Tag: Royal Marines

  • Iconic Iron Maiden Drummer To Rock MFM!

    Iconic Iron Maiden Drummer To Rock MFM!

     

    Audiences at this year’s 52nd Mountbatten Festival of Music at the Royal Albert Hall in March are in for an extra special treat when global drumming icon of Iron Maiden fame, Nicko McBrain, takes to the stage to join The Massed Bands of His Majesty’s Royal Marines.

    The heavy metal musician is a household name and will be part of the three concerts that will offer fans a once-in-a lifetime experience during the evening concert on Friday 8 March and the matinee and evening shows on Saturday 9th March 2024.

    Commenting on what might seem an unlikely combination of talents, Nicko says: “It is such an honour to be invited to perform with the Massed Bands of the Royal Marines at the 2024 Mountbatten Festival of Music. I feel so humbled to be a part of this fantastic event. I look forward to seeing you all at the Royal Albert Hall in March to enjoy rockin’ out to some Maiden ditties, along with a few fantastic surprises!”

    With this exciting news and some 80% of tickets already sold, those wanting to grab some of the remaining seats are advised to book now to avoid missing out! The concerts are in aid of Royal Navy and Royal Marines Charities and the Young Lives vs Cancer Charity.

  • Watch: The Time Harry Kane & Gareth Southgate Met The Royal Marines!

    Watch: The Time Harry Kane & Gareth Southgate Met The Royal Marines!

    England play France later today in the Quarter Finals of the World Cup in Qatar.

    A Royal Air Force C-130 Hercules transport aircraft flanked by two Typhoon fighter jets flew over Wembley Stadium before the final of the European Women’s Football Championship. Image Crown Copyright 2022. 

    The two European nations come together to decide who will make it through to the semi-finals of football’s global competition.

    Did you know Harry Kane, Gareth Southgate and the England squad trained with the Royal Marines back in 2017 in preparation for the 2018 World Cup in Russia? We relive that moment below via footage from The Sun. 

    Before we enjoy the video again, the Pathfinder team have given their predictions for the big game.

    Mal Robinson, Editor, Pathfinder International – “It could go either way and depends on what team Gareth picks. I will go for a 2-1 England win!”

    Aaron Gourley, Editor of Pathfinder’s sister football B2B magazine – FC Business – said: “1-1 to go into extra time. After that I’ll be hiding behind the sofa!”

    Paul Foster, Sales Director for Pathfinder added: “I will go for 2-1 England.”

    Pathfinder Sales Executive, Ross Irvine from Scotland had other thoughts on the outcome! “2-1 to France, with a bit of luck!”

    Watch the England team and the Royal Marines below…Good Luck England!

  • UK Armed Forces Join Largest Arctic Exercise In 30 Years

    UK Armed Forces Join Largest Arctic Exercise In 30 Years

    Six Royal Navy ships and 2,000 UK personnel have joined vessels and troops from 26 other nations for Exercise Cold Response off the shores of Norway.

    Pictured: Photographer taking a picture of the Exercise Cold Response taskgroup comprised of HNLMS SCHIEDAM, EML SAKALA M314, HMNLS DE ZEVEN PROVINCIEN, HMS DEFENDER D36, HMS NORTHUMBERLAND F238, HDMS VAEDDEREN F359, FGS BAD BEVERNSEN M1063, HNLMS ROTTERDAM L800, HNoMS HINNOY M343, HMDS PETER WILLEMOES F362, FN DIXMUDE L9015 and HMS PRINCE OF WALES R09.
    Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales has taken its place at the centre of one of the most powerful naval task forces in the world at the start of the largest Arctic exercises for 30 years. HMS Prince of Wales is currently serving as the NATO Command Ship for the NATO’s Maritime High Readiness Force – led by Rear Admiral Mike Utley CB OBE – Commander UK Strike Force. They have sailed north to the Arctic for Exercise Cold Response, a bi-annual exercise that is a month-long test of allied forces which will see 30,000 troops from 27 nations operate together.

    Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales has taken its place at the centre of one of the most powerful naval task forces in the world at the start of the largest Arctic exercise for 30 years.

    HMS Prince of Wales, which is currently serving as NATO’s command ship, has sailed north to the Arctic for Exercise Cold Response 2022, a month-long test of allied forces which will see 30,000 troops from 27 nations operate together.

    The regular exercise, which takes place every other year and planning for which began in December 2020, will involve more than twice as many personnel as the 14,000 planned for in Exercise Cold Response 2020.

    During the weekend, a task force of 25 ships from 11 nations gathered close to Norway at the start of the training, including six Royal Navy ships and more than 2,000 UK military personnel.

    Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said:

    The Arctic is becoming an area of increasing military competition and the security of the region is directly linked to our national security.

    Exercise Cold Response is a demonstration of NATO’s ability to both operate and compete in one of the harshest environments in the world and is demonstration of how a multinational force would defend Europe’s northern flank.

    HMS Prince of Wales joined the Cold Response task force shortly after air defence exercises in the North Sea alongside four of the UK’s F-35B Lightning jets from 617 Squadron, the Dambusters, on Friday 11 March.

    The jets from RAF Marham took part in an air battle exercise, which was orchestrated by two Royal Navy fighter controllers on HMS Prince of Wales in the skies over the east of the UK and in the North Sea.

    The F-35B jets were pitted against eight ‘aggressor’ aircraft, allowing them to hone tactics between ship and fighter jets.

    As HMS Prince of Wales continued her journey north to the Arctic, the RAF’s 207 Squadron carried out a flypast with two of their F-35B jets while the aircraft carrier sailed alongside USS Mount Whitney and USS The Sullivans.

    Commander UK Strike Force embarked in HMS Prince of Wales is responsible for leading NATO’s Maritime High Readiness Force – an international task group formed to deal with major global events – and deploys for the first time in that role to Cold Response.

    Alongside landing support ship RFA Mounts Bay, HMS Albion leads the UK’s amphibious input into Cold Response, with “a significant level” of littoral strike operations – traditional-style commando raids – staged in the fjords, with the British force integrating with numerous allies.

    Around 900 Royal Marines have been deployed to the Arctic since January in preparation for the exercises, sharpening their expertise in operating in the freezing conditions.

    While HMS Prince of Wales works on Cold Response, her sister ship HMS Queen Elizabeth is carrying out vital training and exercises in the waters close to the UK to keep her ready for operations anywhere in the world.

    Sign up for Pathfinder’s Armed Forces & Veterans Resettlement Expo here! 

  • Royal Marines Complete Arctic Training With Intensive Combat Missions

    Royal Marines Complete Arctic Training With Intensive Combat Missions

    Pictured are X-Ray Company, 45 Commando Royal Marines supported by Vikings of Armoured Support Group (ASG) on the final troop attack in the Arctic during Winter Deployment 21.
     

    The fury of battle reverberated around the snow-blanketed mountains and fjords of the high north – the climax of two months’ arduous Arctic training by Royal Marines.

    Arbroath-based cold weather warfare specialists 45 Commando were tasked with ambushing and pursuing a mock enemy across the mountainous terrain, testing each marine’s guile and tactical skill in one of the most inhospitable places on earth.

    The week-long ‘fight phase’ was also a chance for further development of small-team tactics that are a key part of Future Commando Force modernisation, which is seeing Royal Marines embrace new technology and return to being raiders from the sea.

    Sergeant Taylor, Mountain Leader Class 1, said: “The aim of the week, and the course, is to produce marines who are comfortable with operating in a mountainous and Arctic environment, and we achieved that.

    “The fight phase is deliberately arduous, as it successfully instils the discipline and skills required to overcome both the environment and a determined adversary.

    “The final week of the course was a significant step-up from the mobility phase (in which commandos refresh skills in moving on snowshoes and skis), the weather became a lot more challenging as well, but the marines relished the opportunity to be tested in this environment and demonstrate that they can still be lethal.”

    The commandos operated across mountains, gathering intelligence on their ‘enemy’ and disrupting and destroying positions.

    They also further honed skills from earlier in the winter deployment, moving on skis and snowshoes to quickly get across the battlefield and utilising survival techniques to sustain themselves in their brutal surroundings.

    New troop commanders were given the freedom and responsibility to draw-up and issue their orders and deploy their marines against 45 Commando’s recce troop, who were acting as the adversary in the battles.

    At the same time, the specialist Shore Reconnaissance Team from 30 Commando Information Exploitation Group were launching missions on the side of a Norwegian fjord around the Narvik area.

    The expert team from the Surveillance and Reconnaissance Squadron (SRS) have been sharpening their skills in landing on the rocky fjord shores using their small fast raiding craft to move in on ‘enemy’ positions.

    The team – who are specialists in reconnaissance and studying coastlines for the best areas to land larger amphibious forces – carried out daylight missions as well as under the cover of darkness using night vision equipment.

    To become members of the SRS Commandos must first be Landing Craft specialists and, once they have enough experience in role, they undertake a five-week arduous Reconnaissance Operators course, which develops covert surveillance and reconnaissance skills, and experience of operating behind enemy lines to gather intelligence.

    The Shore Reconnaissance Team are one of the technical trades within the Surveillance Reconnaissance Squadron. All teams within the group are technical experts in their field and with a vast amount of experience in deep reconnaissance.

    Their task was to accurately move in to engage ‘enemy’ positions discretely without showing any light, using paddles on their small boats to come ashore silently.

    The inshore raiding craft – which can carry up to six commandos (or four with full bergens) – are powered by an outboard motor but they are also fitted with paddles for silent approaches for covert tasks when an engine noise would compromise the mission, like those undertaken by the recce team. The team also practiced withdrawing from a beach under fierce contact from enemy positions and other emergency procedures.

    45 Commando are now finishing their Arctic training with live firing at the ranges, further ski training and training on skidoos for reconnaissance and increased mobility across the terrain before returning to the UK.

  • Strictly Come Dancing’s JJ Chalmers: Purpose & Meaning Will Help You Waltz Resettlement

    Strictly Come Dancing’s JJ Chalmers: Purpose & Meaning Will Help You Waltz Resettlement

    The new issue of Pathfinder International is out now and inside we were lucking enough to chat to former Royal Marine, JJ Chalmers before he started the strict regime of dancing training for BBC 1’s flagship show – Strictly Come Dancing.

    Read the full interview with editor Mal Robinson below…

    “I joined the Royal Marines back in 2005 and I joined the reserve forces to begin with and passed out as a Commando and all that good stuff and absolutely loved it. Then there came a time that I got my personal life in order and went off and joined the Regular Corps” begins JJ as I manage to get hold of him following a day’s filming for the new series of BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing.

    “Shortly thereafter came a tour in Afghanistan (Herrick 14). I’d done some mega stuff in my career up to that point and I’d been really lucky doing course and deployments but this (Afghanistan) was the pinnacle of anyone’s career, whether they are full time military or reservist, to deploy on operations and have a mega time is the pinnacle” JJ continues.

    “So Herrick 14 and a summer tour and I was in 42 Commando and we were up north on checkpoints working in the green zone and it was amazing and everything you hope it is, challenging, pretty shaky and dodgy at points but then again you look back and they are just some of the best times of your life. They were simple times, and they were just mega to be with the lads, you were facing whatever it was, good and bad together and so it was absolutely hoofing.”

    JJ’s life would turn upside down following an explosion from a booby trap in a compound he and his team were clearing, as JJ takes up.

    “At the mid-point of the tour and just as fighting season was picking up we deployed on a operation which pressed into Taliban held areas and we went there and got stuck in and one of the tasks was to clear a bomb making factory.

    Whilst conducting that operation we triggered an IED within a compound and it went off and it just tore us to pieces. I was one of the guys who fortunately came off the ground, obviously we had casualties and we had fatalities, I was torn to pieces, but I made it home.

    I woke up back in Birmingham, in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and in my initial instinct, I checked my legs so I thought I was fine and I thought I would be back in Afghan in a matter of weeks, but the Corps as difficult as it is, the surgeons sat me down and told me this was going to take two to three years to recover from but I would be retained in service in that time.

    I was hoping to be retained in service, I said I will do anything to stay, I’ll work in the stores, I’ll work in admin, just whatever job you can find me, I just want to stay in the Corps” JJ explains.

    “The Corps was pretty good and got me roles, but your career as you know it is over, and what you need to do aside from getting physically fit and your life back together and regaining your ability, you need to go away and figure out what you want to do with your life and then we will support you to do whatever it is. And that is completely true to word and so what happened was my recovery went on for the best part of five years, throughout that time, in and out of hospital and Headley Court, and you are using that down time to build up qualifications, network, just begin to have understanding of what civilian life is like.

    I was very lucky, I didn’t have a day job as such, like I was having to report to Company HQ each day, I was able to make the most of my resettlement time and of course I would urge anyone (going through resettlement) to take this very seriously and it was good to do that because on the outside of this world, I am very lucky now to have a career that I love as much as being in the Corps.

    JJ then goes onto talk about finding your way in life and resettling from the military and the importance of finding that something you like, even if its not directly paid work…

    “It is challenging, it is entertaining, it is all those things, but when we look at the problems that surround mental health and the struggles that veterans face and one of the things that really underpins that is employment and if it isn’t employment, then it is meaning and purpose. It is why we are getting out of bed each day and as I say, employment is a big part of that and at the very least it needs to be some sort of volunteering. The thing that you love might not pay your bills, but you need to find it and use that time wisely.”

    You got into media, how did all that come about?

    “It all happened because of the Invictus Games. The games felt like a natural progression of my rehab anyway. The Afghan war was ongoing, and it was full of people going through something similar and we were all becoming physically able again. As a result, we discovered that part of life that was missing, because we take a lot of things for granted in life and in the military. We take for granted our physical ability, the adventure that we see and so when you lose that it is hard, it is soul destroying. The Invictus Games was a platform that allowed us to not to just recover physically, but to regain those parts. The other thing of it was, Prince Harry wanted the games themselves to be a shining beacon for other veterans to come out from the woodwork and engage in recovery, but also for the civilian world to look at it and go, there is lessons to be learned from the veteran community.

    To make that fully effective, we need to be on the Telly and we need bums on chairs, and that wasn’t to motivate us, it was to have a meaning and a purpose and to basically have a sense of service again. That’s why we joined the military, to serve, and we were serving again (with the Invictus Games) you know wearing a uniform with the Union Jack on and serving my country.

    So this meant I was very involved in the media side of things and I was getting crated left, right and centre off the lads for being on the Telly all of the time, but once you get past that part of it I developed a love for it. It was something I was good at and it was something I could learn and be challenged by it and to say it was worth taking a crack at.

    Whilst still in service, I began to look for opportunities, to get myself into the right rooms with the right people that would sort of nurture me and essentially the day I was medically discharged from the Royal Marines in 2016, that very day, I flew out to Orlando to work for the BBC, to work on the Invictus Games.

    I was very lucky to transfer from one straight to the other but it was a case of brining the skill set and the motivations that I had, that the military had given me, Invictus had rediscovered in me and now I take that to work every single day and I am going to take this into Strictly!”

    It is just operating. It is doing everything the right way, depending on people around you and immersing yourself in whatever job or process it is and to try and deliver the best outcome.

    And onto Strictly…

    “It is mega! There is a part of me that is still Lance Corporal Chalmers, standing in a sanger in Afghanistan and just going to myself “What? He’s doing what all these years later?” and that is insane, but actually when you look at what I’ve done as in my career and the level I got to as a TV presenter, strangely this is the natural progression. It is of course an unbelievable opportunity that not everyone in my position gets, but I am absolutely winning by getting a ticket and being one of these twelve people.

    As mad as it is for Lance Corporal Chalmers ten years ago, it somewhat makes sense because this is the type of opportunity that I have worked hard and nurtured in order so I can have these challenges.

    (At the point of writing) I haven’t really started dancing yet, I have done a little bit of this and that, but what I have started doing is immersing myself into the world of dance and that is the costumes, that is the make up and that is just more foreign than anything…well lets be honest it maybe not that foreign for a Royal Marine…it is just now it is work, rather than on a Thursday night” laughs JJ.

    “That is the amazing thing about it all (Strictly) is learning a new culture. We come from a culture within the military that we are defined by and when I meet my fellow competitors and the professional dancers, you realise that this is an entire world and you are privileged to get to enter it and the level at which they are operating, well the dancers on Strictly are the Special Forces equivalent of dancers to the military and it is amazing that I am getting them to coach me and that I get to go onto this massive platform.

    (At the time of writing) the launch show is next week, and I am ready to take this from zero to one hundred as fast as I possibly can. I have a lot to learn and I mega green behind the ears and I’ll probably find things out the hard way, but I am ready to go.”

    And how will JJ cope with flack off the judges on the show?

    “I hope it is water off a ducks back and I hope not to take it too personal. Let’s be honest, I have had nastier people do nastier things to me, but at the same time there is this flipside. We have all been on courses, we have all instructed others, and we have all been given feedback, and actually at times, we have all been shouted at, but its all for good reason. Its all to make us better, we need feedback, we need to know what you are doing right and wrong. So of course, I want to get a pat on the back and told I am doing well, but if I am not doing well, I want to get a de-brief, I want to get given my marching orders and come back the next day better…and so I’ll standby!”

    Finally, we return to the topic of leaving the forces and the importance of getting military resettlement correct…

    “It is mega tricky. The first thing I would say is that there is a lot of help and support out there for veterans and it isn’t all doom and gloom, but there is a lot of noise as well. Use your time in transition from the forces well and start identifying, what it is you want to do and if you can, get an opportunity to get into whatever you want to and spend time doing the job.

    Leaving the forces and going and getting a job in civilian life is just like joining the military. You are going to go into a military recruitment office and they tell you what its all about and then the reality is very different and so in this sense it is exactly the same, do your research and see what it says on the tin is actually what it is like.

    That is one part of it, but really it is finding meaning and purpose. If that pays the bills then mega, but it might be volunteering, it might be joining the cadet force as an instructor, it could be working for a charity, it might just be a hobby, but you need to find that thing that sets you apart and gives you a bit of identity because for me that’s what you lose more than anything when you leave and you start to think I am a former soldier and in some ways there is a negative part in that, a negative part of not being something you once were.

    But actually, you can go out there and redefine who you are and become somebody who was that once and has learnt from it, but actually now something else…I mean I am a dancer now (JJ laughs), a TV presenter and a dancer, but of course I will always be a Royal Marine at heart.”

    JJ Chalmers at the time of writing is now in the quarter finals of Strictly Come Dancing and all at Pathfinder wish him well for the remainder of the competition and beyond.

    Read the entire new issue of Pathfinder International military resettlement magazine for free HERE!

  • Royal Marines Train With Cutting-Edge Autonomous Technology In Cyprus

    Royal Marines Train With Cutting-Edge Autonomous Technology In Cyprus

    ROYAL MARINES ON LITTORAL RESPONSE GROUP (EXPERIMENTATION) (LRG (X)) 2020 Pictured are Bravo Company, 40 Commando Royal Marines having completed their final strike onto enemy positions during Exercise Olympus Warrior as part of LRG(X) 

    The UK’s Littoral Strike Group has demonstrated the Royal Navy’s readiness to defend against the most advanced and novel threats of today as part of their deployment to the Mediterranean.

    Off the coast of Cyprus, the Royal Navy’s Littoral Strike Group has showcased the battlefield of tomorrow with trials of innovative and experimental equipment including drones, autonomous systems, quad bikes, jet skis and new communications systems.

    The Littoral Strike Group (Experimentation) [LRGX] features the deployment of the Royal Navy’s high readiness Littoral Strike forces on a three-month deployment to the Mediterranean and Black Sea region. During the exercise, the Royal Navy has tested innovative tactics and kit including the Future Command Force (FCF) – the evolution of the Royal Marines into a hi-tech raiding and strike force.

    The FCF is a bold modernisation project, which will overhaul how the Royal Marines operate in a 21st century context. Commando Forces will be used for Littoral Strike capability, which is the use of Commando Forces from a sea-base to attack targets or influence events in high risk, demanding or politically delicate areas. This will give the UK a more agile and lethal capability, ready for missions anywhere in the world at a moment’s notice, whether that’s for war-fighting, specific combat missions such as commando raids, or providing humanitarian assistance.

    In Cyprus, commando teams experimented with Malloy T-150 quadcopter drones carrying resupplies weighing more than 60kg of ammunition, military jet ski-style vehicles that can secretly drop small teams and supplies ashore and state of the art communications technology providing live imagery to those on the ground.

    Commodore Rob Pedre, COMLSG, said:

    “Royal Navy Flagship HMS Albion’s hosting of the Capability Demonstration in Cyprus has been a highlight of the LRG(X) deployment. The demonstration by our Sailors and Marines was superb, and showcased the quality of our Armed Forces, whilst providing an insight into how the Royal Navy is integrating future technology and new concepts.

    “The event was also an important expression of the UK’s steadfast commitment to our allies and partners, as we work together to support regional stability within the Eastern Mediterranean.”

    The LRGX deployment includes the headquarters and staff of Commodore Rob Pedre, the Commander Littoral Strike Group, flagship HMS Albion, destroyer HMS Dragon and amphibious support ship RFA Lyme Bay. Royal Marines on the deployment make up a FCF from the specialist raiding units of 47 Commando, Marines of 42 and 40 Commando and the intelligence experts of 30 Commando Information Group. Also deployed are Wildcat helicopters from the Commando Helicopter Force at RNAS Yeovilton.

    Last month the force conducted a series of exercises along the North African shoreline, before joining NATO partners on the French-led exercise Dynamic Mariner, demonstrating the UK’s commitment to NATO’s southern and eastern flank.

    The Strike Group has now moved on from Cyprus to Egypt, where Defence Minister James Heappey will visit the ship and crew, demonstrating the UK’s commitment to regional security and an opportunity to exercise with the Egyptian Armed Forces.

    Sergeant Adam Sperry of 30 Commando said:

    “The marines have had to swiftly learn how to use the new equipment and integrate it. That kit has included state of the art communications technology and autonomous resupply aircraft, totally transforming the battle space.”

  • Royal Marines Accommodation In Lympstone Reaches Milestone

    The Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) project to build new accommodation for personnel at the Commando Training Centre Royal Marines (CTCRM) in Devon has celebrated a major milestone.

    The socially distanced topping out ceremony held at the Royal Marines’ principal training centre in Lympstone means that the building’s framework has now reached its highest point. The event was held in line with the current Covid-19 guidelines.
    Representatives from the Royal Marines, Defence Infrastructure Organisation and its contractors Galliford Try and AECOM attended a socially distanced event to mark this achievement and to view progress on the building.

    The project is worth approximately £10-million in total and will see the creation of a 181-bed block for junior ranks as well as supporting facilities, such as a communal area and administrative offices, at the site near Lympstone. The accommodation will comprise of 21 eight-bed rooms and one ten-bed unit plus three single Duty of Care rooms for supporting staff. All rooms have been designed so that they can be allocated to either male or female occupants.

    The new blocks will house Royal Marine recruits who have either been injured in training or are undergoing remedial professional military training.

    Progress has carried on at this important facility in accordance with strict Covid-19 guidelines.
    Simon Jones, DIO Project Manager, said:
    “This is an incredibly exciting milestone for the project and one we are pleased to be working on with Galliford Try and with our technical support providers Aecom.
    “This purpose-built facility will provide modern and essential accommodation to personnel as they recover from injury and undergo rehabilitation on site.
    “We are delighted with the progress on the facility to date especially in these challenging times and we look forward to celebrating its completion.”

    Mark Wusthoff, Area Director for Galliford Try Building West Midlands & South West, said:
    “We were delighted to be able to welcome our partners on site to signify this important milestone, demonstrating the progress we have safely made despite the challenges presented by the pandemic.
    “Defence is a key sector for our business and we are looking forward to the successful completion of this project, demonstrating the breadth of our offering to the sector and our capabilities within it.”

    Image: Crown Copyright 2020.

  • Royal Marines Commando Unit Created To Shape The Future Commando Force

    Royal Marines Commando Unit Created To Shape The Future Commando Force

    A select group of commandos will form a new Vanguard Strike Company to shape how the Royal Marines Commandos of the future will operate around the globe.

    These trailblazers will have access to game-changing technology and weaponry as they head on their first deployment next year.

    The Royal Marines are currently undergoing a bold modernisation project – known as the Future Commando Force programme – which will overhaul how the world-famous green berets operate.

    As part of this restructuring, more than 150 Royal Marines and Army Commandos will come together this autumn to form the Vanguard Strike Company.

    The company will head on its maiden deployment in mid-2021 after further trials later this year and ongoing equipment, structural and tactical experimentation associated with the Future Commando Force.

    Commandant General Royal Marines, Major General Matt Holmes, said: “The Vanguard Strike Company will lead and inform how the Royal Marines and Army Commandos will operate and fight in a dynamic, technological era of warfare.

    “We envisage several of these networked sub-units persistently forward deployed around the globe, with an array of sophisticated enabling capabilities, to present dilemmas to adversaries whilst supporting partners. These will all be at high-readiness, as a capable forward contingency force at the core of the Royal Navy’s Littoral Response Groups.”

    The deployment next year will see the first practical demonstration of kit, equipment, training and organisational change necessary to shape the concept further and bring it quickly to the forefront of the Royal Navy’s contribution to national security.

    The elite commandos will work in small, versatile teams that will be tailored for the respective mission they will be facing – calling on areas of expertise and hone skills necessary to bring an advantage depending on the type of operation.

    This will give the UK a more agile and lethal capability, ready for missions anywhere in the world at a moment’s notice, whether that’s for war-fighting, specific combat missions such as commando raids, or providing humanitarian assistance.

    This is about returning commando forces to their roots: to operate at reach and in all theatres, including the arctic, as the spearhead of operations.

    It has already been announced that Royal Marines Commandos will have a new uniform as part of the bold transformation.

    Fit for a new era of warfare, it is in keeping with the maritime traditions of the Corps and honours their Commando forebears through insignia.

    The NATO procured uniform – which is being procured from USA-based firm Crye Precision – is lighter-weight, has higher tear-strength, is faster-drying and is more breathable than typical 50/50 cotton/nylon clothing.

    The Vanguard Strike Company will wear this uniform on their first deployment.

    Read about 80 years of the Commando Soldier in the July issue of Pathfinder HERE!

    Image: Crown Copyright 2020.

  • Read Our Aldo Kane Exclusive Interview Here!

    Read Our Aldo Kane Exclusive Interview Here!

    Military Muscle was delighted to catch up with former Royal Marines Commando Sniper, Aldo Kane and he features in our exclusive interview in this month’s issue. Read it in its entirety below. Military Muscle is a health, fitness and well being supplement inside Pathfinder International magazine – the leading UK military resettlement magazine.

    Finding Your Passion Can Lead To Successful Career Goals!

    Military Muscle is delighted to catch up with extreme adventurer, rope specialist, climbing expert and mountaineer and well much, much more in Aldo Kane. A former Commando Sniper, now turning his hand to TV and film consultancy and behind the scenes technical production.

    Here is Aldo’s story of military life, resettlement, ongoing transition, believing in your goals and following your passion…oh and abseiling into active volcanoes!

    “I joined the Royal Marines at the age of sixteen, went down to Lympstone and got into recruit troop in September 1994, I did ten years in the Marines, between 40 Commando, Fleet Protection Group or Commachio Group as it was once called up in Faslane and down to 42 Commando.

    When I passed out I went to 40 and I did Northern Ireland and all that type of stuff, then joined Recce Troop and over that next period of time I was in Recce Troop, Sniper and sort of kept that Sniper job role through to the end of my time in the corps.
    I left at the end of 2003 and that was the end of Telic 1, so I obviously missed all of the Afghan tours. I had already done my resettlement by then and I was out and already working when that all kicked off, so it was kind of in the back of my head about re-joining and getting back in amongst it but because I had joined at the age of sixteen and got out at twenty six, I had this other question of what is the outside world like?

    I’d never had a normal job, apart from paperboy to then being a Bootneck.”

    I ask Aldo what was the main driver for joining up so early?

    “My twin and I both joined actually, we were both set to join at the same time and then he stayed and finished his school and then joined when he was eighteen, but for me it was from an age of about twelve or thirteen I began to get vaguely interested in the military and began to read all of the commando magazines. Then I was on an Air Cadet camp in RAF Kinloss and I remember seeing a Bootneck helicopter pilot and I remember seeing his green lid, his green beret and he stuck it down on the NAAFI counter in front of me and I must have been only fourteen and I had a chat with him and he told me about the corps and about the Marines and that was it. From fourteen onwards, I was like, that’s what I am going to do. As soon as I could sign the paperwork, I did, it was just like a childhood dream to do it and then at sixteen I am going through Commando training at Lympstone.”

    Was that daunting for such a young lad?

    “I was actually quite beside myself with excitement. I remember lying awake on Woodbury Common on the very first exercise you were doing and you could hear several other recruit troops coming under contact and firing weapons and I just thought this was one of the most exciting things that I could possibly be doing with my life at that time and that was the first night that I had spent out.

    I never found any of it daunting as I had no other frame of reference, it’s not like I was joining at twenty-one where I had been grafting somewhere else and had previous knowledge of what normal life was like. I think having no frame of reference helped, it just meant you dealt with what you were given on a daily basis and you don’t compare it to what you used to have, but it was amazing and I loved it.”

    And what the main driver for leaving the military?

    “I always think the best thing I ever did was joining the Marines and I think the second-best thing I did was leave at that time where I didn’t want to leave. I’d left at a time where I felt I was at the top of my game, I was doing incredibly well and it was difficult for me to leave, but somewhere deep down inside of me I had this drive to do something else and it was starting to take shape in the early days in the Marines when it was about adventure and about being on expeditions and climbing, I had just started to learn to climb, to ski, to mountaineer and I suppose I was thinking in my head, I was twenty-six, if I don’t like the outside world, I can join back up and see off the rest of my career there in a kind of selfish way. That is what drove me to get out and the reality of getting out was that it was one of the hardest times of my life.

    Ten years in the military and in my mid-twenties having just come back from Iraq involved in fighting to then go and into the civvy world and learn everything about civilian jobs and how that worked and not having the back up of the corps behind you, it was incredibly lonely and difficult period of time.

    The only thing driving me through it was the fact that I knew it wasn’t going to last forever, it would be a transitional phase and that was what I was going through and vowed not to make any decisions in that first year because I was still finding my feet and actually as I say this was the second best thing I ever did as after ten years in the military, I had all of these skills, qualification and experiences behind me, but I was still young and still hungry for something else.”

    And so, what was behind the decision to leave?

    “Weirdly, it was difficult because I didn’t want to leave the thing, I was part of, the brotherhood, but I just had this other drive to get on, to keep pushing in a different direction.

    I left at a time when people were doing sort of computer stuff and most people were like, “I am going to get out and do computer engineering” but I didn’t want to go down the route of another uniformed service which was the actual easiest option for me. So I did the rope access and offshore stuff and so I did the full resettlement package and that got me qualified on (as I was already climbing) rope access and non-destructive testing and so basically I was an offshore inspection engineer.
    So I did that for my resettlement when I left but when I got out I went into working for an organisation called Skillforce so I did a couple of years with them whilst I was finding my feet which is the best transition actually because I came from the military, I then came into this organisation which was teaching kids in school in my local area, but I was working with ex-military instructors. I was working with an ex-Argyle and Sutherland Highlanders’ RSM and a couple of his Warrant Officers, so I went straight into this civilian military which was a brilliant two years of sliding into civvy street really.

    I still had my sights fixed on going off shore as it was better money and more than the money it was about the time off and you would get two on, two off at the time and it also offered the same opportunity of travel as the corps did. There were all sorts of jobs kicking off in the middle east and far east and it was like being back at the time when I was just joining the corps and there were all of these options and it felt the same when I did the rope access.

    So, I did two years at Skillforce whilst I was finding my feet and then I got my first job away. Its not that easy to get a job offshore either, it can take a bit of time and getting people to trust you, to get a reputation because A it’s a good job and B the roles are well sought after and so it took me almost two years to get the job offshore.

    I got my first inspection job and I did that for three years on the oil rigs and when I was coming back from being offshore I was in the process of how I could set up my own business and I messed around doing a few different ideas. I did a bit of property development which didn’t really work out, I did chewing gum removal, I bought a big pressure washing machine removing gum from streets in my leave from offshore, I mean it was just ways of trying to generate extra money really.

    That didn’t really work out and then I brought everything back home and using the ethos “there’s acres of diamonds in your back yard” I basically just realised I’d already been doing Rope Access offshore, why didn’t I just set up a business doing that on the beach. And that’s what I did, I set up a company that serviced wind turbines, did blade repairs and did quite a lot of civil work on the dams, hydroelectric, so really I spent the next three or four years doing a lot of that work, even sometimes just cleaning buildings, window cleaning, anything on the ropes.

    That was the first look at my life and job wise I’d had the Marines, then Rope Access of offshore, oil rigs, wind turbines and then the next phase is the TV phase and I guess I am kind of in that one now.”

    Its only now I hear Aldo’s career story, you realise it isn’t a walk in the park and straight into TV work as some of us would think, with Aldo explaining more…

    “When you see things from the outside, it’s easy to assume they got there very easily and quickly, and I reckon from my own experience that the resettlement phase probably took around five years. I had bounced three or four jobs and I was in a job career line that I thought this is going in the right direction and I was happy, I was earning money, I didn’t have mega problems at home, but I reckon that took five years still.

    The TV side of things is a mega slow burn. I get emails all the time saying “I’ve just done this” and “I’ve just got this qualification, I’d like to do the job you do” but when it comes on TV, the films we’ve worked on TV, that’s from like two years ago and it might have been the only job we did at that point.

    On the outside it is the perfect job but its taken twelve years and in the first four years, I was probably doing one job a year and I was still doing my wind turbine stuff, rope access and cleaning pigeon crap off bridges at this point, I was still in between jobs going out and doing my day job and I’ll always keep my tickets because this type of work (TV work) won’t last forever so I’ll always keep that in the back pocket and perhaps go back to that at some point.”

    Tell me a little about the first TV job, that was interesting…

    “My friend asked me if I could get a film crew inside an active volcano in the Congo and that to me was like, everything that I had been doing up to that point, I’d been making it work and the minute I found out I could go somewhere, have an adventure, get paid for it and then its on TV to get a second run of reliving it and it was just a mega turning point and that was 2010.
    I came back from that job, sat in my kitchen, and drew out a plan of where I wanted to be in five years, ten years from now.
    I have done so many of these jobs now where you think, “how the hell did I get here?”, things like doing all the safety and security work for Foxy’s (Jason Fox) Narcos series a couple of years ago and I have been Steve Backshall’s right hand man working with the expedition crew on twelve world first expeditions and then we’ve done a couple of undercover tiger documentaries around anti-poaching and conservation, but really my business now is providing technical safety services to the TV and film industry, from rigging on The Avengers to setting up ropes or diving sites for TV production, so the majority of my work even now is off camera, is doing what I joined the Marines for. Doing eighteen hour day’s hard graft with not a lot of recognition, but you get that sense of self, sense of purpose and worth, you just generally feel like you are contributing to something much bigger than yourself and I think that is what I really like about it.

    The stuff I have been doing on screen has only been in the last four years and that was really because I’d been asked so many times to do on screen stuff and I hate any attention and so I said I’ll give it one shot and you really have to be hungry for it. It’s a case of ultimately whatever you set your mind to, you will get there in the end.

    And now I have Vertical Planet as my company. The work is varied, sat having lunch with the Narcos hitmen in Colombia and then I can be discovering a waterfall in Suriname for the first time that’s never been mapped or charted and then I can be sat in a bush crapping in a bag back on OP routine while I am investigating a tiger farm in south east Asia.

    If you asked me when I was sixteen what job I’d like to be doing when I was forty, I would have described this job. I maybe wouldn’t have had the details about it in depth, but this is exactly where I want to be, this is what I want to be doing.
    This only happened to me once I took my life into my own reigns. In the first five years after leaving the military, I was part of the crowd and following routine and expect that things would happen for me. When you realise that that isn’t the case, if you don’t have a plan you will be come part of someone else’s plan and when that clicked, that’s when things started to take off.
    I found my passion and then I gave it everything I had.”

    Aldo Kane was talking to Mal Robinson.

    Check out Aldo’s work at: http://www.verticalplanet.tv/

    Check Aldo’s official website with workout programmes at https://aldokane.com/

    Read the entire issue of Pathfinder & Military Muscle here for free

  • Commandos In Belarus For ‘Winter Warfare’

    Exercise Winter Partisan, which lasts until 14th March, will see the Green Berets from 42 Commando train in integrated teams with members of the Belarusian Armed Forces, sharing experience and expertise…

    Troops will train in winter survival skills such as camouflage and winter movement skills including abseiling and skiing, before putting them to the test in an exercise setting. This represents the largest group of UK Armed Forces personnel to have trained in Belarus and forms part of a bilateral programme of training and education the two countries share with each other.

    Last summer, Belarusian troops won a silver medal in Exercise Cambrian Patrol in Wales – the world’s toughest patrolling challenge – and participated with 2nd Battalion, the Royal Irish Regiment, on Exercise Urban Ranger.

    Exercise Winter Partisan represents the return phase of this year’s bilateral exchange between the UK and Belarus and will help to build trust and mutual understanding.

    As well as the military training, troops will engage in cultural activities looking at the two countries’ shared history – particularly both nations’ contribution in World War II in what is the 75th Anniversary year of VE Day. The Royal Marines will visit a World War II Museum in Minsk and participate in a Remembrance event.

    Image: MOD Crown Copyright