I am asking Wapinchaw (or anyone else) what are these wars that boomers have fought to “assure my liberty”
Because they must have missed out covering this in history lessons
You asked “what are these wars that boomers have fought to assure my liberty”
According to The National Archives, Baby Boomers are people who were born between 1946 and 1964
National Archives
Baby Boomers therefore came of military age (18) in 1966 and would have retired aged 55 in 2001. The last Boomers would have attained military age (18) in 1982 and will be serving until 2037 (age 55). For the purposes of this discussion I will consider that Boomers are those who have been in UK Forces service from 1966 and will be for some time yet.
The first conflict this cohort would have served in is thus Aden/Radfan, officially 1964-1967 in which 90 British military fatalities were sustained along with 510 wounded. The strategic objective was to retain control of the entrance to the Red Sea, exactly what is going on today.
In 1969 Communist insurgents from Yemen began infiltration into southern Oman, the Dhofar Province. Their objective was destabilisation and take over of Oman, handing control of the Strait of Hormuz to Chinese/Russian backed interests. Iran, at the time still Persia, was also interested in Hormuz, as vital a shipping artery then as it is now. A total of 25 British service personnel are known to have died during this conflict. I served at RAF Salalah during this conflict and was awarded the General Service Medal (Dhofar). This conflict was declared over in 1977.
In 1990 Iraq invaded Kuwait in what has become known as the First Gulf War. This was a large scale conflict involving a number of nations and resulted in the withdrawal of Iraqi forces at a cost of 47 British service personnel’s lives.
In 1982 the invasion by Argentina of the Falkland Islands was repulsed at a cost of 255 British service personnel ‘s lives.
The second Gulf War of 2003-2009 cost 179 British military lives.
The “troubles” in Northern Ireland between 1969 and 2007 cost 1,441 British military lives.
Besides these shooting wars there were a number of “cold” conflicts, principally The Cold War between the USSR and NATO from 1945 – 1990. While there are no officially recognised UK military casualties, UK forces were on a high state of alert for extended periods in order to deter the USSR from breaking out of East Germany and overrunning Western Europe, a fear re-emerging as a consequence of the Ukraine invasion.
There have also been Royal Navy missile submarines on continuous patrol since 1969, armed with several generations of strategic nuclear missiles capable of wreaking massive destruction on an aggressor. British forces have also been stationed for decades in strategic locations such as Bahrain (I was there in 1971) and Sharjah (I was there in in 1971/72) to provide support to the free movement of oil and gas cargoes through the Strait of Hormuz.
While you may not consider any of the above to be “wars fought to assure liberty” they were situations in which British service personnel served and died to protect the interests of the UK and the West as a whole. To those who died they were most certainly in a war. I was there in a few of these places, as were several others who visit these pages. Any one of us could have been called on to face serious injury or even death during our service in these places and we would have faced it to the best of our ability according to our Oath of Allegiance.
I did not miss out on history lessons, I was there for several small parts of it. What have you done for the UK and Western interests?