘Nine-nil, nine-nil, nine-nil,’ they chanted, laughing. Even when baton-wielding soldiers and RUC men poured out of the Landrovers to force them back, they continued jeering.
‘Nineteen years old,’ the corporal said. ‘His first tour. Jesus Christ.’
He closed the blood-filled eyes of the boy on the ground.
The Border Fox had struck again.
Chapter 1
HQNI Lisburn, 6 July 1989
‘What do you have that I can use?’ Lieutenant Colonel Blair asked, sipping his coffee.
Brigadier General Whelan, Commander of Land Forces in Northern Ireland, looked at his subordinate warily.
‘I can give you an additional Special Support Unit from 39 Brigade’s patch,’ he replied.
‘RUC cowboys? But sir, I’ve lost four men in four months, all to the same sniper. Morale is ro
ck-bottom, and the local players know it. I’ve already had three complaints this week alone. The boys are taking it out on the population.’
Whelan held up a hand and said: ‘This is a bad time of year, Martin. The marching season is almost upon us. We’re overstretched, and Whitehall won’t hear of us bringing in another battalion.’
‘It’s not another battalion we need. I was thinking of something more compact.’
‘The Intelligence and Security Group?’
‘Yes. To be frank, sir, we’re getting nowhere. Our own Covert Observation Platoon has drawn a series of blanks. I don’t have the resources within my own patch to tackle this problem. We need outside help – and I’m talking help from our own people, not the RUC.’
‘Hasn’t E4 come up with anything?’
‘Special Branch guards its sources like an old maid her virginity. They’re terrified of compromising the few touts they have. No – we need a new approach. This South Armagh Brigade is the tighest-knit we’ve ever encountered. It’s better even than the Mid-Tyrone one was a few years back. The Provos seem to have taken the lessons of Loughgall to heart. They’re very slick, and they’ve recovered amazingly quickly. This Border Fox now has up to three ASUs operating in close support. We need to take out not only him, but at least one of those back-up units.’
‘Take out? You rule out more conventional methods of arrest, then?’
‘I believe it would be too risky. No, this bastard is fighting his own little war down near the border. The South Armagh lot need to have the carpet pulled out from under them.’
‘And your men need a kill.’
Lieutenant Colonel Blair, commanding officer of 1st Battalion the Royal Green jackets, paused.
‘Yes, they do.’ He would not have been so open with any other senior officer, but Whelan was a member of the ‘Black Mafia’ himself – an ex-Greenjacket who had done his stint as CO of a battalion in South Armagh.
‘This is irregular, Martin – you know that. You’re asking me to initiate an operation in a vacuum. Usually it is the Tasking and Coordinating Group that comes to me …’
‘More Special Branch,’ said Blair with a wave of his hand. ‘This is not an RUC problem. It is the Green Army that is taking the casualties, my men that are out there in the bogs day after day and night after night, while the RUC conduct vehicle checkpoints and collar drink-drivers.’
Whelan was silent. It was true that the uniformed ‘Green Army’ had been paying a heavy price lately for the patrolling of the border, or ‘Bandit Country’ as the men on the ground called it. And the Border Fox had made headlines both in the UK and America. He was a hero to the Nationalist population and their sympathizers across the Atlantic. Nine members of the Security Forces had been killed by him in the last eighteen months, the last only a few days ago. All of them had been killed by a single bullet from a high-calibre sniper rifle that had punched through the men’s body armour as though it were cardboard. The capture of that weapon, more importantly, the termination of the Fox’s activities, were obviously desirable.
But Whelan did not like authorizing what were in effect assassinations. He had no moral qualms about the issue – the Fox had to be stopped, and killing him was an effective way of doing that. But he hated giving the Republican Movement yet another martyr. Political consideration had to be taken into account also. If he authorized an op against the Fox he would have to inform the Secretary of State – in guarded terms of course – of what was about to happen.
More importantly, there was the feasibility of the operation. Intelligence in 3 Brigade’s Tactical Area of Responsibility was poor. The IRA brigade in South Armagh seemed very tightly knit and so far all attempts to cultivate informers had failed. It was impossible to proceed without good intelligence, and seemingly impossible to obtain that intelligence. Hence the Security Forces were powerless, for all their helicopters and weapons. And so the Fox continued his killing unhindered, which was why he had Martin Blair in his office, seething with baffled anger.
‘Damn it, Martin, don’t you think I see your point? But how can we proceed with anything when we have nothing to go on? Special Branch has drawn a blank, and your own covert op has turned up nothing.’
‘Then we must create our own intelligence’, Blair said doggedly.
‘What do you mean?’
‘Give me the Int and Sy Group. Let them loose in my patch. They may turn up something.’
‘That’s a hell of a vague notion.’
‘They’re doing bugger-all at the moment except interminable weapons training. I got that from James Cordwain himself. The rest of the Province is as quiet as the grave.’
Whelan winced at his subordinate’s choice of words. Major Cordwain was OC of the combined Intelligence and Security Group and 14 Intelligence Company. ‘Int and Sy’, or more often just ‘The Group’, was another name for Ulster Troop, the only members of the SAS who were based permanently in the Province. Fourteen Intelligence Company was another pseudonym for a crack surveillance unit drawn from all units in the army and trained by the SAS themselves.
‘Int and Sy’s job description does not include charging in like the bloody cavalry, guns blazing.’
Colonel Blair smiled. ‘Tell James Cordwain that.’
‘Indeed.’ Cordwain had taken over the Group less than a year ago. He and his young second in command, Lieutenant Charles Boyd, were a pair of fire-eaters. Cordwain had been with 22 SAS in the Falklands and was an expert in covert surveillance and the tricky business of so-called ‘Reactive Observation Posts’ – known to the rest of the army as Ambushes.
‘You’ve spoken to Cordwain about this, then?’ Whelan asked sharply. He did not like officers, even fellow Greenjackets, who flouted the chain of command.
Blair stiffened. ‘Yes, sir, I did – informally of course.’
‘And what was his reaction?’
‘He thought he might have a way in.’
‘What is it?’
‘An operative of ours, based in Belfast at the moment. He used to be part of Int and Sy but MI5 have become his handlers. Been here for over a year, and has a perfect cover.’
‘His name?’
‘Cordwain wouldn’t say. But he thinks it would be possible to relocate him, weasel him into the South Armagh lot.’
‘He must be an exceptional man.’
‘Actually, Cordwain says he’s one of the best he’s ever seen. Parents were from Ballymena, so he has the perfect accent for starters. They were in the South Atlantic together.’
Whelan got up, crossed the office to the sideboard and the decanter that stood there. He poured out two whiskies into Waterford-crystal tumblers and offered one to Blair.
‘Bushmills – the Irish. Bloody good stuff.’
They drank. Whelan looked out of his office window, past the ranks of Landrovers and Saxon armoured personnel carriers, over to where the perimeter wall rose high with netting and razor-wire; it was supposed to intercept RPG 7 missiles or Mark 12 mortars, the Provos’ current flavour of the month.
‘We are skating on thin ice here, Martin,’ Whelan said.
‘Yes, sir, I know. But my men are dying.’
‘Yes. But MI5, they’re tighter with their operatives than E4 is with its information. They may not want to let us play with this man.’
‘Cordwain thinks it may be possible to bypass MI5, sir.’
Whelan spun round. ‘Does he now? And how would we do that?’
‘This man, he has a personal reason for wanting to see the Border Fox brought in. One of my young subalterns was a relative of his.’
‘Ah yes, I remember. That was tragic, Martin, tragic. So it’s revenge this man wants. That may not make him totally reliable.’
‘Cordwain seems to think he is, sir, and Boyd, his 2IC, is willing to provide back-up.’
Whelan set down his glass and leaned over the desk until his face was close to Blair’s.
‘You seem to have thought this out with unusual thoroughn
ess, Colonel.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘I am not used to being given fully-fledged covert operational plans by my battalion commanders. Is that clear, Colonel?’
‘Perfectly, sir.’
Whelan straightened.
‘It may be we will be able to keep this under an army hat. I would certainly prefer it that way – and you say that Special Branch can give us nothing. But we must be even more discreet than usual – and I am not talking about the Paddies, Colonel. I will speak to Cordwain. I will give him the necessary authorization …’ As Blair brightened, Whelan frowned thunderously and cut him off.
‘But mark me, Martin, this conversation never took place. This man of Cordwain’s will be disowned by every security agency in the Province if he so much as sniffs of controversy. And Cord-wain’s back-up will be on their own also. If the press – or God help us the Minister – ever find out about this we’ll be crucified.’
‘I understand, sir.’
‘Be sure that you do, Martin.’ The General tossed off the last of his Bushmills with practised ease. Now you’ll have to go, I’m afraid. I have a bloody cocktail party to go to. I have to rub noses with the Unionists and win some hearts and minds.’
Chapter 2
Belfast
The Crown Bar, opposite the much-bombed Europa Hotel, was quiet. It was two o’clock on a weekday afternoon and there seemed to be only a handful of men in there, seated in the walled-off snugs and nursing Guinness or whiskey, leafing through the Belfast Telegraph.
One of those men was Captain John Early of the SAS. He was a squat, powerful figure of medium height who appeared shorter because of the breadth of his shoulders. He could have – and frequently did – pass for a brickie on his lunch hour or whiling away the days of unemployment. His hands were blunt and calloused, the arms powerfully muscled. His face was square, the close-cropped hair sprinkled with premature grey at the temples and a badly broken nose making him look slightly thuggish. But the blue eyes were intelligent, belying the brutality of the face. Despite the haircut, he did not look like a soldier, certainly not a holder of the Queen’s Commission. And when he quietly asked the barman for another pint his accent bore the stamp of north-east Ulster.