-
Instead, it was Froch and his girlfriend, Rachael Cordingley - who'd arrived earlier in the afternoon.
BBC: man Robin Chipperfield on Froch-watch
-
Major General Patrick Cordingley, a brigade commander in the Gulf war, said this was to be expected.
BBC: 'Low morale' permeates British troops
-
General Cordingley did not think that the Iraqi armed forces would present much trouble, once Iraq's air defences had been dealt with.
BBC: British Tornado jet in file photo
-
And we're joined, I'm delighted to say, by Major General Patrick Cordingley who commanded the Desert Rats in the first Gulf War.
BBC: NEWS | Programmes | Breakfast with Frost | Sir David Frost interviewed Patrick Cockburn and Major General Patrick Cordingley
-
Major-General Patrick Cordingley, who commanded a British armoured brigade during the Gulf War, told a meeting in London recently that Saddam Hussein faced "inevitable consequences" if he did not allow the weapons inspectors in.
BBC: British Tornado jet in file photo
-
Having been shopping in the town a few hundred yards from the hotel, he walked back over the river towards his room alongside his pregnant girlfriend, Rachael Cordingley, and with a bag in each hand.
BBC: man Robin Chipperfield on Froch-Watch
-
Prof Bogdanor and Major General Patrick Cordingley, former commander of 7th Armoured Brigade and vice president of the UK National Defence Association, debate how far former commanders should be allowed to enter the public forum.
BBC: Guthrie comments 'beyond acceptable'
-
Major General Patrick Cordingley, commander of the Desert Rats in the first Gulf War and chairman of the appeal, said he had not met anybody who had not been moved by a visit to the arboretum, which is based in Alrewas.
BBC: Appeal push at 'inadequate' site
-
At a seminar in Abu Dhabi this week, Major-General Patrick Cordingley, a Briton who commanded a brigade in the Gulf war, maintained that Gulf security was still threatened by potentially hostile neighbours (read Iraq and Iran), ballistic missiles, lethal agents like poison gas, and internal unrest.
ECONOMIST: The Gulf