Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

This Country stars call for spirits at pub

- BY PHIL CARDY phil.cardy@sundaymirr­or.co.uk BY KAREN ROCKETT

FEARS have emerged for the future of the illustriou­s Parachute Regiment.

The Paras, one of the world’s most renowned fighting forces, could be put at risk by Government moves to expand special forces and cyber units.

Senior commanders are concerned the elite airborne troops could be sacrificed after discussion­s in Downing Street.

The Prime Minister’s controvers­ial adviser Dominic Cummings is understood to have questioned why the regiment still exists when it has not parachuted into battle for almost 70 years. The Paras have escaped the axe which has hit many other units in defence reviews. But now some senior figures believe the time has come for the unit to “take its share of the pain”.

The regiment, founded in WW2, is composed of two regular battalions, the Special Forces Support Group and a reserve battalion. It is feared it may lose a battalion – around 550 men.

The MoD is understood to want to increase the size of the special forces by up to 300 personnel and give more funding to cyber units, such as the 13th Signal Regiment launched last month.

A source said: “There are some very worrying conversati­ons at top levels. There’s a feeling we are living on borrowed time despite what we achieved in Afghanista­n and Iraq.” Plans for cuts have been drawn up in response to the Treasury’s diktat for every Whitehall department to slash spending by at least 5 per cent. Cummings and several senior Government ministers believe the days of the UK Armed Forces playing major roles in wars are over.

Instead they argue that more should be spent on special forces, making the UK a world leader in cyber warfare and using more drones in attack and intelligen­cegatherin­g operations.

However Falklands hero Lord West suggested replacing troops with computers and robots was short-sighted.

He said: “In the final analysis, wars end up killing people and you need killing capability. I’m quite happy to face someone down in a field if I’ve got a machine gun and he’s got a laptop.”

THE stars of BBC comedy This Country spent one of their first nights out after lockdown summoning spirits on a ouija board at Britain’s most haunted pub.

Daisy May and Charlie Cooper went to the Ancient Ram Inn, in Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucester­shire, said to be haunted by 20 spectres.

They claim to have made contact with “Beth”, who lived there in 1370.

Charlie, 31, said: “This is a pilgrimage for us.

“I’ve spent the night in the most haunted room at Jamaica Inn, on Bodmin Moor. I had my head under the covers all night.”

His sister Daisy May, 34, who is expecting her second child, said of the Ancient Ram: “You’d think it would be terrifying, but I like the feel of the place.”

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