
Sean Rayment
Journalist at Freelance
Sean Rayment. Journalist. Books: Bomb Hunters; Tales from the Special Forces Club; Painting The Sand. Doesn’t respond to trolls. Ex-Para.
Articles
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1 week ago |
thesun.co.uk | Sean Rayment
DOZY defence chiefs have lost an arsenal of weapons and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in the past 12 months. They include a Russian-made Kalashnikov AKM assault machine gun and an AR15 assault rifle. The AKM can fire up to 600 bullets a minute, has a range of more than 300metres and is a favourite of terrorist groups. Other weapons on the mislaid or stolen list include an L1A1 semi-automatic self-loading rifle.
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2 weeks ago |
dailymail.co.uk | Sean Rayment
Around 20 ex-SAS soldiers are facing murder charges for the shooting of IRA gunmen more than 30 years agoBy SEAN RAYMENT Published: 20:02 EDT, 26 April 2025 | Updated: 20:02 EDT, 26 April 2025 Around 20 former members of the SAS who shot dead IRA gunmen more than 30 years ago are facing murder charges, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.
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3 weeks ago |
dailymail.co.uk | Sean Rayment
One serving woman a week in Forces claims she was raped by a colleague, shocking statistics showBy SEAN RAYMENT Published: 20:08 EDT, 19 April 2025 | Updated: 20:14 EDT, 19 April 2025 Shocking statistics show there is a serving female Army member for every week of the year that claims to have been raped by a colleague.
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3 weeks ago |
thesun.co.uk | Sean Rayment
RED-faced commuters have left almost 300 sex toys on London buses, trains and taxis over a decade, official figures show. They were all handed to Transport for London lost property between 2014 and 2024 — with up to 40 reclaimed by owners. The remainder have either been sold or destroyed. Some were found at train stations including Waterloo, Liverpool Street, Euston, London Bridge and Victoria stations — and at all five terminals of Heathrow Airport.
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1 month ago |
thesun.co.uk | Sean Rayment |Thomas Godfrey
COMBAT drones have now become the dominant killer on the battlefields of Ukraine, The Sun on Sunday can reveal. Up to 80 per cent of casualties on both sides of the conflict have been caused by what are known by the military as “unmanned air systems”. The figures from Western officials mean that eight out of ten soldiers being killed and wounded in the conflict are being targeted remotely by devices piloted by young soldiers often miles behind the front line.
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RT @SeanRayment: Are the SAS victims of a legal witch-hunt? In the latest edition of The Security Podcast, here https://t.co/wfe46dUbKb, I…

Are the SAS victims of a legal witch-hunt? In the latest edition of The Security Podcast, here https://t.co/wfe46dUbKb, I discuss the controversial subject of Lawfare and its implications for members of the special forces, including those who took part in intelligence-led https://t.co/zeu28PZ2xQ

Are SAS soldiers who served in Northern Ireland the victims of a witch hunt? https://t.co/C5UrPIJ996