Formation In 1999, the
Territorial Army (TA) was reorganised, in what became part of the
Strategic Defence Review, with an emphasis on the reduction of the infantry and expansion of the armoured (yeomanry) and royal artillery (air defence elements). On 1 July 1999, the
Royal Rifle Volunteers (RRV) was formed through the amalgamation of the following battalions: 6th/7th (Volunteer) Battalion,
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment (part),
2nd (Volunteer) Battalion,
Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment (part), and 5th (Volunteer) Battalion,
Royal Green Jackets. The new regiment becoming the TA infantry regiment for the South Central area. The new regiment's structure on formation was as follows: • Regimental Headquarters, at
Brock Barracks,
Reading • A (Royal Green Jackets) Company, in
Oxford – from amalgamation of HQ & A Coys, 5th (V) Bn, Royal Green Jackets • Anti-Tank Platoon, in
High Wycombe (later moved to Oxford and replaced by a Rifle Platoon) • Waterloo Band and Bugles, at Slade Park Barracks,
Headington – inherited from 5 RGJ • (B) Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire, and Wiltshire Company, at Brock Barracks, Reading – from HQ & C Coys, 2nd (V) Bn, Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire, and Wiltshire Regiment • Rifle Platoon, in
Swindon • C (Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment) Company, in
Portsmouth – from C Coy, 6th/7th (V) Bn, Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment •
9 (Princess Beatrice's Isle of Wight Rifles) Platoon, in
Newport • E (Royal Green Jackets) Company, in
Milton Keynes – from E Coy, 5th (V) Bn, Royal Green Jackets The new regiment was placed under command of the
145th (South) Brigade, which, in 2000, was redesignated as the 145th (Home Counties) Brigade. The regiment was, and would remain the only infantry unit in the brigade, sitting alongside its
University Officer Training Corps counterparts.
Future Army Structure On 1 April 2000, 9 (PBIWR) Platoon was redesignated as 9 (Isle of Wight) Platoon, losing its connection with Princess Beatrice's Isle of Wight Rifles. into the following: • Platoon in
Marlow • E (Royal Green Jackets) Company, at John Howard Barracks,
Blakelands During the War in Afghanistan (2001-2021), the RRV was the third Reserve regiment to mobilise some fifty-four soldiers on Operation FINGAL. The two RRV platoons deployed to
Camp Souter for a four-month tour from February to May 2003. As part of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), their role was to form part of the Kabul Patrols Company, in concert with A Company, 2nd Battalion,
The Royal Anglian Regiment. In May, the RRV was relieved in place by a sub-unit from 3rd Battalion,
The Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment (3 PWRR), which deployed for a six-month Operation FINGAL tour. During the Iraq War (2003-2011), individual RRV reservists deployed on Operation TELIC 2. Subsequently, from October 2003 to April 2004, during Operation TELIC 3, the RRV provided one of two platoons for ‘Eden Company’; the other platoon was furnished by The
East of England Regiment. Their role was Force Protection Company for HQ 20 Armoured Brigade, at Basra Palace. In April 2004, the RRV platoon returned to the
United Kingdom and was demobilised shortly thereafter. From May to November 2005, during Operation TELIC 6 in Iraq, the RRV deployed ‘Roebuck Company’, comprising 110 reservists, which included a platoon from 3 PWRR. Its role was Force Protection Company for HQ Multi-National Division (South-East) in Basra, located at the Coalition Operating Base, at Basra Airport. Roebuck Company was initially under Command of the Rear Operations Battle Group, 2nd Battalion, The Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, and later under Force Protection Wing, Basra Air Station. On 26 November 2005, the company was relieved and returned to the UK, initially returning to Bodney Camp, Norfolk, until demobilisation. By 2005 all UK operations in Afghanistan were consolidated under the single name Operation HERRICK. On 26 January 2006,
Secretary of State for Defence John Reid announced members of the regiment would deploy alongside HQ
Allied Rapid Reaction Corps to provide
force protection at, what would later become,
Camp Bastion. Thirty Soldiers of the regiment then formed Salamanca Platoon, which deployed with
Task Force Helmand from April to September 2006. Individual RRV reservists also served in
Northern Ireland (
Operation Banner),
Bosnia and Herzegovina (
SFOR),
Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija (
KFOR), and
Sierra Leone (
Operation Palliser). == 7th Battalion, The Rifles ==