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Bandsmen are told to stand guard

Blackadder1916

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Bandsmen are told to stand guard
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/05/19/narmy19.xml

By Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent 2:23am BST 19/05/2007

The Army is so short-staffed that military bandsmen have been put on standby to replace infantry battalions guarding Cyprus.

Some musicians have threatened to resign if they are sent on the operation, The Daily Telegraph has learned.

With more than 14,000 troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, planners desperately need more than 3,300 soldiers.

The first band scheduled to go to Cyprus will be the 50 musicians from the Welsh Guards, followed by the Grenadier Guards and the Rifles.

The first deployment is expected in January. During their three-month tours they will be expected to help keep the Greek and Turkish communities apart in the UN operation and guard British bases that are vital to operations in the Middle East.

They will also free up 100 soldiers from the Royal Welsh battalion to deploy abroad if an emergency arises.

Some bandsmen are saying that they joined up to be musicians, not soldiers.

"The worst thing about this is that we are essentially professional musicians who have not seen a rifle since our basic training," said one.

"The whole thing is ludicrous because we are musicians not bloody infantry. Three in our band are already saying if this goes ahead they will resign on the spot." The Corps of Army Music has 24 bands that total almost 1,000 musicians - the equivalent of two infantry battalions.

With the Army now fielding 36 battalions, officers believe the plan is a clear demonstration of how stretched the Forces are.

"It is an imaginative use of manpower which rather indicates the size of the manning problem and how we can fill the gaps in personnel," a senior officer said.

"This will cause great merriment in the battalions seeing the musicians finally going to work for a living. This could be the end of military bands as these people joined up to be musicians not soldiers.

"It is not the most demanding of tours but might be a challenge for the bandsmen." Military bandsmen spend the majority of the time playing music in Britain, including Trooping the Colour and the Edinburgh Tattoo, and around the world. But they are also soldiers who have traditionally acted in roles such as stretcher bearers in war.

Whitehall officials indicated that deploying the bandsmen to Cyprus "remained a possibility" but added that the Army "had to be flexible during a period of high operational tempo".

"We want to use all our available sources for tasks around the world," a source said.

A MoD spokesman said: "Any possible future Band Service deployments are contingency planning, not a firm commitment. No decision has yet been taken to deploy the Band Service."


 
Universality of service any one?  ::) They joined the forces, they are soldiers first, musicians second.
 
A three month stint on sunny Cyprus would probably be slightly better than this "tour of duty".

Queen's men booted out of Oz
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2007220215,00.html
By TOM NEWTON DUNN  Defence Editor May 15, 2007

Ninety Queen’s bandsmen on a tour of Australia have been kicked out of the country — because they could not pay their bills.

A series of fundraising concerts ended in disaster when their Aussie promoter went bust and pulled the plug.

The cash-strapped musicians — who often play state ceremonies in front of Her Majesty — had no money to pay their hotel bill, so were thrown on to the street.

A freight firm has also confiscated the two bands’ instruments AND uniforms until a debt said to be thousands of pounds is settled.

The musicians — from The Grenadier Guards and The Rifles — were only a third of the way through a tour of Sydney, Brisbane and Perth.

When creditors including freight firm Pinnacle Entertainment threatened to call cops, the bandsmen alerted the British High Commission in capital Canberra.

It promised the debts would be settled, and arranged flights back to the UK. The musicians flew back, but are twiddling their thumbs on indefinite leave as they have no instruments.

A source at the Corps of Army Music said: “The Grenadiers and the Rifles are two of the best bands we have.

“They were not only representing their service, but also the nation.

“For them to have been chucked out of a Commonwealth country like a load of criminals is appalling.

“There’s never been anything like it. It’s reduced the Army to a laughing stock.”

The Grenadier Guards — based at Wellington Barracks, Central London — played at Trooping the Colour and the Queen’s 80th birthday lunch last year.

The Winchester-based Rifles has impressed crowds at the Edinburgh Tattoo.

The Foreign Office said yesterday: “The Army bands were there as part of a tour organised by a commercial promoter who, we understand, had financial issues.

“The High Commission made arrangements to help the band members return to the UK.”

An MoD spokesman said: “We are not prepared to discuss commercial matters. We can confirm that there was a contract between the department and the promoter and insurance for this tour was in place.”

 
Man, I did my tour in Cyprus  tour in '84 as an infanteer; what a freakin' blast - had a great time myself; good go.
 
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