Close Menu
  • Home
  • Alternative News
    • Politics & Policy
    • Independent Journalism
    • Geopolitics & War
    • Economy & Power
    • Investigative Reports
  • Double Speak
    • Media Bias
    • Fact Check & Misinformation
    • Political Spin
    • Propaganda & Narrative
  • Truth or Scare
    • UFO & Extraterrestrial
    • Myth Busting & Debunking
    • Paranormal & Mysteries
    • Conspiracy Theories
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

While the World Cup Plays On, Palestine Refuses to Die

July 17, 2026

After Barbara: Illegal Aliens and the Census

July 17, 2026

My New Boston Globe Article on Trump’s Bogus Election Fraud Claims

July 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TheOthernews
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Alternative News
    • Politics & Policy
    • Independent Journalism
    • Geopolitics & War
    • Economy & Power
    • Investigative Reports
  • Double Speak
    • Media Bias
    • Fact Check & Misinformation
    • Political Spin
    • Propaganda & Narrative
  • Truth or Scare
    • UFO & Extraterrestrial
    • Myth Busting & Debunking
    • Paranormal & Mysteries
    • Conspiracy Theories
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
TheOthernews
Home»Propaganda & Narrative»SAS Drove Prisoners Off Forklifts ‘For Fun’, Inquiry Told – Consortium News
Propaganda & Narrative

SAS Drove Prisoners Off Forklifts ‘For Fun’, Inquiry Told – Consortium News

nickBy nickJuly 17, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Damning evidence has shown how British SAS drew up “kill lists,” sometimes executing unarmed Afghans in their beds, and killing “for fun,” reports Richard Norton-Taylor.

UK’s Talisman suite of vehicles in convoy to Forward Operating Base Khar Nikha in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, March, 2012.  (Sgt. Wes Calder RLC/UK MOD,Wikimedia Commons/ OGL v1.0,)

By Richard Norton-Taylor
Declassified UK

Damning evidence of the culture of Britain’s special forces, from their training camps in Herefordshire to the battlefields of Afghanistan, was released on Tuesday.

It was disclosed by the judge-led inquiry set up in the wake of detailed reports of unarmed civilians executed in cold blood in night raids by SAS soldiers.

A special forces soldier said prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq were put on the prongs of forklift trucks which were then raised and driven so fast that they fell off.

“It was something they did for fun doing this and jamming on the brakes so they fell off,” one of the inquiry witnesses said she had been told.

The inquiry, chaired by appeal court judge Sir Charles Haddon-Cave, also heard that alcohol, banned for everybody else in the military, was “widespread” in the special forces.

“Normal rules,” including respect for rank and “observance of dress,” were also ignored by the SAS which was disconnected from the rest of the British army.

‘Out of Control’

Charles Anthony Haddon-Cave, commonly called Lord Justice Haddon-Cave, 2021. (UK Government, Wikipedia)

In evidence first heard in closed hearing, Christopher Green, a former army officer, testified that the SAS was under a chain of command “that did not place the same level of significance on the moral domain in the way we fight.”

He said the SAS seemed to be “out of control,” benefitting from a “culture of exceptionalism,” while he was called a “Taliban-loving apologist” who could not be trusted and had no authority to contradict elite special forces.

He was told by a senior army commander in Helmand to drop his questioning of SAS tactics.

Green, who became a whistleblower after serving in Afghanistan in 2012 and later gave a statement to the military police, told the inquiry that the rules that applied to the rest of the army in the conduct of military operations did not apply to the SAS.

In its attempts to cover up evidence, Green was denied access to “gun tapes” – video footage of special forces operations, he told the inquiry. He described the refusal to let him see the tapes as “an admission of guilt.”

“What I would like to see,” he said at the end of his evidence, “is the British army [which has] been losing wars for the last twenty plus years … restored to being a winning organisation rather than a losing one.”

‘Local Atmospherics’

Green referred to an SAS night raid in the village of Rahim in Helmand province, Afghanistan, in 2012 when three young men, described as innocent farmers, were killed.

The Ministry of Defence later paid their mother, Bebe Hazrata, more than £3,600. It said the money was not “compensation” but an “assistance payment” to “calm local atmospherics.”

The inquiry has heard how British special forces drew up “kill lists” and engaged in night raids, sometimes executing unarmed Afghans in their beds and planting “drop weapons” by their bodies to justify the killings.

Among several reports on the SAS, Declassified has described how a senior British special forces officer warned that the failure to own up to criminal behaviour in Afghanistan by the SAS – including shooting toddlers in their beds – would allow the regiment to descend into “the sewer” and sink to the level of despotic regimes.

Evidence to the inquiry released on Tuesday also includes a witness statement by Monica Grenfell who described “coarse and feral,” and racial comments heard as she worked at the SAS training camp in Hertfordshire.

It was Grenfell who said she was told by a special forces soldier during her time at the camp about the detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan being driven on the forklift trucks.

Describing a “corrosive” atmosphere, she said the SAS portrayed themselves as a “band of brothers” but they were far from it, with the regiment’s two main units “hating each other.”

She has written an account of her work for SAS “support services” under the pseudonym, Monica Lavers.

Richard Norton-Taylor is an editor, journalist, playwright and the doyen of British national security reporting. He wrote for The Guardian on defence and security matters and was the newspaper’s security editor for three decades.

This article is from Declassified UK.

Views expressed in this article may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

Please Donate to
CN’s
Summer
Fund Drive!



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
nick
  • Website

Related Posts

Can Trump Sue Himself? – Consortium News

July 17, 2026

Lindsey Graham Was The Face Of The Duopoly

July 17, 2026

Britain’s Big Brother State Is Already Here – We Just Don’t Realise It Yet

July 17, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Our Picks

Putin Says Western Sanctions are Akin to Declaration of War

January 9, 2020

Investors Jump into Commodities While Keeping Eye on Recession Risk

January 8, 2020

Marquez Explains Lack of Confidence During Qatar GP Race

January 7, 2020

There’s No Bigger Prospect in World Football Than Pedri

January 6, 2020
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

While the World Cup Plays On, Palestine Refuses to Die

Investigative Reports July 17, 2026

Photograph Source: Creative Commons of Gaza In memory of Mohammed al-Wahidi and the countless aid…

After Barbara: Illegal Aliens and the Census

July 17, 2026

My New Boston Globe Article on Trump’s Bogus Election Fraud Claims

July 17, 2026

Can Trump Sue Himself? – Consortium News

July 17, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.