An update from UK ops in #Mali: Two weeks ago an armed group committed an atrocious killing of over 50 civilians in the villages around Outagouna. The #Malian Army and Nigerien troops from @UN_MINUSMA were first on the scene. We were not far behind.
The 🇬🇧LRRG is 250-strong, but it isn’t designated as a QRF.
Yet we can move fast and stay deployed on the ground for a month at a time, providing security for longer than most.
Outtagouna is around 150km from Gao. So the first phase was getting south. We received the news in the middle of the night and were moving 250 soldiers South first thing the next morning.
It wasn’t long before we were outside the town.
Getting down there allowed us to report the facts to the @UN, help those recently bereaved, reassure the inhabitants and deter another attack.
To protect people over a wide area, we’ve been getting UAVs up in the air repeatedly.
The taskgroup has one in its infantry company and another in it recce squadron.
Importantly, like the rest of the @BritishArmy, we are more than comfortable owning the night – patrolling in the dark when ISGS try to come back to intimidate and kill.
If something is spotted, @TheWelshCavalry can cover large distances over the desert to react quickly.
Their Jackals and Coyotes are superb in this terrain.
We’ve already reacted to information coming from the Malian Army about future attacks – getting to villages quickly after the news.
So far, so good.
We’ve also been leaving eyes and ears hidden around the area.
Overt deters; covert finds and calls in support.
I won’t lie – it’s frustrating to arrive after the event. But we can’t be there for long periods.
Next we’ll be bringing in the @UN Human Rights investigation team. This is ‘one-team’ @UN_MINUSMA business.
Right now, as you read this, we are still out there. And we will be for a while longer, providing security to the people of #Mali and their way of life.
On behalf of the UK and the UN. 🇺🇳🇬🇧
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✅The centre of Leeds
✅2km of underground tunnels
✅Patrolling through knee-high drain water
✅One of this year's more unusual Army exercises
A photo thread 🧵
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Exercise Hypogeal Bear was run by Sgt Mottley of 21 Engineer Regiment. It involved Army units (including 2 @RAnglians and 4 @TheParachuteReg) working alongside West Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.
Wagner Group operations in Africa, and the trail of associated civilian deaths in Libya, CAR and Mali.
A thread of nine articles from the last two months
How Russia Is Slaughtering Civilians on the African Front
"Eyewitnesses say the Russians spread through the alleys of Moura with soldiers from the Malian army... numerous civilians died in the hail of bullets." @FritzSchaap spiegel.de/international/…
@FritzSchaap Darfur village left reeling from Wagner Group's CAR massacre
"Eyewitnesses and gold miners told MEE last month that mercenary fighters believed to be belonging to Wagner Group attacked them in Andaha, CAR, killing dozens of miners"
Mohammed Amin middleeasteye.net/news/sudan-dar…
1963, Cambridge, MA. A psychologist is about to run an experiment with profound impacts on how instructors view students and leaders view their people.
Bob Rosenthal is about to discover the #Pygmalion Effect.
A thread about unlocking #potential for leaders and instructors
But first, h/t to @rcbregman. You can find this and other lesson on human nature in 'Human Kind'. I highly recommend it.
@rcbregman@UpSkillYourLife@dklineii@SahilBloom Back to Bob. He sets up two cages, each with the same maze. Then puts signs on each cage identifying one group of rats as highly intelligent, and the others as dull and dim-witted.
The catch? Both groups are perfectly normal and exactly the same.
On 31 Jan we said farewell to Captain Raymond Savage.
A veteran of the #Leicestershire Regiment, he fought in Norway, Malaya, and Singapore before building the Thai-Burma railway.
When he died at 102 last year he was known as 'the last man standing' - for many reasons.
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Each year for Tigers Weekend Raymond would attend the service, march past and lunch in #Leicester. This involved him driving from Devon to Leicester and back the same day. He did this well into his nineties.
But of course his amazing story deserve to be told from the start.
Raymond Savage joined The Artists' Rifles in 1937 and was commissioned into The Leicestershire Regiment in 1939.
He commanded a platoon in Norway in April 1940. The British defence of Norway did not go well. “There was a rather one-sided fight,” said Raymond.
If you are interested in following someone who opens your eyes to what some of our adversaries are doing, then I highly recommend @CalibreObscura. They write articles and threads on non-state armed groups, their TTPs and their #weapons.
Here's a thread of their best work:
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@CalibreObscura How about this: an interview with one Abu TOW, of the most prolific and well-known rebel #ATGM operators in Syria, or indeed globally. He's fired 140 ATGMs - and claims 133 hits. 2/ calibreobscura.com/fighting-with-…
@CalibreObscura Think you 'own the night'? Everyone does. But its worth looking at the low-light capabilities that are being used in Idlib and re-asking yourself if you really do. A fascinating run-down of IR/TI sights in use. 3/ calibreobscura.com/retaking-the-n…