Author Topic: One thing the Iraqis have that are better than the British...  (Read 330 times)

Offline gofaster

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6622
...are their shoes.

======From Yahoo News========

British troops prefer Iraqi boots to Her Majesty's standard issue

NEAR BASRA (AFP) - British soldiers have been scavenging the debris of war for Iraqi army boots because the British army variety are disintegrating in the hot desert sun.

   
Guardsman Lee Williams, 18, of the Desert Rats' Royal Scots Dragoon Guards battle group, found a new pair of boots in an abandoned barracks which he said were "lighter and more comfortable" than the British footwear.


He added that he had been forced to swap his footwear because no replacements were available for his own disintegrating boots.


Equipment shortages have affected British forces since their arrival in the Gulf.


Other soldiers are wearing patched-up combat trousers, repaired in one instance by removing a pocket, and in another case by cutting up a colleague's spare shirt.


Army officers concede there have been problems with supplies, partly because of the relatively short time available between the announcement of British deployment and the soldiers' arrival in the Gulf.


Guardsman Williams, from Birmingham, accepted that his footwear problems would not prevent him fighting effectively, but said that he was disappointed that he was having to wear Iraqi boots.


"I was in a prisoner of war camp two days ago in which there was an abandoned barracks and I saw a room full of boots and clothing," he said.


"The English boots I had on were coming apart, they were the black ones, not desert boots, and the sole on them was coming off because of the heat.


"So I picked up a pair of the Iraqi boots for myself. There were lots of them, and they are more comfortable and lighter than the ones I was wearing.


"I'm not too keen about it for obvious reasons and I would not have believed it if you'd have said that I would be wearing Iraqi boots before I came out here."


Another Irish Guard, Guardsman David Richardson, 22, from Manchester, has cut up his own trousers in an attempt to repair holes in the crotch and backside.


"I've only got one pair of desert combats and they were issued second-hand I hope the previous wearer didn't go commando in them! with tears in them which have got worse since I got here," he said. "I've had to cut my pocket out to make patches to cover up the holes. It's embarrassing.


"The Iraqi army seems to be better clothed than we are. We are supposed to look like professional soldiers, but we don't. I look like a tramp."

Offline Pei

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1903
One thing the Iraqis have that are better than the British...
« Reply #1 on: March 27, 2003, 03:42:24 PM »
During that last Gulf War the British had a shortage of desert clothing as well. They had a large stock of it up until 1989 when we sold it to Iraq.

More worrying than boots is the poor state of the communcation gear: in Kosovo UK troops relied on mobile phones.

Offline -aper-

  • Nickel Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 369
One thing the Iraqis have that are better than the British...
« Reply #2 on: March 27, 2003, 04:29:52 PM »
They better drop their L85s and get some AKMs.

Offline funkedup

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 9466
      • http://www.raf303.org/
One thing the Iraqis have that are better than the British...
« Reply #3 on: March 27, 2003, 04:46:15 PM »
Should be no problem.  I'm sure there will be plenty of AKM's littering the battlefield.

Offline Major_Hans

  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 144
One thing the Iraqis have that are better than the British...
« Reply #4 on: March 27, 2003, 06:32:06 PM »
I would agree.  Kalasnikovs really are good rifles.  Not very accurate, but everyone uses them.

I wouldn't mind owning one.

Still, the American M-16A2 is supposed to be damn good now, not like those M-16s in Vietnam.  You can tell the difference between the models.  The new ones have a round grip around the barrel, the older, junk ones had a triangular foregrip.