The Daily Telegraph

Soldier charged for killing peers in virtual battle

- By Victoria Ward

A SOLDIER has been formally charged under military law after “losing his rag” and killing his comrades during a virtual battlefiel­d exercise.

The Edinburgh-based Army Rifleman is believed to be the first soldier to be punished under UK military law for offences in a virtual scenario rather than in real life.

He is said to have been fed up with being stuck at a computer rather than training outside.

A source from 3rd Battalion, the Rifles told The Mail on Sunday: “We’d spent two weeks sitting in front of laptops pretending we were in a hostile urban environmen­t – I’d challenge anyone to take it seriously for that long.

“All this was taking place in an office at our headquarte­rs, when we’d rather be doing real-life soldiering outside in the fresh air. But there’s less of that sort of exercise these days because the Army has committed to Unit-based Virtual Training.

“We were supposed to imagine we were travelling in armoured vehicles through a really hostile built-up area. One of the lads just lost his rag and ‘opened fire’ as it were, killing the soldier next to him. He then drove down the street deliberate­ly smashing into cars. It’s safe to say the officers in our battalion did not find it as funny as we did.”

The unidentifi­ed Rifleman was reprimande­d after the exercise and later formally charged with disobeying orders.

His reputed punishment was to spend a weekend carrying

‘It’s safe to say the officers did not find it as funny as we did’

out guard duties at the 3 Rifles base at Redford Barracks in the Scottish capital.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “We take the training of our service personnel very seriously and anyone who is disruptive to this training will receive disciplina­ry action.

“Virtual reality training programmes are able to deliver greater flexible training and replicate complex scenarios allowing for rapid experiment­ation, developmen­t of tactics and ability to test new vehicles in multiple environmen­ts.”

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