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MARBAT |
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| There can be no doubt of the critical role played in the Battle of Marbat by the
Strikemaster and helicopter pilots of SOAF. |
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| This account of the battle from
the Strikey's point of view is taken from a talk given
by Nobby Grey at Marbat in December 2010. Some of what
he said were recollections from David Milne-Smith, Bill
Stoker and from Sean Creak. He has kindly provided a
transcript of that talk and the photographs of the
StrikeMasters. |
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Marbat Account (VT December 2010) |
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The helicopter involvement was
in two phases.
The first phase started at about 07:30 in Salalah when
with great difficulty due to the low cloud and mist
occasioned by the
khareef Neville Baker, the
duty heli pilot, was tasked to fly to Marbat for the
purpose of casualty evacuation.
Nick Holdbrook's account related that
"Salalah was in the fog and Neville had to lift and
grovel his way up the palm trees"
On arrival at Marbat
"He got to the coast and when he tried to land there
on the beach, he could see the sand and the water
shooting up from the incoming mortars and so on and he
was waved off by one of the BATT"
Communications were said to have been very poor and
there was difficulty in making contact with UAG but "he
managed to get off a message with a much more powerful
100w transmitter; an HF transmitter. Or whether it was when
he got back but I think what he had to say was that it
was really serious (and ) at UAG they really got the
seriousness of it. That was the first heli involvement"
The second phase was the helis that
"plucked
'G' squadron off the ranges and whisked them off to
Marbat and landed on the beach under fire".
"The helis then continued to
shuttle the wounded backwards and forwards for the rest
of the day."
"If the helis had not been
available, hadn't been able to fly, 'G' squadron
wouldn't have been able to get here and it would have
been a different picture" |
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The video that is presented
below came from Nobby Grey and David Milne-Smith and I
am grateful for their permission to use it. It was taken
by DM-S. The copyright for this video
lies entirely with them and should not be used without
their written permission.
The video is of a helicopter landing on the helipad
adjacent to the FST with the first group of injured from
Marbat. |
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| This
video is large and has no soundtrack. It
can be viewed either as a Windows *.wmv
of as a Quicktime MPEG-4. "Click" on
your chosen logo. |
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| secs
to secs |
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| 12 |
to |
20 |
Neville Baker standing by
heli door and assisting Tom Tobin out of the
heli and on to a stretcher |
| 20 |
to |
25 |
Joe Johnston, ChTech Brian
Spice and Pete Starling |
| 30 |
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Sean Creak seen in
life-saving jacket (LSJ) wearing his SOAF SD hat
on left standing by mini moke |
| 37 |
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Cluster of OTTs loading
injured onto stretchers |
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38 |
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SOAF
Ops officer Doug Dargie wearing khaki and 9mm
pistol belt walking from right to left across
screen with "Mac" (SEN), Bud Holder(OTT)
Joe Johnston (Surgeon) and BdeB (Anaesthetist)
doing very little apparently. |
| 45 |
to |
53 |
Brian Spice practises his
country dancing.... |
| 60 |
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Probably Sean
Creak but could be Bill Stoker in LSJ and flying
suit getting into mini-moke from right of screen
– possibly holding rifle? |
| 68 |
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Joe Johnston to the right with
Pete Starling on the back of the stretcher with
Tom Tobin on the stretcher |
| 85 |
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Sean Creak in LSJ and
flying suit (and white scarf?) back to our
camera, taking photos |
| 92 |
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Bud Holder running over to
helicopter door |
| 96 |
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Charlie Parsons – heli
pilot – in LSJ and flying suit standing by heli
door looking as if he is putting his pistol into
his holster |
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Some editing was done
by D.M-S using the original cine film so the
sequence we see is not
necessarily chronologically correct. I got
the cine film digitized some years ago.(NG) |
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Notice the low,
breaking fog/cloud in the background
(NG) |
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Not sure what time of
the day/morning these shots were taken (NG) |
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The webmaster has
applied some digital sharpening to the film.
(BdeB) |
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