Fighting for the French Foreign Legion Read online




  First published in Great Britain in 2009 by

  Pen & Sword Military

  An imprint of

  Pen & Sword Books Ltd

  47 Church Street

  Barnsley

  South Yorkshire

  S70 2AS

  Copyright © Alex Lochrie, 2009

  ISBN: 9781848840850

  Digital Edition ISBN: 9781848846968

  The right of Alex Lochrie to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing.

  Printed and bound in England By Biddles UK

  Pen & Sword Books Ltd incorporates the Imprints of Pen & Sword Aviation, Pen & Sword Family History, Pen & Sword Maritime, Pen & Sword Military, Wharncliffe Local History, Pen & Sword Select, Pen & Sword Military Classics, Leo Cooper, Remember When, Seaforth Publishing and Frontline Publishing

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  Contents

  Acknowledgements

  Chapter 1 Survivors

  Chapter 2 Bygone Days

  Chapter 3 Into the Unknown

  Chapter 4 Basic Instruction

  Chapter 5 The 2ème REP

  Chapter 6 La Première Compagnie

  Chapter 7 Normality, Legion Style

  Chapter 8 Collective Power

  Chapter 9 Commando Training

  Chapter 10 New Responsibilities

  Chapter 11 The Day When All of our Lives Changed

  Chapter 12 Operation Desert Storm

  Chapter 13 A Touch of Normality

  Chapter 14 Why are We Here and What are We Doing?

  Chapter 15 Our Darkest Hour

  Chapter 16 My Personal Shame

  Chapter 17 Life Continues

  Chapter 18 A Little Bit of History

  Chapter 19 Conclusion

  Acknowledgements

  I would like to thank all those who have helped me get my story into print: my wife who encouraged me to write it; James Baillieu, who put me in touch with Henry Wilson of Pen & Sword Books; Bobby Gainher, my editor; and of course all the officers and legionnaires who accompanied me on my journey, who this book is really all about.

  CHAPTER 1

  Survivors

  Life in the French Foreign Legion can be described in one word – tough! – particularly if you happen to be part of the elite world that is the 2ème Regiment Etranger de Parachutiste (2ème REP).

  At the beginning of January 1985, my company was on the move again. The 1st Company specialized in commando warfare and, like everything else in the Legion, that meant some serious training. The expression ‘No pain, no gain’, must have originated in the Legion. We headed off to mainland France for a training course at France’s number one commando training centre, Le Centre National d’Entrainement Commando (CNEC).

  Our first week was spent at the town of Collioure, on the Mediterranean coast near the frontier with Spain. It is a town that has been the subject of many paintings, with its imposing fort perched on the cliffs overlooking the port. The French Army uses the old fort as a confidence-building centre before trainees progress on to the real thing at the commando training centre high in the Pyrenees, at Mont Louis. There were walls to climb, moats to cross and jumps from high to low walls with a 120-foot drop on the other side to the waves crashing onto the rocks below. There were roofs to clamber over and windows to abseil into. At the beginning of the week everyone was nervous, attacking the obstacles with caution and at walking pace. Security harnesses were worn at all times and anyone taking unnecessary risks was punished. Men thought to be acting recklessly found themselves off the course and working in the kitchens. Obstacles which seemed to be high and dangerous at the beginning of the week were now being taken at the double against the clock, which was exactly what was meant to happen. But this had just been a foretaste of what was in store for us before we moved up to the No.1 Commando Training Centre at Mont Louis - the real McCoy.

  The drive up through the Pyrenees was breathtaking as we passed through some of the most beautiful countryside in Europe. After the relatively mild climate of Corsica and the Mediterranean coast, we quickly found ourselves at 2,000 metres above sea level and well above the snow line. Mont Louis is the highest town in France, the ancient fort dates back to the 1600s and was very impressive. All of this was set against a background of intimidating,snow-covered mountains, forests, lakes and it was very, very cold indeed. A brass monkey wouldn’t have lasted five minutes.

  The obstacle courses were graded into three degrees of difficulty and coded yellow, red and black. The CNEC does not expect everyone who comes here to attain the highest level, but the Legion does, and in particular the REP expects nothing less. Anyone failing to reach the highest level has no place in a commando company and would be moved to other duties within the Regiment on their return. Those who had to drop out through injury would get another chance to complete the course at a later date.

  The facility is also used by foreign forces including the UK’s Royal Marines, the SAS and the American Seals, and is acknowledged as being one of the best of its kind in the world. France has two other ‘extreme warfare schools’: the jungle warfare school in French Guyana and a commando training centre in Djibouti, both run by the Legion.

  Physically, this was the hardest thing I have ever done. As at Collioure, instruction started at a walking pace, slowly building our skills and confidence to tackle the most dangerous parts of the course, the ‘piste noir’. Again it was all about teamwork and having total confidence in those around you – this was not a game and mistakes could easily cost a life or lead to serious injury. Apart from the pure difficulty of the obstacles, the cold was playing a major part by covering everything in a thick coating of ice. The centre normally closed during the winter months but the Legion is the Legion and here we were. Gloves were normally optional, but without them your skin would have stuck to the cables. Once you accepted that the obstacles were passable and that many had done it before you, it became a question of self-confidence.

  As the weeks passed, we became more gung-ho in our approach and the stopwatches began to come out. This was very physical for me and a real test to see if I could keep up with the youngsters, but there was more than the physical side to being a front-line commando. You can be one of the strongest men in the world but if you don’t have the mental aptitude to attack the problems you are faced with, you won’t get anywhere. Stamina also comes into the equation and that was where my age was a definite advantage. As ever, I was finding the obstacles hard going where arm strength was important. Leg strength and balance were not a problem but I knew that I was struggling on some of the tasks.

  Early one morning in the middle of the third week, I was dragged from my bed, ordered to get dressed, had a hood pulled over my head and my hands tagged behind my back before being pulled and pushed along for at least ten minutes. Outdoors, indoors, out again – I hadn’t a clue where I was. Eventually I was shoved into a room and sat down forcibly on a wooden bench. Even though I knew it was an exercise and that no real harm would come to me, it was hard to take.

&
nbsp; Before continuing with my story, it might be useful at this stage to explain how I found myself to be there. Every Legionnaire, after all, has his own reasons for seeking such an extreme way of life. For some it is pure adventure, while others are running away from reality or believe that the Legion is just waiting for them to turn up at the door. Whatever the reason, those who are selected are in the minority and I considered myself to be one of the lucky ones to have had the honour of being where I was.

  CHAPTER 2

  Bygone Days

  On 10 June 1983, I found myself in Paris asking a gendarme how to go about joining the French Foreign Legion. He advised me to go home, but realizing that I was intent on enlisting, he told me that I would find a recruiting poster in every main railway station in Paris. I therefore went to the Gare du Nord and sure enough, there was a giant poster advertising an exciting new life in the Legion. It was quite a step to take at the age of thirty-eight and I didn’t know if I would be accepted. All my life I had experienced one adventure after another – most of them enjoyable, some disastrous, but nothing on this scale. I have always striven to be the best at whatever I do but suffered from two handicaps – the second of which was a direct result of the first.

  When I was at school, dyslexia was unheard of. I was marked down and considered to be slow, almost backward, in some of my teachers’ minds. I knew from an early age that this was not the case and I was determined that I would make the most of what I could do well. I knew, even if everyone else didn’t, that I had a good brain and that I could learn in time to compensate for my handicap. I also discovered that I had an exceptional eye for detail and could apply logic to tackle the problems I faced.

  My second handicap was lack of confidence caused by being told regularly, ‘Don’t be stupid, you can’t do that.’ This was to have a profound effect on me for many years. My parents blocked any ambitions I might have had because they thought that I would fail and cause them embarrassment.

  Sport was one avenue of release for me and from my early teens I enjoyed success through physical achievement. By the age of fifteen I was house captain, played in the school football team, was school sports champion and represented my country at athletics. I also held the Scottish record for the long jump in my age group.

  My main interest was art and I was fortunate that at my school I had two excellent art teachers. I saw this as my future and wanted to go to art school, but my father did not believe that this was a ‘real’ job and my mother came out with the now familiar phrase ‘Don’t be stupid, you can’t do that.’ As a result, I found myself working as ‘the post boy’ in the office of a wholesale warehouse in Glasgow, which was very unexciting and I knew that I wouldn’t stick it out for long. Because I knew that my parents did not agree with my ambitions to become an artist I decided to take my destiny into my own hands – I suppose I ‘ran away from home’.

  At the tender age of seventeen, I went to London without telling anyone and found myself a job as a junior artist in an advertising agency. I found myself in a shared flat with no friends and very little money, but for the first time in my life I was independent and very happy. It was tough at first, but I learned a lot about my chosen career and, more importantly, about myself.

  After a year, my employer opened an office in Glasgow and I decided to move back home. My parents still did not approve of my choice of career, but I was determined to get to the top if only to prove them wrong. To further my skills I enrolled at the Glasgow School of Art for evening classes, five nights a week. I studied graphic and interior design and continued my studies for five years. I have only praise for the quality of my teachers and of the courses. I tried to vary my career by moving from advertising into exhibition stand design, packaging, then back into advertising. The reaction of my parents to my progress did not change – each promotion brought the habitual response, ‘Don’t be stupid, you can’t do that.’

  If my promotion achieved a mention in the press they would say, ‘How embarrassing, people will be laughing at us.’ They refused to accept that I was actually capable and qualified to hold the positions. By the late 1970s I had been appointed Advertising Manager of one of the largest retail groups in the UK. I was now married and had moved to Aberdeen. The group I worked for was going through some major changes due to the sudden death of its owner, so I decided that as I was now using a fountain pen more than my drawing one, it was time for another change.

  From the age of fifteen, I had thought about what it would be like to be a policeman, and had even applied to become a police cadet, but in those days the minimum height was 5 foot 9 inches in your stockinged feet, and I had been an inch short. I was friends with a senior officer in Aberdeen City Police and had helped them out on occasions if they needed the help of an artist. He persuaded me that I could use my skills within the force, so I thought why not, and became a police officer.

  I loved it. You never knew what was going to happen next. The training was professional and I would have the opportunity to use my specialist skills in a completely different environment once I had completed my two year probationary period. I enjoyed the interaction with the public, having to make on-the-spot decisions that could affect or even save a life.

  I was taught first aid, advanced driving skills, how to take control of various situations from football crowd control to major emergencies. I quickly learned that no matter how little service you have, the public look at the uniform and expect you to take charge. I even had the privilege of helping to deliver two babies. I was twenty-four when I decided to join and despite my first handicap, dyslexia, which was more of less unheard of at the time, I managed to pass the entrance examination and started out on my new adventure.

  I had no preconceived ideas about what being a police officer would entail, but I was looking forward to a career where every day would be different. The first thing to learn was to take responsibility for your actions. Such responsibility comes as a bit of a shock, but with good professional guidance I soon learned to cope. It was an exciting challenge. Aberdeen City Police had its own training department which covered basic instruction on subjects such as Scottish Criminal Law, The Road Traffic Act and local by-laws. It was a lot to take in on top of the practicalities of the job and was quite stressful at times.

  Every new constable served a two-year probationary period which included two, month-long, residential courses at the Scottish Police College which was located in Tullialan Castle in Fyfe. It was only at the end of the second course that you qualified to be a police officer. Despite Aberdeen having a large student population, the problem of drug and alcohol abuse had never been of major concern, but overnight they became a major problem.

  Towards the end of my probationary period, my artistic skills had started to be used by the force’s Identification Branch. I became involved in developing a new ‘photofit system’ and produced some images of suspects that led directly to the arrest of the guilty parties. After one of my images had been released to the press, the culprit came forward voluntarily when his friends and workmates commented jokingly on his likeness to the wanted person. I found myself involved in everything from simple house break-ins, hit-and-run car accidents and sexual assaults, to murder. It opened my eyes to a world that I didn’t know existed. From the bizarre to the farcical, from the intriguing to the obscene – I saw it all.

  A couple of examples are worthy of a mention. I cannot identify the actual incidents for obvious reasons, but I can explain my involvement. One involved a teenager who said he had been attacked by a gang and had had some words cut into his chest with an open razor. When I photographed his injuries I had the chance to examine them more closely and noticed that the cuts were deeper at the bottom of each stroke. I was able to demonstrate on a pig’s carcass that if they had been inflicted by someone standing in front of him as he claimed, the cuts would have been deeper at the beginning of each stroke. When I put it to him that the injuries could not have been inflicted as he described, he eventuall
y admitted that the cuts were self-inflicted in an attempt to get the attention of his parents who doted on his elder brother who was ... a police officer.

  Another case involved an elderly lady who was a resident in a care home and had been subjected to a particularly vicious sexual attack. She had been beaten about the face and her attacker had bitten her on her breasts, severely enough for me to take a cast of one of the wounds. A suspect had been detained but this was in the days before DNA testing and the enquiry was going nowhere. I brought an apple into the interview room and laid it on the table. As the suspect became more confident that we had no evidence, he asked if he could have the apple. Without thinking he took a bite out of it and before he knew what was happening I removed it from his hand and took it to the lab. The imprint of his teath in the apple matched those that I had cast from the old lady‘s chest. Got ‘im!

  I could write a book about my time in the Police but now is not the time. Although I was enjoying the challenges, dedication to the job is not easy on married officers and my marriage was on the rocks. My wife had a full-time job and as a result we hardly saw each other. I found myself looking for alternative ways to spend my off-duty hours and decided to take up another challenge – flying.

  This was everything I had dreamed it would be and I threw myself into it body and soul. The joys of flying cannot be put into words – it has to be experienced for oneself.

  Single engine, multi-engine, helicopters, night flying, instrument flying, aerobatics, I did them all, but nothing compared to the thrill of my first solo. That was definitely one of the high points of my life. My instructor had just landed with me and as we taxied back to the holding point ready to re-enter the runway, he opened the door without warning, jumped out and shouted, ‘Off you go. You’re on your own.’

  I hadn’t had a chance to think about it so I wasn’t nervous. The control tower had been advised in advance and the circuit had been cleared of all other traffic. I made my take-off and was about to turn on to the approach when I heard an inbound commercial flight’s call that it was coming in to land. Normally commercial aircraft have priority, but he was told to wait until I had landed as I was on a first solo flight. When I called in that I had cleared the runway, the pilot of the inbound jet congratulated me and arranged to meet me in the airport bar afterwards. I was on a high.