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www.navynews.co.uk
Off-sale date: October 1 2006
September 2006 -
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A time for reflection
Royal Navy Amphibious Operations
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How the Royal Navy takes things littorally - souvenir supplement inside
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LEAVING your home for pastures new is always a time for
But as HMS Brocklesby and HMS Bangor sailed in opposite directions to their new base ports, the reorganisation of the mine countermeasures force was con-
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eight Sandown-class ships are now exclusively to be found at Clyde Naval Base where they form MCM1 the 'Scottish Squadron', complete with the -=pant badge on their funnels the command of Cdr Chris Davies. And Brocklesby's arrival in Portsmouth reunites her with all seven of her Huntclass sisters, completing MCM2 under the command of Cdr 'Harry' Blackmore. sailed from Bangor Portsmouth accompanied by Commodore Portsmouth Flotilla, Cdre Andrew Cameron, to mark the end of her seven-year association with the South Coast. The ship has just completed a maintenance period during which her mission system was upgraded to Nautis 3 - a major step forward in terms of capability and performance. On her passage north II Bangor paid her respects to the men who died in the Russian cruiser Varyag - the ship was later wrecked off the west coast of Scotland (see page 5). -
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Unforgettable: staying calm in a crisis - reports from Lebanon on pages 14-16
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0HMS Brocklesby sails from
Clyde Naval Base to her new home in Portsmouth Picture: LA(Phot) Jonathan Massey,
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ROYALS 'EAGER TO SOME GOOD'
THE burden of smoking out the Taliban and safeguarding peace in southern Afghanistan rests upon the shoulders of the Royal Marines as of this month.
The core of 3 Commando Brigade deploys to the unsettled Helmand Province, where it will take over peacekeeping tasks from 16 Air Assault Brigade during a six-month tour of duty.
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The Royals are under no illusions about the dangers the mission
holds - the insurgents in Helmand are determined fighters who have attacked British forces during the summer.
But the elite green berets are in no doubt that they are up to the task - and are keen to "get stuck in" if needs be. "These are six months which will fly past," said Col Ian Huntley, Deputy Commander of 3 Commando Brigade - soon to be renamed Commander HelmandTask Force. "We are eager to get out there and do some good." Around 2,000 green berets are being committed in southern Afghanistan the kernel of 42 and 45 Commandos,
plus the supporting Army and RM units including 29 Regiment Royal Artillery, the Commando Logistics Regiment and UK Command Support Group. The Royals will form part of a larger British force nearly 5,000 men and women strong - and itself a key component of a NATO task group in the Helmand region which boasts around 18,000 troops. Their aim is to put down any terrorist activity, train Afghan troops and allow the local civilian populace to rebuild the country's shattered economy after three decades of conflict. The mission to Afghanistan will be the first combat deployment of the Viking,
the Commandos' new tracked vehicle which provides them with additional protection from enemy fire. The Royals' last act before deploying was a major exercise on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire and in Wales - Southern Raider, observed by senior Royal Navy and Royal Marines officers and Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram. "The Afghan people have had enough of war and conflict," the minister declared. "They want a different future and the Royal Marines will help them achieve that." " Saddling centre pages
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