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Protection with a Firearm

Heroes Remember

Protection with a Firearm

Transcript
We always carried our 7.62 rifles. We always carried them, always carried them. There was always that threat, there was always that threat. Within the village or within the town of Srebenica or the surrounding areas and we used to go on foot patrols carrying our weapons. Go on vehicle patrols with a 50 calibre ready to fire in the event of that we are fired on. Now we never took anything we, because a soldier and what was going on in town, we never put our guard down. We had to be always on that professional side because you never knew what was going to happen, never knew. Things got pretty heated with myself, my platoon commander at that time, two Serb officers, things got pretty heated. They were going to call in a tank and then one guy stood back and I could hear him caulk his weapon and I went - oh here we go you know. So we had to do likewise, like take the weapon off our shoulder. We always slung our weapon cause that’s the peaceful thing to do, but we took it off and had our armset ready and it was, they backed down. I think it was, they were intimidating us and if that’s what they were trying to do it worked. But we took our weapon of our shoulder too and said okay then, I’m not going to show you that you’re intimidating. I’m going to intimidate you and it did work. They backed down and let us through the checkpoint, and sometimes they would do that just to see how you would react as a foreign soldier.
Description

Mr. Wiseman explains the level of readiness a soldier has to have while under constant threat of intimidation.

Robert Wiseman

Mr. Robert Wiseman was born October 9, 1953 in Bathurst, New Brunswick. With his father being a Veteran, and his five other brothers joining up, Mr. Wiseman made this the reason for joining the service. In 1974, fresh out of high school, Mr. Wiseman travelled to CFB Cornwallis Recruitment Camp receiving 11 weeks of training then to CFB Gagetown for advanced training as a combat soldier. Mr. Wiseman joined the army experiencing one tour to Cyprus and later in his career travelled to Bosnia holding the rank of Warrant Officer. His service in Bosnia provided humanitarian support to the Bosnian people after the Srebrenica massacre where many people were killed. After discharging from the army, Mr. Wiseman returned to Fredericton.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
1:28
Person Interviewed:
Robert Wiseman
War, Conflict or Mission:
Canadian Armed Forces
Location/Theatre:
Bosnia
Branch:
Army
Rank:
Warrant Officer

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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