,
Greater Manchester in December 2002 The first few weeks of the planned action were postponed while negotiation took place. The first period, a two-day strike, began at 18:00 hrs GMT, on Wednesday 13 November and ended at 18:00 on Friday 15 November. In the event that reconciliation could not be brokered, further industrial action was planned. The
armed forces provided emergency cover during the strike by activating
Operation Fresco, using
Bedford RLHZ '
Green Goddess' fire engines, originally produced for the
Auxiliary Fire Service for use following a
nuclear attack on the United Kingdom, as well as a handful of modern appliances held in reserve. The armed forces also fielded small breathing apparatus rescue teams (BART) and rescue equipment support teams (REST) headed by professional firefighters of the RAF and staffed by specially trained members of all three services. Police officers escorted responding armed forces personnel to emergency callouts;
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott was criticised for hypocrisy by members of the FBU for offering increased overtime payments to police officers and armed forces personnel undertaking these duties. Each side placed the responsibility entirely with the other; the FBU said that their employers' failure to meet their demands was the cause of the strike.
Prime Minister Tony Blair criticised the strike as "wrong and dangerous" and warned the FBU that lives could be lost the lack of a prompt response by emergency services. 19,000 armed forces personnel were deployed to cover for striking firefighters, with fears being raised that the deployment would impact British forces' intervention in the upcoming
invasion of Iraq. There were numerous examples of striking firefighters responding to emergency calls from the
picket line and several rescues were made in this way. ==Negotiations==