the message board for Dubai English speaking community
gtmash wrote:What's all this bull about swapping armies? You'd have to be a citizen of a country to be in its military.
williell wrote:I am canadian, and my mother is british. I have had a small taste of what it is like to soldier, I was deployed to Afghanistan once before as a reservist, and fought with members of the regular forces. Now though I really want to try to do this full-time, I want to see what my military potential is. In afghanistan, when I was outside the wire, I was fighting for C Coy, or "C Contact" as we came to be known.. It wasn't about Canada, it was about my buddies, gunners, riflemen, and grenadiers. When i volunteered to be deployed to Afghanistan, thats why i did it, because friends did. Because I wanted the experience, I spent summer training to be infantry, and I wanted to put myself to a test. I was proud not just because i was Canadian, but because i was doing good things. And even when i wasn't doing the nicest things, I was still proud. Combat is probably the ultimate test of everything, although I still do wonder if the honor felt in winning or surviving and the friendships we have were really worth the blood of friends and enemys.. Still, I want to be a professional soldier, I don't care who I fight for, I care about what we do, and I care about who I fight with, I want to work with those who are most professional and good people, I want to be the best of the best. After I do this though, I know I want to be in the UAE, I fell in love with Middle Eastern culture when I went to Afghanistan. When a friend who deployed to Dubai came back and told me about what he experienced there, I knew that this was the place for me.
Globetrotter wrote:williell wrote:I am canadian, and my mother is british. I have had a small taste of what it is like to soldier, I was deployed to Afghanistan once before as a reservist, and fought with members of the regular forces. Now though I really want to try to do this full-time, I want to see what my military potential is. In afghanistan, when I was outside the wire, I was fighting for C Coy, or "C Contact" as we came to be known.. It wasn't about Canada, it was about my buddies, gunners, riflemen, and grenadiers. When i volunteered to be deployed to Afghanistan, thats why i did it, because friends did. Because I wanted the experience, I spent summer training to be infantry, and I wanted to put myself to a test. I was proud not just because i was Canadian, but because i was doing good things. And even when i wasn't doing the nicest things, I was still proud. Combat is probably the ultimate test of everything, although I still do wonder if the honor felt in winning or surviving and the friendships we have were really worth the blood of friends and enemys.. Still, I want to be a professional soldier, I don't care who I fight for, I care about what we do, and I care about who I fight with, I want to work with those who are most professional and good people, I want to be the best of the best. After I do this though, I know I want to be in the UAE, I fell in love with Middle Eastern culture when I went to Afghanistan. When a friend who deployed to Dubai came back and told me about what he experienced there, I knew that this was the place for me.
I don't understand your ambition whatsoever, but not it's not on me to judge...
"I want to work with those who are most professional and good people, I want to be the best of the best. "
Ever thought about joining the "Légion étrangère"?
williell wrote:
I've read that much of the UAE's military is expatriatese.
williell wrote:Has anyone here served in the UAE Military? How professional do you believe it is, are its soldiers as fit and professional as those of Britian, U.S.A., or Canada? Does it have special forces? What language does its servicemen speek (arabic, english, ect)?
firefingers wrote:williell wrote:Has anyone here served in the UAE Military? How professional do you believe it is, are its soldiers as fit and professional as those of Britian, U.S.A., or Canada? Does it have special forces? What language does its servicemen speek (arabic, english, ect)?
well mr, I am one of thoses military guys who served in kuwait and I know for a fact that britsh and us militaries, chickend out to go in kuwait befor us, we cleared the ways, road and mined feilds, but it was a top secret bcz of some stupid political issues !!!!!!!
yes you people have better TECH but we always bust there asses and win life ammuntion training and missions, we had a round 5 of them and it always end up us loughing at them soliders from us and britsh when their commanders scream at them failing the missions
sorrrrryyyyyyyyyyyy
Ever thought about joining the "Légion étrangère"?
gtmash wrote:williell wrote:
I've read that much of the UAE's military is expatriatese.
Hey man, which moron told you that? He must've confused the UAE military with the UAE "labour" force. Decades ago, a handful of expats joined the military, but not anymore.
williell wrote:gtmash wrote:williell wrote:
I've read that much of the UAE's military is expatriatese.
Hey man, which moron told you that? He must've confused the UAE military with the UAE "labour" force. Decades ago, a handful of expats joined the military, but not anymore.
" The Trucial Oman Scouts, long the symbol of public order on the coast and commanded by British officers, were turned over to the United Arab Emirates as its defense forces in 1971. The UAE armed forces, consisting of 65,000 troops, are headquartered in Abu Dhabi and are primarily responsible for the defense of the seven emirates.
The UAE military relies heavily on troop forces from other Arab countries and Pakistan. The officer corps, however, is composed almost exclusively of UAE nationals. "
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_o ... b_Emirates
Im sorry that you can't understand my logic, I don't know if you could really understand unless you have actually done it already. ^ian^ is right, we did kill, but we did it for good reasons (that is just my opinion). I didn't mind doing it because I thought it was the right thing to do. The people of Afghanistan, especially the youth, deserve to be free from oppression. I killed those people who terrorized students and teachers with blackmail, killed them with car bombs, and mortared them from the mountains. I think that I am right to have done what I did because I believed I was doing a good thing, I protected my friends and made other peoples lives safer. I walked children to school, sheltered them from insurgents, whereas insurgents took innocent civilians, and held them hostage so they could be more safe. I can't understand the logic of those who serve as brainwashed ignorant patriots. Its not about the country, its about those friends you make and what you actually do.
williell wrote:gtmash wrote:williell wrote:
I've read that much of the UAE's military is expatriatese.
Hey man, which moron told you that? He must've confused the UAE military with the UAE "labour" force. Decades ago, a handful of expats joined the military, but not anymore.
" The Trucial Oman Scouts, long the symbol of public order on the coast and commanded by British officers, were turned over to the United Arab Emirates as its defense forces in 1971. The UAE armed forces, consisting of 65,000 troops, are headquartered in Abu Dhabi and are primarily responsible for the defense of the seven emirates.
The UAE military relies heavily on troop forces from other Arab countries and Pakistan. The officer corps, however, is composed almost exclusively of UAE nationals. "
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_o ... b_Emirates
gtmash wrote:williell wrote:
I've read that much of the UAE's military is expatriatese.
Hey man, which moron told you that? He must've confused the UAE military with the UAE "labour" force. Decades ago, a handful of expats joined the military, but not anymore.
benwj wrote:gtmash wrote:williell wrote:
I've read that much of the UAE's military is expatriatese.
Hey man, which moron told you that? He must've confused the UAE military with the UAE "labour" force. Decades ago, a handful of expats joined the military, but not anymore.
My next door neighbour is a general in the Army and he's from Sudan.
Another neighbour of mine trains the UAE Army, and he's from the States. He said that if I every get into trouble, give him a call and he will sort it out.
Personally, I think that any foreigner in the UAE defence force would have zero career progression when up against UAE nationals who get a free ticket, so I can't understand why they would be interested anyway.