Labour Scraps Doctors' Apprenticeships
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sas are a top secret organisation, but when can they eventually reveal their identitie -is it when they retire and if so how long after retiring?
No best answer has yet been selected by tali122. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.So far as I can find out the rules are basically that anyone in the SAS can't tell anyone except very close family members that they are in the regiment, and any mention of them in the public refers to them by their original regiment title.
Once you've left the SAS however there don't appear to be specific rules about revealing your involvement, but there are things you can't reveal about specific operations. This especially applies to so called 'black hat' operations which are essentially operations that the MOD deny ever happened.
As mentioned above, it's pretty likely that most ex-members won't mention it as it could be slightly dangerous, eg: if members of the IRA found out you'd worked against them or were involved in the Operation Flavius in Gibraltar.
Trev
Sorry to come in late on the thread, only just read it on the AB Blog.
I worked closely with SAS whilst in the forces. No I was not dropping out of helicoptors and eating earwigs. And I admit I was nowhere near the standard required yet considered myself an excellent soldier. Yes there is a degree of secrecy about them and on the whole it is fair to say that anybody who claims to be ex-SAS is living in fantasy land.
However, whatever their code of secrecy is, it is impossible to keep the entire Army and RAF Regiment quiet about squaddies recruited to them. For example I knew of a few men leaving my unit and all of a sudden were living in Hereford. It does not take a genius to realise where they are.
Further, to the best of my knowledge the SAS are recruited for their sheer normality. They basically score high in every test the Army throws at them but they just blend in. No showmen whatsoever.
The Official Secrets Act will apply to any governmental organisation from SAS to your local town hall.
I therefore imagine they are silent about their job because the exact people recruited are just Mr nobodies, blending in and getting on with one of the toughest jobs in the world.
periwinkle, in answer to your question, Yes you do need to be a serving soldier in the British Army. Members of the SAS keep their own Regiment, ie if they are in the Royal Engineers, when not wearing the grey beret and badge of the SAS they will wear the black beret and badge of the Royal Engineers. The SAS is made up from many different Regiments, as various skills are needed within the SAS units. To dispel a popular myth; the SAS are not made up of the 'hardest' blokes in the Paras'.
Rupert
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