News From Ireland


Irish joining British Army in large numbers

Recession means Irish Army not hiring


Young Irish are joining the British Army in record numbers.

Young Irishmen are joining the British Army in record numbers because of the deep recession in Ireland which has meant far less recruiting by the Irish Army. Many are now bound for Afghanistan as their regiments prepare to ship out.

The Irish regiments such as the Royal Irish Guards and Irish Rangers are reporting an influx of Irish since the recession has begun, the Irish Times has reported.

A lack of overseas missions by the Irish Army is another reason cited.


Major Mickey Stewart, whose mother was from Rathfarnham and father from Donaghadee, Co Down says more Irish means a greater identity for the Royal Irish regiment

“ Numbers (from Ireland) fell off and we lost some of our identity. There are more Irish again now and that matters an awful lot to people. The greatest thing is that it provides a sense of family, something tangible in terms of culture,” he said.

Ranger Michael Maguire, from Bantry, Co Cork, joined two-and-a-half months ago. “I was waiting for the Irish Army but it wasn’t recruiting. There was no end in sight; they just said it was indefinite,” he told The Times.

Ranger Seán Ryan, an 18-year-old from Co Clare, joined six months ago. “I left home at 15, did a block-laying apprenticeship in Kerry, finished up there and got a job. I moved to England at 16 and got a job from guys I knew in Robert Emmet’s hurling club in Ruislip in London.

“I didn’t want the Irish Army – not busy enough. The French Foreign Legion sent on the package of information, but I threw it out. I was originally going to join the Paras, but I was told about the Royal Irish.

“Some people don’t care that I joined; other people don’t talk about it. Some of the guys in Ruislip weren’t happy about it. Some of the family haven’t found out yet.”

Guardsman Craig Featherston’s Dublin family were not “best-pleased at first," but are supportive now: “Close friends are all fine about it. You get the odd look, but it is more that you are in any army, not just the British army.”

Ranger Michael Farrell, from Bray, Co Wicklow, told the newspaper “People at home are more intrigued than anything else. I have never had any hassle.”

Ranger Brian Curley from Co Galway, says “a lot of my friends are in the Irish Army. It didn’t appeal to me. I thought about it once. My Irish Army friends were advising me to join the Royal Irish. Here, you are dealing with fellows who have real battlefield experience.


Nster.com


11 Comments

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And why not there our neighbors ! all the comment below from Americans are pretty sad.. you should keep out of Irish affrairs its the year 2012 we've moved on and the old bitter comments are not relevant anymore..
Well, historically, it seems "oxymoronish", but a livelihood is a livelihood. It is 2011, afterall
Irish soldiers serving in the British army should remember that " THE ENEMY OF YOUR ENEMY IS YOUR FRIEND ".
Snakes. The Metaphorical Snakes of Saint Patrick is what those rats are. Blaming the economic downturn is a load of Bollicks. I came to France in 2000, not a word of French, lived on the streets, busked and now own 3 houses here.No excuse lads, I am sorry.
Gerry Adams Peace Dividend bearing fruit. Discard the tricolor use Awhrann na Sassanach with an upside Harp. Fighting irish bleeding for the crown who wudda thunk it would become a practice.
It's a long way to Tipperary
Monkeyapplenerd – Irishmen from Nth and Sth join the American Armed Forces. Does that make them that make them betrayers too? My Irish-Canadian cousin saw four of his unit killed in action in Afghan killing fields. People need to recognise that it is not only members of American and British armed forces that are fighting the evil of the Taliban and Al Qaeda there on behalf of peace for us. Irishmen doing so as members of another country's army are no different and should be respected and thanked by us for their courage.
Mr. Cooper plagiarised this story from the Irish Times’ (IT) printed version. What he doesn’t tell above is that the number of men from the Irish Republic who have joined the British Army for Afghanistan is just 80 (eighty), as the Irish Times prints, which also stated that a few hundred from the Nth of Ireland have joined. Out of all Ireland, I don’t think that amounts to “large numbers”, Mr. Cooper. Three letters to the IT’s editor today btw: two writing like the posters below, one writing as a pacifist. There will be more in the coming days. I’ll watch with interest.
This explains more than anything why the Irish will be forever slave of the Sassanach. Their Queen will be home to visit their counties in 2011. Can a body imagine a chosen brethern doing something like this. They'd come together to pool their energies and forge a nation as they bloody well have. In every land bent on success with eyes ever on a homeland.
I don't care how bad economic conditions are an Irish person joining the British army, that is a betrayal to their race, country, and their fellow Irish people.
Royal Irish Regimental Sgt Maj, Dubliner Frankie O’Connor says: “As soon as the lads are taken from the enclave, wherever that might be. Sorry but this make me sick
 




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