The Mail on Sunday

The persecutio­n of an SAS hero

33 years after his key role in a daring undercover mission that killed IRA death squad linked to 43 murders, former soldier in his 60s -- who’s now stricken by PTSD -- is jailed for six months for refusing to appear at their inquest

- By SARAH OLIVER and MARK HOOKHAM

A FORMER SAS hero is to be jailed for refusing to appear at the inquest of three members of an IRA ‘death squad’, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

The elite ex-soldier, who is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), has been found in contempt of court after saying he was too ill to be cross-examined about the shooting of the three IRA hitmen in an SAS ambush more than 30 years ago.

The gunmen were en route to murder a member of the security forces when SAS soldiers opened fire in the village of Coagh, Co Tyrone in June 1991.

One of those killed, Tony Doris, 21, was a cousin of Northern Ireland’s current First Minister Michelle O’Neill, the first republican to hold the post, who is also the vice president of Sinn Fein. She has previously demanded ‘justice’ for the families of those killed in the Troubles.

The other two IRA gunmen – Peter Ryan, 37, and Lawrence McNally, 38 – are believed to have been linked to 43 murders.

The former SAS soldier, who can only be identified as ‘Soldier F’, has provided a witness statement for an inquest into the IRA men’s deaths and has agreed to answer written questions.

But he has declined to give oral evidence to a coroner’s court in Belfast because of his poor mental health.

He has battled PTSD since 2002 and two leading psychiatri­sts agree he is not fit to give evidence in person.

But now, in an extraordin­ary interventi­on, a court in Scotland – where Soldier F now lives – has ruled that he is in contempt of court and sentenced him to six months in jail. It was asked by Northern Ireland’s top coroner to pursue the ex-soldier.

The former serviceman, who is in his 60s, could be hauled to prison within weeks if an appeal fails later this month. It would be the first time a veteran has been jailed for refusing to cooperate with a so-called ‘Legacy’ inquest.

The former serviceman is not the person also known as Soldier F who faces two charges of murder over the shooting of 13 protesters in Londonderr­y in 1972, on what is known as Bloody Sunday.

A source close to the exservicem­an last night said: ‘He was a loyal, dedicated soldier who was on the front line of the Troubles in Northern Ireland.

Now, more than 30 years later, he’s just collateral damage.

‘Soldier F is proud of his service, of what he did to keep the peace, but he feels he’s been abandoned, sacrificed for something bigger.’

The shocking case has reignited claims of a ‘witch-hunt’ against veterans who served in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.

Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith, who served with the Scots Guards in Northern Ireland, said the jail sentence was ‘appalling’.

‘This is a very political move, which we have seen already many times with British soldiers. The evidence he gives in sworn testimony must surely be enough,’ he said. ‘What is actually being planned is some kind of personal humiliatio­n. I am concerned that what is going on now isn’t about evidence but it’s about persecutio­n.’

Colonel Richard Kemp, who also served in Northern Ireland, said: ‘It is a disgusting thing to do to somebody who has put his own life on the line, who has served his country in good faith and was part of a security force that prevented Northern Ireland from breaking into civil war. It seems unjust and excessive to sentence him to jail for something like that.’

The covert mission in Coagh came amid a deadly cycle of shootings and bombings in Co Tyrone in the early 1990s.

Ryan, McNally and Doris were all members of the IRA’s feared East Tyrone Brigade. It was one of the IRA’s most effective units, killing dozens in a bombing campaign on Army bases and police stations.

Ryan, who had been on the run from prison for the previous ten years, was regarded as one of the IRA’s deadliest hitmen.

At 7.30am on June 3, 1991, a maroon Vauxhall Cavalier, driven by Doris and with Ryan and McNally in the passenger seats, sped into Coagh, a tiny village in Mid Ulster, and swung into a car park next to the Hanover House Hotel.

What the IRA cell did not know was that their movements were being tracked – and they had

‘He’s proud of his service but feels abandoned’

driven straight into a meticulous­ly planned SAS ambush.

Detectives with the Royal Ulster Constabula­ry’s Special Branch had earlier received intelligen­ce – possibly from an IRA informer – that they were plotting to kill an Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) soldier whom republican­s suspected was linked to a loyalist

group. An undercover SAS squad was deployed to intercept them.

In a typically daring ploy, one of the British soldiers, later known as Soldier L, stood near the UDR soldier’s parked car reading a newspaper, in a bid to trick the IRA gunmen into thinking their ‘target’ was waiting to pick up a friend on their way to work.

While he acted as a decoy, a group of his heavily armed comrades hid nearby in a specially adapted Bedford lorry. Another SAS squad, known as the ‘arrest group’, waited behind the hotel.

One of the SAS men, known as Soldier H, who was providing surveillan­ce from inside the hotel, has told the inquest that as the Cavalier stopped, one of the IRA gunmen inside the vehicle aimed a rifle at Soldier L.

This, it is claimed, prompted Soldier H to issue a ‘go order’ and the hidden SAS men opened fire, while Soldier L flung himself behind a wall. As up to 150 bullets were fired, the IRA gunmen’s car careered out of the car park but crashed into a wall and a parked Volkswagen.

At some point, the ‘arrest group’, which included Soldier F, also fired at the car, which burst into flames. The incident, and others at the time, led to accusation­s that the

British Army was operating a ‘shoot-to-kill’ strategy.

An inquest was launched in 2022 to examine whether lethal force was justified – one of a string of controvers­ial ‘Legacy’ inquiries into killings that took place during the Troubles. The inquests were launched after years of campaignin­g by relatives whose family members were killed during the conflict.

Opening the inquest, Brett Lockhart KC, counsel for the coroner, said: ‘Two of the men got out of the car, according to soldiers who have given statements, and were carrying rifles.

‘They were both shot at by other soldiers who had been in the vicinity of the Bedford lorry. Both the Volkswagen and the Cavalier burst into flames. All three bodies … were burnt beyond recognitio­n.’

Mr Justice Humphreys, Northern Ireland’s top coroner, has described Soldier F as ‘an important and central witness’ because he helped plan the operation and was one of the soldiers who opened fire.

Soldier F joined the regular Army before becoming a special forces soldier in his mid-20s. He is a Northern Ireland expert who was decorated for his courage under fire, and is a father and a grandfathe­r.

His PTSD has manifested itself with flashbacks, nightmares and depression. By February 2018, he was in the care of an NHS consultant psychiatri­st who diagnosed his PTSD as being moderate to severe.

The MoS understand­s that two of Britain’s leading forensic psychiatri­sts – Professor Seena Fazel and Professor Chris Fox – have declared that his mental health is too fragile for him to give oral evidence and face crossexami­nation at the inquest into the events at Coagh. In 2022, Soldier F provided a witness statement about what happened but applied to be excused from giving oral evidence on medical grounds. His plea was rejected, and in June 2023 the High Court of Northern Ireland issued a subpoena requiring him to give evidence to the Belfast hearing the following month. When he still did not attend, a ‘certificat­e of default’ was issued and lawyers for Mr Justice Humphreys went to the Court of Session in Edinburgh in a bid to pursue Soldier F for his non-attendance.

Last week, Scottish judge Lady Carmichael jailed him for contempt, saying: ‘I have determined that the appropriat­e sentence in the case is one of six months’ imprisonme­nt.’

The media was banned from reporting the sentence until late on Friday.

The source close to Soldier F added: ‘The saddest thing of all is that because he’s still got that military mindset, he’s already packed his prison bag: flip-flops, thick T-shirts, trainers, two sets of pyjama bottoms.

‘It’s just like the old SAS days when he always had a grab bag waiting to go in case his cover was blown.’

In 2022, an interview with a former Special Branch officer emerged in which he claimed that McNally and Ryan ‘had 43 murders under their belts as a team’.

The pair were both said to have been fuelled by revenge after their brothers were murdered by loyalists.

Another detective claimed Ryan was carrying a tomahawk

‘The saddest thing is he’s packed his prison bag’

axe, which he planned to use to ‘finish off’ the UDR soldier they were targeting.

The IRA trio were immortalis­ed by hardline republican­s in an IRA song called Ambush At The Bridge.

Doris is buried in a cemetery not far from Michelle O’Neill’s home. His headstone declares that he was ‘killed on active service’.

Speaking in 2022, Ms O’Neill – whose maiden name is Doris – said the Coagh shooting was not investigat­ed by Police Service of Northern Ireland’s now defunct Historical Enquiries Team.

‘Tony’s case is ongoing,’ she said. ‘It doesn’t matter what background you come from, if you’ve been hurt you’ve been hurt, [and] if you’ve lost a loved one as a result of hurt being caused to anyone, you’re entitled to have your case heard and to have justice.’

Ms O’Neill’s late father Brendan Doris is believed to have been involved with the IRA’s East Tyrone Brigade in the 1970s.

It is not known what his role was, but he was interned at the height of the Troubles because of his membership of the IRA.

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 ?? ?? BRIGADE: IRA hitmen Tony Doris, Peter Ryan and Lawrence McNally. Inset, Doris’s cousin Michelle O’Neill
BRIGADE: IRA hitmen Tony Doris, Peter Ryan and Lawrence McNally. Inset, Doris’s cousin Michelle O’Neill
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 ?? ?? AMBUSH: The IRA guard of honour for Lawrence McNally, who was killed in Coagh by the SAS in 1991. Left, burnt-out cars after the mission
AMBUSH: The IRA guard of honour for Lawrence McNally, who was killed in Coagh by the SAS in 1991. Left, burnt-out cars after the mission

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