COLLECTION NOW SOLD A Good Collection Of British WW2 Enfield No4 Rifle Spike Bayonets COLLECTION NOW SOLD A Good Collection Of British WW2 Enfield No4 Rifle Spike Bayonets COLLECTION NOW SOLD A Good Collection Of British WW2 Enfield No4 Rifle Spike Bayonets COLLECTION NOW SOLD A Good Collection Of British WW2 Enfield No4 Rifle Spike Bayonets

COLLECTION NOW SOLD A Good Collection Of British WW2 Enfield No4 Rifle Spike Bayonets

In very nice condition, in full storage grease different forms of the eponimous WW2 British armed forces bayonets used in WW2

British troops pulled off a number of bayonet charges in the brief campaign to drive Argentine forces from the Falkland Islands in 1982. Grunts from the Scots Guards and the Gurkhas chased 500 enemy troops off the summit of Mount Tumbledown in the pre-dawn darkness of June 14. The British suffered 63 casualties in the battle; 160 Argentine soldiers were either killed, wounded or captured. Two weeks earlier a 2 Para private by the name of Graham Carter led his comrades in a bayonet charge against a force of enemy troops across Goose Green.

In the last 20 years, British troops have resorted to the bayonet to break impasses in combat both in Iraq and Afghanistan. In May, 2004, a detachment from the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders surprised a force of 100 insurgents near Al Amara, Iraq with a bayonet charge. British casualties were light, but nearly 28 guerrillas were killed. And as recently as October of 2011, a British Army lance corporal named Sean Jones led a squad of soldiers from the Prince of Wales Royal Regiment in a bayonet charge against Taliban fighters in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. After being ambushed and pinned down by militants, the 25-year-old ordered his squad to advance into a hail of machine gun fire. “We had to react quickly,” Jones remarked. “I shouted ‘follow me’ and we went for it.” He was awarded the Military Cross for his actions. Even in an age of GPS-guided bombs, unmanned drones and network-centric warfare, 300-year-old technology — like the simple bayonet — can still carry the day.

A couple of years or so ago Burundi was preparing to send a peace keeping contingent to the Congo and Somalia yet they knew that their army was not up to it and begged for a UN training team to come and train it. On being asked who they would like, they decided to look at the Americans, French, Canadians, Germans and Swedes but it was the British that they chose to train their army because they said they wanted to be trained by the best.

The last photo in the gallery of lance corporal sean jones recieving his Military Cross for gallantry from the former Prince of Wales, now H.M.King Charles IIIrd, for his famous heroic command of the bayonet charge in Helmand

Code: 24589

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