Panorama: Forgotten Heroes, BBC One

Colonel Tim Collins asks why more isn't being done for Army veterans

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Colonel Tim Collins (left) with former soldier Mark Morgan, on the streets of Brighton

A film apparently in support of British servicemen on BBC One? The Daily Mail will never believe this. Whatever, this was a bleak, unsparing investigation of the way veterans of our nation's various pointless and endless wars are dumped back into civilian life with scant regard for their mental health or physical wellbeing.

It was a particularly forceful 60 minutes because it was fronted by Colonel Tim Collins, the former Commanding Officer of the Royal Irish who made that celebrated eve-of-battle speech before the 2003 invasion of Iraq. It was also Collins who was infuriated by Jimmy McGovern's portrayal of army life in the Afghan war drama Accused: Frankie's Story, shown on BBC One last November. Here, he had a chance to redress the balance as he presented an assortment of grim case histories.

'It takes six months to turn a man into a soldier, but the MoD assumes it takes no time whatsoever to turn him back into a civilian'

Private Steve Van Der Bank, having survived an onslaught of Improvised Explosive Devices in Iraq, returned home to Mansfield to find himself plagued with anger, moodiness and nightmares. Heavy drinking made him violent, and he ended up homeless and suicidal.
Royal Marine Gary Beake had returned from seven months in Afghanistan, where he'd seen 19 of his comrades killed, and found himself without a job and sleeping on a mattress in the living room of his mother's cramped house in Newcastle. He was a low priority on the council's housing list, while his army training as a signaller proved mysteriously useless in the jobs market.
Steve Anquetil, after eight years in Iraq with the Royal Welsh, described how he'd landed at Brize Norton in the morning and been back home in Newport later the same day, without any kind of adjustment or decompression period. It wasn't until 18 months later that he was diagnosed as suffering from post-traumatic stress. He looked like a haunted man walking on eggshells, but he eloquently made the point that while it takes six months to turn a man into a soldier, the MoD assumes it takes no time whatsoever to turn him back into a civilian (British troops in Afghanistan, pictured below).
troops_smallPerhaps the most pitiful was Mark Morgan, a veteran of Northern Ireland who'd been on patrol in Omagh when the bomb went off in August 1998. Tormented by flashbacks, he'd descended into a spiral of heavy drinking, crime and prison, and ended up living rough in Brighton. Colonel Collins joined him for a night sleeping in a doorway, and didn't enjoy it. Morgan has now quit drinking and aims to go to university, but he seemed horribly fragile.
The public may not support our weird shadow-wars, which just seem to trundle along because nobody has the wit or the will to force them to a conclusion, but they do support the servicemen, and give generously to military charities. Politicians by and large only pay them lip service, when pressed. Collins's soldiers suffer from the extra disadvantage of being from the white working class, and are therefore not fashionable at Westminster.

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On resettlement the forces stress transferable skills. I left the army in 1998 at 42 years old with loads of qualifications and then had six months of signing on before I got work myself through an ex forces charity. Now 56 and out of work again with even more qualifications for over two years I signed on every two weeks without one job offer from the Job Centre, when I was required to sign on weekly I stopped going.

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