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Army units merge to form Rifles | Army units merge to form Rifles |
(30 minutes later) | |
Soldiers from four regiments and battalions have seen their old units merge to become the largest infantry unit in the British Army. | |
The Royal Green Jackets took part in a cap-badge changing parade at Kiwi Barracks in Bulford, Wiltshire. | The Royal Green Jackets took part in a cap-badge changing parade at Kiwi Barracks in Bulford, Wiltshire. |
The parade marked the moment it became the 4th Battalion The Rifles. | The parade marked the moment it became the 4th Battalion The Rifles. |
Soldiers from three other regular units in England, Germany, Afghanistan and Iraq are holding similar ceremonies as they also become part of The Rifles. | |
The 1st Battalion The Devonshire and Dorset Regiment Light Infantry, the 1st Battalion The Royal Gloucestershire Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment Light Infantry, and The Light Infantry will all reform. | |
'Happy marriage' | |
The Rifles is now the largest regiment of infantry in the Army. | |
Lt Col Patrick Sanders, of the former Royal Green Jackets, described the merger as a "very happy marriage", which had not been forced. | |
"We all chose to come together," he said. | |
"These are four of the finest regiments in the Army and everybody wanted to take this step." | |
Each soldier in The Rifles now has the right to call himself a rifleman, an honour previously accorded only to the Royal Green Jackets. | |
They wear a cap with a badge featuring a silver bugle topped with a crown, evoking the history of the light infantry troops who first used the bugle, instead of the drum, to deliver messages across 18th Century battlefields. | |
Capt Baz Melia, of the former Royal Green Jackets, said the new regiment had a unique concept governing it. | |
"That is, that any soldier can decide to move to any location where The Rifles are stationed and he will fit in immediately. | |
Fixed roles | |
The different battalions will be stationed in locations all over Britain including Chepstow, Exeter, Edinburgh, Yorkshire and Ballykinler in Northern Ireland. | |
The Rifles comprise five regular battalions, two Territorial Army (TA) battalions, and three TA companies in two separate TA battalions. | |
It will have many regimental associations and 12,000 cadets - a quarter of the Army Cadet Force. | |
The merger is part of the Future Infantry Structure, which was announced by then Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon, in December 2004. | The merger is part of the Future Infantry Structure, which was announced by then Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon, in December 2004. |
It was decided the Arms Plot system - the mechanism by which battalions move and change roles every two to six years - was unsustainable. | It was decided the Arms Plot system - the mechanism by which battalions move and change roles every two to six years - was unsustainable. |
Instead, individual battalions would be fixed by role and location. | Instead, individual battalions would be fixed by role and location. |