The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

‘These are people who sacrificed a lot but are now asking for what?’

Veterans’ champion warns of enduring toll of Afghan withdrawal

- By Stephen Stewart HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

The sudden withdrawal of Allied troops from Afghanista­n a year ago inflicted enduring psychologi­cal damage to British veterans and their families, according to the new Scottish Veterans Commission­er.

Former Royal Navy engineer Susie Hamilton said the withdrawal of British forces and a resurgent Taliban were casting a long shadow on the lives of ex-servicemen and women.

The evacuation left the country on the brink of catastroph­e after the Taliban retook control and reimposed hardline religious diktats while the country struggled to cope with economic and natural disaster.

And Hamilton – the first woman to serve as the nation’s veterans champion – said the war was still taking its toll on the servicemen involved and, in particular, families who lost loved ones there.

Her comments come a year after British forces left Afghanista­n – the end of a 20-year military campaign in which 457 UK servicemen and women were killed. An estimated 176,000 Afghans lost their lives.

Emboldened, Taliban fighters swept through the country as the Allied forces suddenly left, taking control of capital Kabul on the August 15 and prompting thousands of Afghans to rush to the city’s airport in a bid to board the last flights out.

Hamilton, who worked with a veterans homeless charity before becoming commission­er, said: “The way Afghanista­n ended has had an impact on the veterans who served there. These are people who have sacrificed a lot.

“They feel that everything they sacrificed for has not come to fruition. We also have to remember families, families who lost loved ones in Afghanista­n, who also feel that things in Afghanista­n are slipping back to the way they were.

“I can only imagine that it is incredibly difficult for them and I think there would need to be some ongoing support for them for quite a while.

“For some of our Afghanista­n veterans, we did see an uptick in the support they needed. We only see a small percentage and in the wider veterans community, I think particular­ly amongst families who have lost people, it is quite difficult.”

Hamilton, 50, retired in 2007 as a Lieutenant Commander before working with Scottish Veterans Residences (SVR), which provides supported housing for former members of the armed forces who face homelessne­ss. She said: “One of the issues I really want to get to grips with is overturnin­g some of the commonly held tropes and myths about veterans.

“There are one or two stereotype­s people have about veterans. They are either all gentlemen with medals or maybe young men with mental health issues and all sorts of aggression and other problems.

“That’s just not the truth. I know veterans are fantastic employees. In fact, the last couple of people that I’ve recruited here have been veterans.

“Not just because we’re a veterans organisati­on but because they’re very good. I really want to try to see some shift there, so that particular employers see veterans as the first choice and see that

they’ve got a massive range of skills and transferab­le skills. That’s quite a big challenge because I think there’s quite a lot of myths to overcome there. For example, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a treatable condition. People can be helped, people can get better. And, also, it’s a condition that many people have who have never been anywhere near wars.

“We need to get rid of that stigma. I really would like people when they hear veteran to see what I see, which is capable well-trained individual­s who have got absolutely stacks to offer.”

Hamilton, from Edinburgh, joined the Navy at 18. She experience­d sexism and prejudice as an officer in the Marine Engineerin­g Branch but this did not deter her from building a successful military career. She had a number of shore and sea appointmen­ts, which included operationa­l service in the Adriatic and the Gulf.

She said: “It was challengin­g. When you are on board a ship, you are such a close-knit team people don’t even notice you’re a woman. You’re all working all hours of the day and night and it isn’t an issue. Interestin­gly, sometimes ashore I came across prejudice.

“I’d like to think it’s better now but it did happen to me. There were people who could not see past the fact I was a woman.

“You need a sense of humour to deal with that. It teaches you resilience – to understand the problem is not with you, it’s with them.

“In the Navy, I was in a minority as a woman and then as an engineer, I was in the minority again. People thought I could not do the job of a marine engineer which is traditiona­lly a male role. On board ship, at the hard end of the job, it was fine.”

She added: “I would like to think open prejudice is stamped on pretty hard now if it is heard or reported.”

Even though she left the military 15 years ago, Hamilton still misses the forces life. She said: “I think you always still miss it. You miss the closeness of working in such a tight team. You don’t really get that anywhere else. When we were on board ship, I even used to trim my male colleague’s eyebrows. You don’t get that in civilian life.”

The post of Scottish Veterans Commission­er was created in 2014 – the first role of its kind in the UK. At the time, former Royal Marine and Veterans Secretary Keith Brown said the commission­er would ensure more than 400,000 ex-forces personnel in Scotland got help to address any challenges they faced.

The commission­er writes reports on veterans affairs and works with service charities, local authoritie­s and health boards to identify areas that might provide greater support.

Announcing Hamilton’s appointmen­t, Brown said: “Scotland has a long and proud military tradition. We are committed to investing in our veterans and helping them overcome disadvanta­ge experience­d as a result of service, as well as aiding projects that help veterans and their families successful­ly transition to civilian life.

“I’m pleased to announce Ms Hamilton as the new Veterans Commission­er, as a veteran of the Royal Navy and with extensive experience working in the third sector helping homeless former military personnel, she is already a great champion for our veterans.

“Scotland has had a veterans commission­er since 2014 with a primary role to improve outcomes for veterans in Scotland by engaging and listening to the experience of former members of the armed forces.

“The first-hand experience Ms Hamilton will bring to the role is going to ensure our veterans continue to get the best support and representa­tion possible.”

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 ?? ?? Susie Hamilton in her new role helping veterans and, circled top right, serving in the Royal Navy on board HMS Battleaxe in Tunis, 1996. Bottom left: Black Watch soldiers on a Chinook helicopter as they return from night-time attack on a Taliban base in Afghanista­n in 2009
Susie Hamilton in her new role helping veterans and, circled top right, serving in the Royal Navy on board HMS Battleaxe in Tunis, 1996. Bottom left: Black Watch soldiers on a Chinook helicopter as they return from night-time attack on a Taliban base in Afghanista­n in 2009
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