Auction Catalogue

19 May 2021

Starting at 10:00 AM

.

Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria

Live Online Auction

Download Images

Lot

№ 17

.

19 May 2021

Hammer Price:
£55,000

‘They were under the impression we were going to lie in our ditch, shoot the enemy from a distance and they would run away. But I believe we caught the enemy on the hop that day and we had to take the fight to them... I decided the best way to attack was a full-frontal assault. It was my decision to fix bayonets and assault their position.’
(Corporal M. R. Byles, 1st Battalion, Princess of Wales Royal Regiment)

The exceptional Iraq ‘Battle of Danny Boy’ M.C. group of six awarded to Corporal M. R. Byles, 1st Battalion, Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, who was awarded a Military Cross for gallantry on 14 May 2004 when he dismounted his Warrior armoured vehicle and led a full frontal assault with automatic fire, grenades and fixed bayonets to clear an enemy trench system – a comrade of Johnson Beharry, whose Victoria Cross was awarded for bravery during the same extraordinarily action-packed tour, Byles is extensively mentioned in Beharry’s memoir ‘Barefoot Soldier’ and also in Richard Holmes’s compelling account of this renowned 7 month deployment ‘Dusty Warriors

Military Cross, E.II.R., reverse inscribed ‘24836752 Cpl M. R. Byles, PWRR, 2005’; General Service 1962-2007, 1 clasp, Northern Ireland (24836752 Pte M R Byles R Hamps); N.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Former Yugoslavia; Iraq 2003-11, no clasp (24836752 M R Byles PWRR); Jubilee 2002, unnamed as issued; Accumulated Campaign Service Medal 1994 (24836752 Pte M R Byles PWRR) good very fine and better (6) £14,000-£18,000

M.C. London Gazette 18 March 2005.

The following is extracted from the official recommendation submitted by Lieutenant B. U. Plenge (Officer Commanding, 9 Platoon, C Company, 1st Battalion, Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment):
‘Report on the actions taken by Corporal Byles on the 14 May 2004 at Danny Boy Permanent Vehicle Check Point:
On the afternoon of 14 May 2004 Corporal Byles was travelling in the back of Warrior 30 with Private Beggs. The call sign had been crashed out in response to a mortar attack on camp and subsequent ambush on light call signs from 1st Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders. As W30 arrived on the scene to the north of Danny Boy, and to the west of the dual carriageway, Lieutenant Plenge gave the signal to debus and a quick steer to another friendly dismounted call sign (Lance-Corporal Wood, and Privates Rush and Tatawaki). Almost immediately they began to come under sporadic small arms and RPG fire. Corporal Byles was then quick to identify the enemy positions that posed the biggest threat. He issued Battle orders to the section and they broke down into fire-teams. He assessed that the best way to assault the positions was full frontal. This was due to the ground and also to minimise the threat of Blue on Blue [‘friendly fire’] from heavy call signs by remaining clearly visible to them. They then crossed the open ground using fire-team fire and movement. Approximately 10 metres from the position, the order, “Pairs assault” was given by Corporal Byles. At this point the section split with Lance-Corporal Wood assaulting one half and Corporal Byles the other. Bayonets were fixed and grenades and automatic fire was used to clear the 20m long trench position. There were several enemy on the position and 4 Prisoners of War were captured.

Almost immediately the trench came under fire from a depth position, previously unseen to the south. The Prisoners of War had to be controlled quickly due to the numbers involved (5 soldiers/4 prisoners) and the pressure of the situation. They were therefore treated roughly as some still resisted, and all were bound with plasicuffs. Corporal Byles then organised a full re-org on the position despite being under effective enemy fire from 5 enemy in depth. He began to engage the enemy and killed 2. A further 1 was killed by chain gun from a Warrior call sign, and the other 2 played dead and were subsequently captured. After a few moments W22, commanded by Sergeant Broome, arrived on the position. At this point Corporl Byles and Private Beggs left the rest of the section to rejoin the other dismounts from his Platoon. They then assisted on the re-org conducted by W33A.

Throughout the whole contact Corporal Byles showed immense professionalism under pressure. He showed bravery in the face of the enemy and strong leadership qualities in leading a dangerous assault against a larger enemy position. He is certainly a credit to his Platoon, Company and Cap badge and it is my belief that he should be recognised as such.’

Mark Richard Byles was born in Portsmouth in 1970. Having joined the British Army, he transferred to the 1st Battalion, Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment in June 2003 and was deployed with an advance party of his unit to Iraq in early April 2004. His battalion’s seven month tour of Iraq in 2004, during Operation Telic 4, would be a highly notable deployment under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Matt Maer, during which a number of very high profile and dangerous events took place; the Battle of ‘Danny Boy’ and the ‘Siege of CIMIC House’ (CIMIC House was the HQ of British led Civil Military Co-operation) most significant amongst them. In addition, the battalion conducted Operation Waterloo, clearing insurgents from Al Amarah. Large numbers of gallantry awards were won, including Private Johnson Beharry’s Victoria Cross. During that tour, the 1st Battalion, Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment Battlegroup faced the most constant period of conflict of any British Army unit since the Korean War. 1 Mechanised Brigade, within which the Battalion served, fired more small arms ammunition in those six months than the British Army as a whole did in thirty years in Northern Ireland. This Battlegroup in Maysan Province faced over one hundred contacts in one day alone and close to 900 over the duration of the tour. Every member of the Battalion on this operation was in some form of contact. To quote the Commanding Officer, ‘That in itself made it a tour like no other’.

Into the crucible
Stationed at Camp Abu Naji, Al-Amarah, Iraq, for the duration of the tour, the battalion’s role was to police Maysan Province, of which Al-Amarah is the capital, assisting the Iraq Civil Defence Corps (ICDC) maintain law and order. In implementing this, the earlier operations in Kosovo were intended to serve as a model: a combination of foot patrols, Land Rover patrols and Vehicle Check Points, or VCPs. However, the battalion assumed command of the Province from 1 Light Infantry on Sunday 18 April just as a major backlash against coalition forces by the Mahdi Army loyal to Muqtadar Al-Sadr was getting underway. The situation deteriorated rapidly, with repeated violent attacks in Al Amarah itself and the repelling of an attack on a joint PWRR / Light Infantry patrol in the nearby town of Majar Al Kabir.

Corporal Byles’ role whilst in theatre was that of dismount commander - commanding troops following their deployment out of the back of a Warrior tracked armoured vehicle - in C Company. His comrade in C Company, Private Sewell remembered being faced with the reality on the ground soon after arrival:
‘We were deploying on what we believed to be a peace keeping operation. That idea lasted approximately 24 hours. On arriving at the base location, C Company, along with B Company 1 Light Infantry were deployed to the city to deal with an incident that turned from bad to worse in a short space of time... The contact was a definitely a planned ambush on the coalition force callsigns [callsign denoting a group of soldiers] as they moved through the location at that time. Unluckily for the enemy, I don’t think they were expecting such an aggressive response. If you talk to anyone involved in the contact, they would tell you that the rooftops were crawling with numerous gunmen equipped with a range of weaponry from AK-47s to RPGs. Once everyone had returned to base, there was a different atmosphere amongst the men, especially C Company as we were in the thick of it.’ (
Dusty Warriors by Richard Holmes refers)

The contact referred to by Private Sewell occurred near CIMIC house: an ambush of Sergeant Danny Mills’ multiple had come under small arms fire, RPG and grenade attack; a Snatch Land Rover was set alight; and Corporal Williamson had been hit. The nearby Rover Group of Lieutenant-Colonel Maer rushed to the scene of the contact to help extricate the stricken unit, but they themselves became pinned down. As news of the battle filtered back to camp, Warrior W10, containing Byles was called in to aid in the relief effort, Private McAllister of 7 Platoon, alongside Byles in W10 that day remembers the events unfold:
‘Straightaway the CSM says to us: ‘Get into two groups, one who’s got ammo, one who hasn’t.’ The blokes who had, including me, gave our details to the flap sheet... I was in W10, in the back was Pagey my platoon sergeant, Corporal Byles, Kenny Bosch, myself, and the company medic Phil. Moments later we were rolling towards town.
We crossed the bridge to get to the main situation at Yellow 3. We could hear small arms fire outside. The boss and Fongy the gunner were observing in the turret, we were under quite heavy contact by now when I heard the boss shout: ‘Fongy, enemy behind the wall’, followed by a burst of co-ax. I remember feeling very hot. I was sweating uncontrollably but quite pumped up as well. We could hear RPGs and small arms whizzing past... Soon after Cporporal Byles saw some enemy to the rear of our wagon. Without hesitation he shouted ‘Open the door, open the door,’ and as the door opened I remember everything becoming louder. For a split second I thought ‘F.....g hell this real, we’re getting out here.’ Suddenly we heard whoosh followed by the explosion that rocked the wagon. The RPG hit below the door. The blast blew off a road wheel, and pushed the whole door up... The next thing I knew Mensah was taking us back to Abu Naji, W10s back door still open.’

With W10 out of the battle, the rest of the relief force barrelled on to the ambush site where the disparate groups and their casualties were assisted to safety in priority order. Matt Maer later observed, ‘As a team we had been in contact for two hours and suffered 30 per cent casualties. It was only tea time on the first full day of our tour.’

The ambush on 16 April had given an early indication of the strength of the Mahdi Army in the town but by the end of April almost every patrol was being ambushed and the police were either absent or, at worst, actively siding with the enemy. On 1 May, a major series of RPG attacks on a platoon heading to extract a foot patrol in Al-Amarah led to Private Johnson Beharry being awarded the V.C. and soon afterwards Maer decided that ‘the Mahdi Army had to be taken down in Al-Amarah’; his opening move on 3 May was to launch Operation
Knightsbridge, a resupply of CIMIC house using tanks. This was followed up shortly afterwards by the similar but even bolder Operation Waterloo with tanks and air support on 8 May which also involved a plan whereby Byles’s C Company would ‘sit on the junction at Red 11 which had good fields of fire and wait for them to have a go. If they bottled it they would lose face in front of the local community. If they fought they would lose. Either way they would win.’ During the operation, the eight Warriors - one of which contained Byles - pushed towards CIMIC house. As the battle gathered in intensity, an enemy mortar team with infantry support came into action from close to the OMS (Office of the Martyr Sadr). Matt Maer gave orders to advance on the building and as dawn broke Corporal Byles section ‘went through it like a dose of salts’. A vast haul of weapons was recovered, ‘from your average AK to aircraft mounted missiles’ and the area was secured by clearance patrols who found evidence of Spectre’s (American AC-130 air support) handiwork, ‘Dismembered bodies lay around on the ground, their rifles and RPGs beside them.’

The Battle of Danny Boy - M.C.
Less than a week after Operation Waterloo, the famous ‘Danny Boy’ action took place near the British permanent vehicle checkpoint of the same name at Majar-al-Kabir near Al-Amarah. Here, on 14 May 2004, a patrol of Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders had been ambushed by Mahdi Army insurgents and called for assistance. First to arrive on the scene were two Warriors of C Company, 1st Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, under the command of Sergeant D. Perfect, which themselves were ambushed on arrival, suffering an RPG hit and resultant casualties. Further relief force Warriors from C Company under the command of Lt. Plenge then arrived at Danny Boy and found themselves in one of the fiercest engagements fought by the Regiment in Iraq. During the battle, which lasted roughly 3 hours, Corporal Byles and Lance Corporal Wood were ordered to dismount from their Warriors and they proceeded to lead their respective teams in a frontal assault on the insurgent’s trench positions using grenades, close-quarter rifle-fire and bayonets. Richard Holmes describes how these British soldiers went into battle with bayonets for the first time since the Falklands War in 1982:

‘Before they arrived at Danny Boy, however, the battle there had taken a decisive turn. Sergeant Broome, using his own two Warriors, started suppressing dug-in positions west of the road. He was speedily joined by Lieutenant Ben Plenge, commander of 7 Platoon, in W31, and Sergeant Brodie in W32, who deployed their vehicles at the north end of the ambush and dismounted their troops. Sergeant Broome gave a quick set of orders to Lance-Corporal Wood, who was commanding Privates Rushforth and Tatawaqa, the dismounts in the back of the vehicle; Corporal Byles and Private Beggs dismounted from another Warrior.
Bayonets fixed, the assault began. Private Fowler, W22’s gunner, sluiced accurate fire on the nearest position. Given the nature of the ground and the position of the fire support Corporal Byles and Lance-Corporal Wood had to assault frontally, with W22 keeping pace with them over perhaps 300 metres, until it could no longer depress its turret far enough to engage the trenches.
The little group of dismounts then split up and used pairs fire and manoeuvre to break into the position; grenades, automatic fire and bayonets were used to clear it.’ (
ibid)

The assaulted trench contained around a dozen men brandishing weapons. 3 were killed and 4 taken prisoner. In his official statement regarding the attack, Byles commented on the taking of prisoners:
‘There was still a lot of fire going on around us and when I jumped into the ditch I was trying to use the element of surprise and shock to make the men put down their weapons. I was shouting at the men and they were panicking and waving their weapons around I recall they had AK47s and other machine guns. When we had deployed on the ground we had received orders to fix bayonets which I had done, so I was aware of this when dealing with the men. Due to the situation and the fact there was fire coming from other positions, I had to be firm with these men for their safety as well as mine and that of my colleagues. So in the ditch I hit these men with my fists and with the back of my rifle to get them to surrender. Both men struggled with me until I was able to finally overpower them and get them to lie on the floor.’

Coming under fire from a second Iraqi position, Byles then turned his fire on this second group of insurgents, killing two, while the Warrior gave fire-support as further skirmishes continued around them. Around 30 Mahdi Army insurgents were killed in the action at the Danny Boy checkpoint whilst the British suffered some wounded men but no fatalities. Corporal Byles and Lance-Corporal Wood were both awarded the Military Cross for their actions, Byles citation stating ‘Throughout the whole contact he showed immense professionalism under pressure. He showed bravery in the face of the enemy and strong leadership qualities in leading a dangerous assault against a larger enemy position.’

Byles himself later revealed, ‘I slashed people, rifle butted them. I was punching and kicking. It was either me or them. It felt like I was in a dream. It didn’t seem real. Anybody can pull a trigger from a distance, but I got up close and personal.’ Recognising the horror of it all, he also added, ‘the worst thing was collecting the dead, seeing the damage that I did to these people. I got back to camp after six hours on the ground, covered in blood from head to toe’. Asked if he had any regrets, Byles responded, ‘they were firing weapons at me.’

Sold together with a transcript copy of the original recommendation, Central Chancery investiture letter, a DVD of the Buckingham Palace presentation ceremony, and boxes of issue for Iraq, NATO and Jubilee medals.