CHAPTER
THIRTY SEVEN
INTO
THE VALLEY
The
plan Northwood Command settled on to move their army from Edinburgh
to Fort George was no kind of Blitzkrieg. Well, of course, it wasn't.
A classic Blitzkrieg style advance would have involved the use of
dive bombing planes and the three American, French and Russian
aircraft carriers out in the North Sea meant such an option was well
and truly off the table.
Instead,
the English Generals deemed their advance would be measured and
careful. They decided on the most obvious route: the A9. The road was
wide enough for their convoy of over 700 trucks and armoured vehicles
to travel four abreast. And this time the column would move as one.
The
speed of the advance was governed by the screening force who headed
up the column. This unit was a mix of 300 infantrymen and engineers
who moved forward in a line two hundred yards wide: one hundred yards
to the east of the A9, one hundred yards to the west of the A9. They
checked the ground for IED's with scanners and sniffer dogs. Their
speed of progress governed the speed of the 10,000 men and 700
vehicles behind them.
Six
non-military drones buzzed overhead sending a view of the surrounding
area to the command vehicle at the centre of the convoy.
Steady
and secure.
3
mph.
On
the first day, they set out at five o'clock in the morning and
stopped for the night at ten in the evening.
51
miles.
On
the second day, they set out at five o'clock in the morning and
stopped for the night at ten in the evening.
52
miles.
103
miles in total.
49
miles to Fort George. They would arrive the next evening and start to
establish their positions.
The
bombardment would commence at dawn the next day.
Steady
and secure. Measured.
*
As
the forces of Operation Cumberland settled in for their first night
on the A9, Marc Romaine and the 813 Legionnaires of 2 REP drove for
30 miles and then marched the final ten miles to a heavily wooded
ridge which gave a view down a shallow valley. Their weaponry and
ammunition had been stashed over the course of two nights a week
earlier. Under the cover of darkness, they dug themselves in. By the
breaking of dawn, they had a created semi-circle of firing positions.
They hid under camouflage nets and branches through the heat of the
day and as soon as darkness fell they started to dig again.
By
dawn their trenches and fire positions were complete. Marc Romaine
had prepared his kill zone with meticulous care and now as the
growing light unpacked a view of the valley ahead of them, he was
more than content.
The
task 2 REP had been given couldn't have been more up their street.
They were to engage and hold for a minimum of forty five minutes.
They were 813 and the advancing army was over 10,000.
It
was perfect.
A
voice from Paris in his ear piece.
“They
are moving, sir.”
“ETA?”
“1500
hours, sir.”
“Bon.”
The
remainder of the Scottish force had also moved through the night in
their rag tag collection of vehicles. The Black Watch hid in woodland
ten miles to the south of the valley. The Scots Guards were ten miles
to the east and a mix of Argyles and Borderers were ten miles to the
west.
Wendel
and his team had dug themselves a hide in a nest of hawthorn bushes
on the low hill which ran up the western side of the valley. Their
position gave them a fine uninterrupted view from the point where the
A9 entered the valley all the way to the ridgeline where 2REP were
waiting.
Four
miles.
Half
way along the valley there was a small crossroads with a clutch of
houses which had been quietly evacuated through the night. A country
road wound down over the hills in the west, crossed the A9, and then
climbed up over the hills on the east.
The
valley bottom was blanketed with mist in the light of the dawn, but
by seven thirty it was all brushed away. Yet again the skies above
were wall to wall blue.
As
he gazed down into the tranquillity below, Wendel felt an
overwhelming sadness. Many of the men in the approaching column were
his friends and comrades. In a few hours, this postcard pretty place
would provide the last pictures their eyes would ever see. The last
memories they would ever file away. It was such an inconsequential
place. A river which wasn't much more than a stream. Small fields
wrapped in drystone walls. Patches of woodland. Splashes of colour in
the gardens of the white houses. Buzzards gliding the thermals. Flies
and bees. Dotted sheep on slopes.
And
a long ribbon of grey tarmac.
The
A9.
Closed
and empty of traffic. A ghost road in a ghost valley soon to be
filled with thousands of ghosts.
This
was the place where it all would be decided. One way or another.
Old
school.
A
thought came to him. The hamlet below him. What the hell was the
place called? He checked his map.
Lochie
Bridge.
So.
Another name to add to the list.
Bannockburn,
Dunbar. Flodden. Culloden.
And
now Lochie Bridge.
Would
it be the last battle of the last war? Maybe. But for hundreds of
years men had promised the latest war would be the last war. It
didn't tend to work out that way. The only war to end all wars would
be the one decided with nuclear weapons.
For
Christ's sake, Wendel. Enough already. He forced his mind away from
the hours to come.
“Come
on lads. Let's give the hardware one last going over.”
They
passed the countdown hours stripping and cleaning their weapons and
talking about anything except the 10,000 men and 700 vehicles which
were rolling slowly toward them.
At
3 miles per hour.
*
Three
minutes past three on a baking hot afternoon in the Highlands.
The
line of screening troops came into view. Then the first of the
vehicles started to take shape in the shimmering heat.
The
forces of Operation Cumberland had arrived.
It
took the screen line forty minutes to reach the crossroads where a
stone bridge carried the B9153 over the small river. By now the whole
of the convoy could be seen. Vehicles in rows of four separated by a
space of 20 yards. Nearly 200 rows of four filling the air with a low
growl of engines.
When
the lead troops were 150 hundred yards from the wooded ridgeline at
the northern end of the valley, Marc's voice spoke into Wendel's ear
piece.
“Activate
Le Frelon, please.”
When
General Marc Romain had made his second low level trip across the
North Sea he had brought along two large bags.
Packed
securely inside were two of the French Army's better kept secrets.
'Le Frelon' in French translated into 'The Hornet' in English. It came
in the form of the kind of steel case you could easily imagine a
professional photographer carrying.
Omar
was the designated operator. He laid the case on the ground outside
the bush and withdrew back into cover. The firing mechanism didn't
look so very different from a TV remote. He tapped a button and the
lid of the case swung open. A shimmer of small objects leaped out
from the case with a mechanical buzzing sound. Two thousand 'micro
drones' took to the sky like a swarm of hornets and started to sniff
out the English drones.
It
didn't take them very long. In a matter of seconds, the quiet of the
valley was disturbed by a sound like a firework display as the tiny
explosive loads carried by the micro drones took down their targets.
*
“What
the bloody hell is that?” From his place inside the Operation
Cumberland command vehicle, the firework noise was little more than a
vague popping sound in the ears of General Sidney Duncan.
“Sir.
We've lost the drone cameras, sir?”
“Repeat
that please.”
“There's
nothing sir. The drones have gone dark....”
*
“Commence
firing.” Marc Romaine's voice was completely flat.
The
fire plan had been hammered home. Any Legionnaire who broke the fire
plan knew they would face a world of pain for a very long time.
Unsurprisingly,
nobody broke the fire plan.
Only
thirty Legionnaires opened fire. They used short bursts to drop
carefully chosen targets from the approaching screen line. In five
seconds, forty advancing troops lay dead or wounded. The remainder of
the force hit the ground and started to return fire.
The
battle of Lochie Bridge was underway.
*
“This
is Donnelly. We have contact. Repeat we have contact. Incoming fire
from the woods on the ridge line to the north."
“Estimated
strength?”
“Between
30 and 50. Accurate fire. We have multiple casualties."
“Hold
your position. Wait out.”
Duncan
took a moment of calm time to control a surge of adrenalin.
Done
“Number
One Force, advance and secure the position please.”
'Number
One Force' was at the head of the advancing column. It was made up of
a mixture of the SAS, the Parachute Regiment, and the Royal Marines.
It would be the job of 'One Force' to engage and destroy any enemy
ambush.
Men
jumped down from vehicles and surged forward to pre-determined
positions. The Paras formed up on the left flank whilst the Royal
Marines went right. The SAS filled the centre.
It
took four minutes for 'One Force' to deploy.
They
stayed low to the ground and hid behind what cover they could find.
The firing from the tree line continued.
The
Colonel in charge listened to their confirmations in his ear piece.
“Right
flank ready.”
“Left
flank ready.”
“Centre
ready.”
“OK.
Light them up and engage.”
Thirty
rocket propelled grenades slammed into the treeline and the ranks of
One Force moved forward.
*
Marc
stood up from his trench amidst the sound and smoke of the incoming
RPG rounds. Somewhere to his left a legionnaire was screaming.
Someone
was shouting “Medic!!!!”
“Fire
at will.”
The
effect of the full fire power of 2 REP was devastating. The advancing
troops of 'One Force' were cut down like harvested wheat. A mix of
bullets and RPG rounds turned the air to white hot metal.
*
“Revised
force estimate! There are hundreds of the bastards....”
Duncan
put some snap into his voice.
“How
many? Be accurate Donelly.”
“Christ..
fuck.. maybe 500? Maybe 1000? We have no way forward, sir. We're
going to need artillery support...”
“Wait
out.”
Time
for another calm time pause. OK. Good enough.
“Colonel
Jones.”
“Sir”
“Deploy
ten guns, please. Your target is the wooded area on the ridge line at
the northern end of the valley."
“Of
course sir.”
“How
long to deploy?”
“Ten
minutes sir.”
“Do
it please.”
“Roger
that.”
“Donnelly.”
“Sir.”
“Continue
to engage, please. Expect artillery support in ten minutes."
“Sir.”
*
“Fireplan
two.”
Within
seconds of Marc's order, the volume of 2 REP fire dropped by 80%. The
new requirement was to preserve ammunition and keep the surviving
elements of 'One Force' pinned down.
“Evacuate
the wounded.”
All
along the semi-circle of dug in Legionnaires, teams of stretcher
bearers collected up the wounded and carried them over the ridge line
to waiting medics.
“Check
in please, snipers.”
Ten
snipers who were hidden on the slopes of both sides of the valley
checked in with their commander.
“Are
they unloading their artillery?"
“They
are, sir.”
“Engage
them.”
*
In
the centre of the English column, frantic teams of men were starting
the process of unhooking ten guns from their tow vehicles.
When
one man dropped to the tarmac nobody noticed.
When
three more men fell they were absolutely noticed and the off load
teams dived for whatever cover they could find.
“We
have incoming sniper fire, sir. Both sides of the valley. I have four
men down here.”
“Can
you get the guns off?”
“Negative,
sir.”
Calm
time. Calm time. Calm time.......
“Sir,
I have Northwood for you.”
“Thank
you Wallace..... this is Duncan....”
“Report
please General Duncan.”
“Ambush
sir. A dug in force at on the ridge line at the north of the valley.
We estimate between 500 and 1000. Automatic weapons and RPG. Very
accurate. We have multiple casualties. We are trying to off load
artillery, but we have sniper fire...”
“Wait
out please Duncan...... “
Calm
time. Calm time. Calm time.....
“.....
Duncan?”
“Sir.”
“The
satellite shows multiple vehicles approaching your position. South,
West and East."
“What
kind of vehicles?”
“Cars,
vans, people carriers....”
“How
many....”
“Our
best estimate is three groups of over a hundred. They're coming north
up the A9 and from both east and west on the B9153....”
*
Wendel
absorbed the reports from the approaching forces.
“East
Force, ETA ten minutes.”
“West
Force. ETA eight minutes.”
“South
Force. ETA six minutes.”
Close
enough.
“On
you Omar. Take the command vehicle.”
The
second classified piece of French Army kit Marc Romaine had carried
over the North Sea was 'Le Couverture Furtif'. The stealth blanket.
It was an unremarkable looking piece of grey material not as large as
a blanket but much larger than a handkerchief. It was more than large
enough to wrap an improvised explosive device. And once wrapped, the
IED inside became entirely invisible to any electronic detector or
well-trained sniffer dog. Marc had brought ten stealth blankets and
over the previous two nights, Omar had used them all as he had buried
a line of devices along the verge of the A9.
Now
he nodded to Wendel and activated device number five. The growling
sound of the explosion rolled up the valley side a couple of seconds
after the sight of the command vehicle and many of the vehicles
around it being reduced to scrap yard metal.
*
….
come in please Operation Cumberland..... Operation Cumberland.....
General Duncan...... Sorry sir, they are not responding.....”
But
General Moore already knew General Duncan would never respond to
anything ever again. The satellite pictures showed a huge explosion
in the centre of the convoy.
“Holy
mother of Christ......”
*
“South
Force at jump off.”
“OK.
On our lead.... Omar.....”
Devices
one and two threw a murderous hail of shrapnel through the southern
third of the convoy. Disorientated men poured down from burning
vehicles to be confronted by the sight of over a hundred cars and
vans and people carriers heading toward them at high speed.
A
few English soldiers managed to get off a few shots, but the vast
majority were in a state of utter shock. Those who fired were soon
dropped by the snipers on the slopes above them.
The
men of the Black Watch leaped from their vehicles and
advanced on the
burning wreckage behind a storm of gunfire.
“West
Force at Jump Off.....”
“East
Force at Jump off.....”
“Omar......”
The
remaining seven hidden bombs broke the spine of the column. Over
three thousand men poured bullets into the mayhem.
After
three murderous minutes, the battle of Lochie Bridge was over.
Operation Cumberland ended in catastrophe. The English Army lost 3245
of its men killed and a further 4798 injured. Every vehicle was
destroyed. The only senior officer left alive was a Colonel of the
Coldstream Guards who surrendered to Colonel 'JJ' Jackson of the
Black Watch.
The
Scottish Army lost fourteen men dead and eighty six wounded. 2 REP
suffered 22 fatalities and 79 injuries, though these were never
acknowledged. Marc Romaine took his men away as soon as the guns fell
silent and over the next four days, they retraced their route back to
Roscoff. Over the following months a few of the 'One Force' survivors
swore blind they had heard shouts in French coming from the tree line
on the northern ridge. Nobody took a blind bit of notice. Their
claims were written off as some kind of post combat delusion.
The
French Government never acknowledged the presence of the Legionnaires
of 2 REP at the battle of Lochie Bridge.
The
victorious Scottish soldiers were in no mood for celebration. The so
called battle had been nothing more than a well-executed turkey
shoot. There was no glory to be found in the screams of hundreds of
wounded men. Victory meant giving emergency first aid and sealing
corpses into body bags. The sights and smells and sounds of the
valley would haunt the dreams of hundreds of the winners for many
years to come.
Wendel
and his team were in no mood for celebration either. A freak bullet
had hit Nazir in the right eye and killed him instantly.
They
carried his body to their hidden vehicles and returned to Glasgow.
Their role in the battle was never officially acknowledged either.
*
A
terrible silence fell on the Northwood Situation Room. All they had
were satellite pictures. Within minutes of losing all communications
with Operation Cumberland, the full extent of the rout was clear for
all to see.
“Prime
Minister.”
“Yes.”
“I'm
afraid I have bad news. The column has been destroyed.”
“Destroyed?”
“Yes
sir. Destroyed. We walked straight onto a sucker punch. You will have
my resignation within the hour."
“A
sucker punch?”
Edward
Montford ended the call and stared into space.
A
sucker punch. The trees of Birnam Wood had climbed all the way to the
top of Dunsinane hill.
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