Army cancels Balkans deployment after paratroopers orgy video
The Royal Military Police has established no crime was committed

The new head of the British Army has cancelled a Parachute Regiment battalionās deployment to Bosnia and Kosovo following the release of a video seemingly showing paratroopers participating in an orgy at a military base.
Lieutenant General Andrew Harrison, the colonel commandant of the Paras, wrote in a letter that General Sir Patrick Sanders had ātemporarily lost trustā in the unitās 3rd battalion.
āThis afternoon the Chief of the General Staff (CGS), General Sir Patrick Sanders, took the decision to remove 3 Para off the roster to deploy to Kosovo this summer,ā he wrote.
3 Para accept they have temporarily lost the trust of CGS
ā3 Para has an extraordinary operational reputation in the service of our nation, and every member of it will be devastated by the lost opportunity to serve on operations once again in the Balkans.
āCGSās decision was based on recent disciplinary incidents on Exercise Swift Response, and in Merville Barracks, the latter which has been in the public domain over the last few weeks.ā
ā3 Para accept they have temporarily lost the trust of CGS,ā the colonel commandant added.
āThey will reflect on and where required adjust behaviours and culture that undermines the reputation and operational effectiveness of an exceptional Battalion.

ā3 Para of course remain ready to defend our nationās interests at home and abroad at a momentās notice.ā
The deployment, which was to begin in September, would have seen some 300 service members sent to the Balkans.
Sir Patrick wrote in his own letter, obtained by the Telegraph, that the alleged behaviour in the orgy video had been found to be consensual and the Royal Military Police established no crime was committed.
Nonetheless, he said it was āunacceptable, corrosive and detrimental to the Armyās reputation (and) could also be construed to denigrate womenā.
āI know that the battalion will respond quickly and restore the reputation that they deserve,ā he added.
āMy message to the Army is clear: Our licence to operate is founded on trust and confidence and we must hold ourselves to the highest standards.ā
Sir Patrick took over from General Sir Mark Carleton Smith on Monday, just five days after the Armed Forces minister was forced to apologise over the orgy clip.
James Heappey said on June 8 that he was āsorry and embarrassedā as he condemned the video as ādisgracefulā.