Officer Cadet Massey
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst was commissioned as
second lieutenant into the
Royal Army Service Corps on 20 December 1963, and he was posted to serve with the transport squadron of 7th Artillery Brigade. Massey was promoted
lieutenant on 20 June 1965. After a year with the Royal Corps of Transport Movement (RCT) he joined 63 Parachute Squadron (RCT) in February 1967 as a lieutenant. Two years later the squadron became the first to reinforce troops in Northern Ireland. On 20 December 1969 he was promoted
Captain. After this tour he was recommended for the
SAS and after passing selection in 1970 he joined "A Squadron" in 1971 as Troop Captain. Massey served in the
Oman and
Dhofar on three tours, before he rejoined the Airborne Forces as Staff Captain of HQ No. 16 Parachute Brigade where he made further tours of Northern Ireland. and posted posting was as a Staff Officer, at HQ Northern Ireland from 1977 to 1979. In the summer of 1979 he was appointed to command "A Squadron"
22 SAS Regiment a position he held until his promotion to
lieutenant-colonel in 1981 when he became an instructor at Camberley leading the
Counter Revolutionary Warfare Team. In 1982 he was appointed the Special Forces Liaison Officer at HQ Commander-in Chief Fleet in
Northwood, Middlesex during the
Falklands War. and in 1988 was himself succeeded as commander of
22 SAS Regiment by
Lieutenant-Colonel Cedric Delves, DSO. From 1988 he was responsible for the UK Commitment in the Far East and Africa at the
Ministry of Defence. Massey was appointed Deputy Director of Special Forces in 1990 and when the Gulf War broke out, he was appointed Operational Commander of the UK Special Forces for
Operation Granby for which he received a belated
Mention in Despatches. On 30 June 1992 he was promoted to Brigadier and returned to his parent corps as Commandant of
Royal Corps of Transport Training Centre in
Aldershot. He retired from the Army on 1 November 1993. ==Later career==