When you enter a barrack room and one man's bedspace has an Irish Tricolour on the wall and another has the red hand of Ulster, and the two are best of mates busy taking the p-ss out of each other, you know you are with the 1st Battalion the Royal Irish. To John and Alan, and all I once had the privilege of serving with, 'Faugh a Ballagh'. True warriors.
Sgt John Cronin at the start of this docu, was commissioned from the ranks and became an officer. He was able to get BA and MBA after his name, thanks to the British Army.
The Irish make first class soldiers, there is a long tradition of which stretches back the mercenary European armies of the 16th century. 30% of Wellington's Napoleonic redcoats were stout Irish lads, they were first class fighters. The tradition continued up to an including WW1, with many thousands of Irish serving. Read John Lucy's superb book, 'There's a Devil In The Drum.' Lucy was an Irish soldier who fought throughout the entire duration of WW1. He was involved in the first battles around Mons, he was a private soldier and eventually became a commissioned officer. He became a Lt. Col post WW1, remained in the BA, and served during WW2. His book makes for fascinating reading- including his account of the devastating effect of the, 'Mad Minute,' with the SMLE .303 against massed ranks of German infantry in the early stages of WW1. Paddy makes a fine soldier- tough, robust, bags of spirit, good humour, resilient. RESPECT.
I served with an Irishman in the RAF NCO and also knew a female Petty Officer in the 80’s, both of whom told me they got opportunities that they could never have got in the Republic.
Wonderful documentary, and the most upsetting part is; it was made 20 years ago and still I myself find that the same issues in this documentary are still being regularly faced. Not to as much but are still their and I fear will always be there.
Thank you to all Roman Catholic Irish veterans who served in the British Army, the Irish Army and the Garda Siochana with the good-humour, decency and honor displayed by the magnificent Irish soldiers in this video. It is the bigots and the haters North and South of the border who are the real traitors to Ireland's respective faiths and traditions and, ultimately, to the cause of a genuine and lasting Irish unity. Both traditions, Ulster Unionist and Irish Nationalist need to recognise and honour the service and the sacrifice of Irish veterans who served in the British Armed forces. And if doing so provokes a degree of historical confusion, well so what? 'Confusion,' as a wise man once said, 'is not an ignoble condition'. Better for Ireland to be re-united in confusion than divided (with or without a border) by its hate-filled certainties. Faugh a Ballagh.
@@davidhanna8029 If you look into history the British establishment has had little respect for Irish Catholic culture,Bloody Sunday paratroopers were awarded medals by the queen and the list of atrocities goes on and on .
Aged out of the Irish foster system in 1989, absolutely nothing for me in Ireland so went to the UK and joined the Royal Navy. They ended up paying a substantial amount towards my university fees. Spent some of the best years of my life there and owe them the life I live today. Living in France now so never did go back to Ireland
@@operationcreation5583 swearing to a foreign monarch that invaded us and still holds onto 6 county's of the North of Ireland is treacherous. fighting Britain's illegal wars is sickening especially from an Irishman.
I come from an Irish background and most of the fam serve in the Irish army and the UN. I serve in the British army and am proud of my Irish heritage but also proud to serve in the British Reme. Ppl should get over historic events ffs.
Seen this one years ago, great documentary. There was few BBC NI documentary's which came out a few years before this one about the Royal Irish Rangers merger with the UDR, the Royal Irish Regt in Bosnia and the Irish ( more specifically Northern Irish) in the French Foreign Legion. All great documentary`s but have not seen then in almost 30 years.
I served in an English infantry regiment I was from the 5th battalion RRF but I was mobilized to serve in Iraq but after 6 months infantry training to regular standard we then deployed to serve 6 month in Iraq attached to the 1st battalion royal Irish....great lads we RRF were platoon level with Platoon of 4 para and a platoon of ex regular and a platoon of a battalion of the old UDR that became with the royal Irish rangers to become Royal Irish regiment! They swear to the most high to serve the Queen......since brexit I hate the British government but if I was called back up as the British military is expanding in manpower and equipment ships planes tanks drones extra nuclear weapons etc i would serve as I swore an oath.....Henry the 8th had many Irish soldiers as did Edward the 1st before him etc (not braveheart nonsense ) the SAS might of been formed by a Scotsman but it it was created by an Englishman Gen Mike Calvert but he was sent to British biggest army of 4 million men and create the chindit's.....but the other creator was an Irish man who also led it Paddy Mayne
@@DublinDan No they're not. Many want to see action, Some joined after 9/11 to fight Al-Qaeda and ISIS, while others joined for good pay and to learn useful skills. The Irish Army is a non-offensive National Guard which is limited in it's capacities and does not provide the opportunities and skills the British Army does.
Wow, really mixed comments on this topic! My take is that our Irish brothers that serve have my maximum respect without question. Whether it is monetary or voluntary is insignificant. Their sacrifice is exactly the same as any other soldier. Thank you for the informative and interesting upload. Brave Irish soldiers have been doing this for many, many years. Let's call it traditional and be proud of them.
Pat Geraghty (Irish Guards) is one of the funniest guys I was trained by at the Guards Depot Pirbright (1993). Although he was extremely tough he never bullied anyone , he knew he was respected and used charisma and humour to motivate. Men like him bring out the best in people. Salt of the earth.
I personally know four PIRA members who joined Brit army to learn there systems and gain knowledge of tactics. This has been the way for hundreds of years my own uncle was released under the GFA he was 11 years into a life sentence. He was known as the Jew because he betrayed the Brit military.
The Irish Regiments in the British Army included Irish Guards Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers Royal Dublin Fusiliers Royal Munster Fusiliers Royal Irish Fusiliers Royal Irish Rifles Royal Ulster Rifles Connaught Rangers Leinster Regiment Royal Irish Regiment (Victoria's) Kings Royal Irish Hussars Royal Irish Lancers Royal Inniskilling Dragoons North Irish Horse South Irish Horse Plus many milita Regiments from most counties in Ireland.
I am from Offlay Royal Artillery 1999-2013 I know a guy in the Royal Marines from Dublin and a guy from Cork in 2 Para I meet 6 lads from ROI in my corp RA
@@michealobraonain5364 but the English people are becoming a minority in their own country with all these countries they colonised over the centuries, bringing them to England. The Irish , The Scots ,The Chinese, The Indians , The Africans, The West Indians, all these people immigrated to England, MAKING THE ENGLISH A MINORITY IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY.
I know a lot of lads who went over, it was never political, most were nationalists, some were outright republican. It was always economic, the Irish army pays terribly and hundreds are leaving every year, those who look for a career, or want the adventure, while getting a decent wage often find the British army better.
@@wayneabel5421 The "family" where one of the members murderered, raped, and stripped the people and culture, and to this day still have impacts in a quarter of the island
Love this, Irish guys wanting to soldier and joining the British Army for the opportunities on offer. Proudly doing a great job. I can imagine some very confused people they stopped and searched in NI! Also shows how the Army wasn’t some sectarian organisation like some make it out to be.
The British establishment has had little respect for Irish Catholics bloody Sunday is only one example of hundreds.Why any Irish Catholic would put himself in the line of fire for them is ridiculous.
@Yoda we'd rather spend our money on more important things like health and education, about 99% of military equipment is never used, what a waste of money.
@@frankbyrne2286 Frank You're 100% correct ,the lowest form of Irish joined these shitty regiment's " tradition " ffs wtf are these fools like ,they where rejected by the Irish army because of criminal records etc but the BA will take them , I NEVER heard an Irish accent in the 30 yrs of the war here in the north !!! Not one !!! So I wonder is this just another propaganda bs film they made ,how could ANY catholic join the UDR, the biggest bunch of bigots to ever get used by the Brits ,they HATED Catholics ffs ,didn't matter If ye came from the roi or Timbuktu ffs ,they despised Catholics.
Well seen these Irish lads never lived in the north because you wouldn’t let your dog join the British army……shame on them all for joining the British army and hopefully they have few friends back home in Ireland
Fucking armchair republican over here😂. Don’t think you realise just how many Irish served in the British military. At the height of the empire a third of the soldiers and sailers were Irish.
@@geordiewishart1683 would rather be a proud paddy 🇮🇪 than live under the butchers apron…..as a famous MP once said Our revenge will be the laughter of our children…….Bobby Sands MP
@@geordiewishart1683 Do you really believe that everyone in Ireland speaks Irish ? Surely you don’t think that …you should be happy for Irish people to live in the uk rather than the thousands of the small boat tourists
Lol, the cat whistle at 19.47 at the sergeants in parade dress, prooves they really do get away with alot there!! Alot more than other regiments anyhow, that would have usually ment a beasting and got you written up....
Okay you want a career or a bit of Rambo witch the Irish army can't give you, theirs the Foreign Legion,US forces and propaly loads of others,I'll not judge you,you had your reasons,do you know the history of Ireland & england the things they done to our ancestors and still today 🇮🇪
Paddy. Blair mayne was a Distinguished officer Who live. Here. In Newtownards paddy Didnt suffer fools lightly. He was known By the. Trail. Of stories That got him into hot Water. Which was. Put to the side like his attitude to his superiors. Who often Kept their distance from. Getting. A bit of Paddys bad temper as He was known not just just turning his bad Temper out on his Subalterns. But any one that disagreed With paddy got the Wrath of his bad temper. along with sterling his co partner They crested. The. L R D G known better as the. Long range Desert. Group. Which today is known as the SAS. he. And. Sterling Caused havoc among The elite of Hitlers best of battle hardened soldiers Some that are still with us could tell When. Paddy doned A Germans uniform And posed as. Brigadier. In fluent. German while him and Sterling set. To destroy. All. The enemies aircraft those who are aware of who I am talking about. Should know. When he had s fatal. Car crash. No one. Went to his aid fearful of his temper which had some one had gone To his aid paddy might still be alive
@@6Tghma There are Protestants and loyalists and Brits up north that were born there, their parents and grand parents and great grand parents were born there and you can't just erase that, so we have to live with the fact that there are two Ireland's. And if someone from the South wants to serve that Ireland then all power to them. And as far as the majority of Ireland goes? Well the majority voted to change the Irish constitution and voted in favour of the Good Friday agreement.
@@Prosatanous I served for 22 years in the Irish Army and NEVER saw any bigotry as you describe. Good humour yes, slagging in a friendly way, yes, banter as soldiers always will, but NEVER once as you allege.
Not once in 19 years. One of my best friends is from the Shankill Road, another is from West Kerry. I have a place to stay in all 32 counties and my home is open to lads from all 32 counties. I've been a best man at a Protestant wedding and I've shed tears with my Northern brothers at a Catholic funeral. It doesn't matter what side of the fence you come from all that matters is knowing the Ranger left and right of you has your back as I have theirs. I will say the English lads are always very quiet during the Six Nations ;)
When you enter a barrack room and one man's bedspace has an Irish Tricolour on the wall and another has the red hand of Ulster, and the two are best of mates busy taking the p-ss out of each other, you know you are with the 1st Battalion the Royal Irish. To John and Alan, and all I once had the privilege of serving with, 'Faugh a Ballagh'. True warriors.
One filthy scumbag traitor. The guy with the red hand flag is a brit so belongs in the british army.
Sgt John Cronin at the start of this docu, was commissioned from the ranks and became an officer. He was able to get BA and MBA after his name, thanks to the British Army.
The Irish make first class soldiers, there is a long tradition of which stretches back the mercenary European armies of the 16th century. 30% of Wellington's Napoleonic redcoats were stout Irish lads, they were first class fighters. The tradition continued up to an including WW1, with many thousands of Irish serving. Read John Lucy's superb book, 'There's a Devil In The Drum.' Lucy was an Irish soldier who fought throughout the entire duration of WW1. He was involved in the first battles around Mons, he was a private soldier and eventually became a commissioned officer. He became a Lt. Col post WW1, remained in the BA, and served during WW2. His book makes for fascinating reading- including his account of the devastating effect of the, 'Mad Minute,' with the SMLE .303 against massed ranks of German infantry in the early stages of WW1.
Paddy makes a fine soldier- tough, robust, bags of spirit, good humour, resilient. RESPECT.
Hardly 30% in Wellingtons Army. Just look at the total population of Ireland then.
@@columbmurray That's all that was needed, £30% they fought like Trojans
@@columbmurrayQuit trying to sound smart people like you the way you are.
@@columbmurray actually more
ua-cam.com/video/z1__IpNdajk/v-deo.html
I wondered where this doc had gone, proud of them! This is for ALL of the many thousands of Irish who joined the British Army and served with pride.
Proud to have served, Hussar / R.E.M.E 70-97.
Seamus Duffy MSc,BSc ( Hons) BSc.
Derry Ireland. 🇮🇪 🇬🇧
War Pensioner!
Lot of love and respect sir 🇬🇧🏴🇮🇪. Both Ireland 🇮🇪 and UK 🇬🇧 should work together especially since we're only small island's.
I served with an Irishman in the RAF NCO and also knew a female Petty Officer in the 80’s, both of whom told me they got opportunities that they could never have got in the Republic.
Wonderful documentary, and the most upsetting part is; it was made 20 years ago and still I myself find that the same issues in this documentary are still being regularly faced. Not to as much but are still their and I fear will always be there.
Thank you to all Roman Catholic Irish veterans who served in the British Army, the Irish Army and the Garda Siochana with the good-humour, decency and honor displayed by the magnificent Irish soldiers in this video. It is the bigots and the haters North and South of the border who are the real traitors to Ireland's respective faiths and traditions and, ultimately, to the cause of a genuine and lasting Irish unity. Both traditions, Ulster Unionist and Irish Nationalist need to recognise and honour the service and the sacrifice of Irish veterans who served in the British Armed forces. And if doing so provokes a degree of historical confusion, well so what? 'Confusion,' as a wise man once said, 'is not an ignoble condition'. Better for Ireland to be re-united in confusion than divided (with or without a border) by its hate-filled certainties. Faugh a Ballagh.
Fair play mate
And all so recognise the sacrifice of Irish people who were killed in their quest for irish freedom from British colonial rule
Imagine writing that😂 bellend
@@davidhanna8029 If you look into history the British establishment has had little respect for Irish Catholic culture,Bloody Sunday paratroopers were awarded medals by the queen and the list of atrocities goes on and on .
They also served in The U.S Armed Forces from The American Revolution, The Civil War, two world wars, Korea, Vietnam right up to Iraq and Afghanistan
Aged out of the Irish foster system in 1989, absolutely nothing for me in Ireland so went to the UK and joined the Royal Navy. They ended up paying a substantial amount towards my university fees. Spent some of the best years of my life there and owe them the life I live today. Living in France now so never did go back to Ireland
Lot of love and respect sir.
I did the same in 1989.There was nothing for me at home .The army was carp though the prods hated me and ruined it for me so I left
One of the reasons I joined the British army..a proud Dubliner.
Traitor! Stay over there
@@6Tghma traitor 🤣🤣🤣 you sound about 12 u little bollox 🤣
Ah yes, going for the better paid army is a traitorous action
@@operationcreation5583 swearing to a foreign monarch that invaded us and still holds onto 6 county's of the North of Ireland is treacherous. fighting Britain's illegal wars is sickening especially from an Irishman.
@@6Tghma gstq
I come from an Irish background and most of the fam serve in the Irish army and the UN. I serve in the British army and am proud of my Irish heritage but also proud to serve in the British Reme. Ppl should get over historic events ffs.
It's not "historic events" when you still occupy 6 counties illegally.
@@mack1312.Boohoo
I've just watched this documentary and my brother was in that Battalion during the 1980s & 1990s. Bosnia, Fermanagh and Mahon Road. ☘️🇬🇧
RIP Ian Malone (Shot by a sniper in Iraq).
Checked the info. He is gone. RIP
RIP Ian
Don't be invading other people's countries, then they won't need to shoot you.
Mark Kelly, what a sad, bitter little boy you are.
@markkelly2261 says you, someone who would probably suffer PTSD after a strong dump.
First time seeing this. An amazing documentery . The section of the ww2 veterans in the Dublin pub was very poignant. "Clear the way"
Seen this one years ago, great documentary. There was few BBC NI documentary's which came out a few years before this one about the Royal Irish Rangers merger with the UDR, the Royal Irish Regt in Bosnia and the Irish ( more specifically Northern Irish) in the French Foreign Legion. All great documentary`s but have not seen then in almost 30 years.
Always good to have an Irish soldier watching your back, bonnie fighters.
I served in an English infantry regiment I was from the 5th battalion RRF but I was mobilized to serve in Iraq but after 6 months infantry training to regular standard we then deployed to serve 6 month in Iraq attached to the 1st battalion royal Irish....great lads we RRF were platoon level with Platoon of 4 para and a platoon of ex regular and a platoon of a battalion of the old UDR that became with the royal Irish rangers to become Royal Irish regiment! They swear to the most high to serve the Queen......since brexit I hate the British government but if I was called back up as the British military is expanding in manpower and equipment ships planes tanks drones extra nuclear weapons etc i would serve as I swore an oath.....Henry the 8th had many Irish soldiers as did Edward the 1st before him etc (not braveheart nonsense ) the SAS might of been formed by a Scotsman but it it was created by an Englishman Gen Mike Calvert but he was sent to British biggest army of 4 million men and create the chindit's.....but the other creator was an Irish man who also led it Paddy Mayne
Any Irish man that swears an oath the British Crown is a traitor to Ireland. it's shameful
@@DublinDan No they're not. Many want to see action, Some joined after 9/11 to fight Al-Qaeda and ISIS, while others joined for good pay and to learn useful skills. The Irish Army is a non-offensive National Guard which is limited in it's capacities and does not provide the opportunities and skills the British Army does.
Irishman here. Proud to have served in The Parachute Regiment.
THAT'S WHAT TRUE FRIENDS ARE FOR
Wow, really mixed comments on this topic! My take is that our Irish brothers that serve have my maximum respect without question. Whether it is monetary or voluntary is insignificant. Their sacrifice is exactly the same as any other soldier. Thank you for the informative and interesting upload. Brave Irish soldiers have been doing this for many, many years. Let's call it traditional and be proud of them.
That guy Ian Malone lived on my road when I was younger I remember the hole thing.
Thank you for your service guys,brave men one and all .FAB
7:14 “Sand and sun what more could you want? Although a couple dancing girls would be fine…” lmao love this guy
Pat Geraghty (Irish Guards) is one of the funniest guys I was trained by at the Guards Depot Pirbright (1993). Although he was extremely tough he never bullied anyone , he knew he was respected and used charisma and humour to motivate. Men like him bring out the best in people. Salt of the earth.
I personally know four PIRA members who joined Brit army to learn there systems and gain knowledge of tactics. This has been the way for hundreds of years my own uncle was released under the GFA he was 11 years into a life sentence. He was known as the Jew because he betrayed the Brit military.
The Irish Regiments in the British Army included
Irish Guards
Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
Royal Dublin Fusiliers
Royal Munster Fusiliers
Royal Irish Fusiliers
Royal Irish Rifles
Royal Ulster Rifles
Connaught Rangers
Leinster Regiment
Royal Irish Regiment (Victoria's)
Kings Royal Irish Hussars
Royal Irish Lancers
Royal Inniskilling Dragoons
North Irish Horse
South Irish Horse
Plus many milita Regiments from most counties in Ireland.
UDR was the largest Irish regiment yet you missed it. Also the London Irish.
UDR was a disgusting sectarian terror gang
4th Dragoon Guards.
The Irish and the British are more alike than they are different
I am from Offlay Royal Artillery 1999-2013 I know a guy in the Royal Marines from Dublin and a guy from Cork in 2 Para I meet 6 lads from ROI in my corp RA
Paddy makes a fine soldier. This is exactly why the brits laugh at us .
From an Irish-American who served in The U.S Army to The Royal Irish Guards serving in Northern Ireland...HOOOOOOAAAHHH
What type of Irish do you claim? Did nobody ever tell you what the brits did in Ireland?
@@michealobraonain5364 but the English people are becoming a minority in their own country with all these countries they colonised over the centuries, bringing them to England. The Irish , The Scots ,The Chinese, The Indians , The Africans, The West Indians, all these people immigrated to England, MAKING THE ENGLISH A MINORITY IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY.
@@michealobraonain5364get over it ffs
Whats the song called at the start?
It has to be a good thing.
I like the Irish Army Dad - As long as we beat them in the soccer haha
A nice friend Nicky Roberts in the room towards the end. Proud brother 👍
Not Brit bashing, I never like the idea of Irish people going to the British army
I know a lot of lads who went over, it was never political, most were nationalists, some were outright republican. It was always economic, the Irish army pays terribly and hundreds are leaving every year, those who look for a career, or want the adventure, while getting a decent wage often find the British army better.
Why ? We are all 1 family of island nations ...or is it bigoted insurgency that makes you detest your fellow islanders joining your defenders !
@@wayneabel5421 The "family" where one of the members murderered, raped, and stripped the people and culture, and to this day still have impacts in a quarter of the island
It's a job army here weren't recruiting many what are they supposed to do if soldiering is what you want to do
@@mikedon5205 exactly
If you join the Irish army you might be some crappy peace keeping duty
If you join the British army more than likely get combat
Nevertheless, Seán Rooney met the same ultimate end as Ian Malone...
Nothing crappy about peacekeeping still dangerous
I know the song at the start is Saxon Shilling, but does anyone know whp sings this version?
Great video, well done lads, respect to you all.
As an Englishman I respect it but can you really trust an Irishman who’s serving in the British army?
Yes You can .
Fair play to them all.
Love this, Irish guys wanting to soldier and joining the British Army for the opportunities on offer. Proudly doing a great job. I can imagine some very confused people they stopped and searched in NI! Also shows how the Army wasn’t some sectarian organisation like some make it out to be.
The British establishment has had little respect for Irish Catholics bloody Sunday is only one example of hundreds.Why any Irish Catholic would put himself in the line of fire for them is ridiculous.
VOICE LOUD & CLEAR SCARES CIVILIANS AWAY, TYPING MAKES IT MORE COMPREHENSIVE
thank you
Fine Soldiers these Irish Lads
Traitors end of story, helping occupiers in their own country for the crown.
@Yoda That's because we are not war monger killers like you Brits.
So you are agreeing with me, thanks.
@Yoda we'd rather spend our money on more important things like health and education, about 99% of military equipment is never used, what a waste of money.
@@frankbyrne2286 If 99% of military kit is never used, it's done it's job. If you want peace, prepare for war- deterrence.
@@frankbyrne2286 Frank You're 100% correct ,the lowest form of Irish joined these shitty regiment's " tradition " ffs wtf are these fools like ,they where rejected by the Irish army because of criminal records etc but the BA will take them , I NEVER heard an Irish accent in the 30 yrs of the war here in the north !!! Not one !!! So I wonder is this just another propaganda bs film they made ,how could ANY catholic join the UDR, the biggest bunch of bigots to ever get used by the Brits ,they HATED Catholics ffs ,didn't matter If ye came from the roi or Timbuktu ffs ,they despised Catholics.
Best regiment. OARAAR. Yeo. Fab
Leaving from Drogheda 😮😮😮😢
God bless our soldiers one and all no matter what religion its immaterial
Well seen these Irish lads never lived in the north because you wouldn’t let your dog join the British army……shame on them all for joining the British army and hopefully they have few friends back home in Ireland
Fucking armchair republican over here😂. Don’t think you realise just how many Irish served in the British military. At the height of the empire a third of the soldiers and sailers were Irish.
Good one, bitter paddy 🇬🇧
@@geordiewishart1683 would rather be a proud paddy 🇮🇪 than live under the butchers apron…..as a famous MP once said Our revenge will be the laughter of our children…….Bobby Sands MP
So why do so many Irish live and work in U.K.?
Bit hypocritical.
And I see you have chosen to communicate in English.
@@geordiewishart1683 Do you really believe that everyone in Ireland speaks Irish ? Surely you don’t think that …you should be happy for Irish people to live in the uk rather than the thousands of the small boat tourists
Gerry Adams
quanta tenerezza mi fanno , questi giovani soldati !--
Good to see the old man with tash
The tradition if the Wild Geese. ✊🇨🇮
Lance corporal Ian Malone killed in Iraq 2003. RIP
The ultimate betrayal
How is it? There fighting for there country Ireland 🇮🇪. Even though there with the next neighbour.
Betrayal
This Irish have always been a part of the British army, get over your hatred
SELF DEFENCE NO NEED WEAPONS
Aust loves the Irish brothers.😊 How forward thinking was the Queen Mother , peace always .
ENJOY THE REST OF TUESDAY PEACE OUT
Comment who the enemy ?
Lol, the cat whistle at 19.47 at the sergeants in parade dress, prooves they really do get away with alot there!! Alot more than other regiments anyhow, that would have usually ment a beasting and got you written up....
ANY SHAC AT PRESENT TIME
Faugh A Ballagh
Okay you want a career or a bit of Rambo witch the Irish army can't give you, theirs the Foreign Legion,US forces and propaly loads of others,I'll not judge you,you had your reasons,do you know the history of Ireland & england the things they done to our ancestors and still today 🇮🇪
That all ended over 100 years ago. Why do you keep up the hate?
I'll not judge you, then continues a comment that judges them.
Get with the time's. Look at how your own leader's and the EU is treating your countrymen?
Watching from England
What a weird bunch indeed
Paddy. Blair mayne was a
Distinguished officer
Who live. Here. In
Newtownards paddy
Didnt suffer fools lightly. He was known
By the. Trail. Of stories
That got him into hot
Water. Which was. Put to the side like his attitude to his superiors. Who often
Kept their distance from. Getting. A bit of
Paddys bad temper as
He was known not just
just turning his bad
Temper out on his
Subalterns. But any one that disagreed
With paddy got the
Wrath of his bad temper. along with sterling his co partner
They crested. The.
L R D G known better as the. Long range
Desert. Group. Which today is known as the
SAS. he. And. Sterling
Caused havoc among
The elite of Hitlers best of battle hardened soldiers
Some that are still with us could tell
When. Paddy doned
A Germans uniform
And posed as. Brigadier. In fluent. German while him and
Sterling set. To destroy. All. The enemies aircraft those who are aware of who
I am talking about. Should know. When
he had s fatal. Car crash. No one. Went to his aid fearful of his temper which had some one had gone
To his aid paddy might still be alive
The Irish guards where from in 1900 💂🇬🇧☘️
On to omagh and on to ballymena
costs
I was in the royal
Irish I am from Dublin best think I ever did
ONLY DOWNSIDE TOO MANY LADIES AROUND DIFFICULT TO PICK 😂
Not in my day
Irish men serving in the British Army non the wiser
Traitors
How are they?
Traitors everyone of them, should be ashamed
Ya says who?
@@Carrjimbo says the vast majority of Ireland, fighting for the occupiers. Snakes
@@6Tghma same question says who?
You certainly didnt fly back from well fed comfy boston for the cause did ya, patriot...
@@6Tghma There are Protestants and loyalists and Brits up north that were born there, their parents and grand parents and great grand parents were born there and you can't just erase that, so we have to live with the fact that there are two Ireland's. And if someone from the South wants to serve that Ireland then all power to them. And as far as the majority of Ireland goes? Well the majority voted to change the Irish constitution and voted in favour of the Good Friday agreement.
What load off shite
What??? Your grammar?
Worst of the worst.
More than you’ll ever be. Great men.
Wonder if they face any sectarianism.... Jibes, bigotry, etc 🙄
Unless they were in a regiment from NI it's unlikely.
@@Prosatanous I served for 22 years in the Irish Army and NEVER saw any bigotry as you describe. Good humour yes, slagging in a friendly way, yes, banter as soldiers always will, but NEVER once as you allege.
Not once in 19 years. One of my best friends is from the Shankill Road, another is from West Kerry. I have a place to stay in all 32 counties and my home is open to lads from all 32 counties. I've been a best man at a Protestant wedding and I've shed tears with my Northern brothers at a Catholic funeral. It doesn't matter what side of the fence you come from all that matters is knowing the Ranger left and right of you has your back as I have theirs.
I will say the English lads are always very quiet during the Six Nations ;)