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Russian Language Aptitude Test
By the way, it won’t be easy learning a new
language at your age. You know that, don’t you?
Early in March 1976, while I was still serving on Victor Tankers at RAF Marham
in Norfolk, I had a telephone call out of the blue from my Desk Officer at the
Personnel Management Centre in Gloucester. The
‘Desk Officer’ was the chap who looks after postings and was always thought by
officers at the squadron and station ‘workface’ to have more influence than he
probably actually did have. The Victor Tanker Mark 1A aircraft that I flew were nearing the
end of their days in RAF service and I knew my time as Officer Commanding the
Victor Standardisation Unit was consequently almost at an end. A posting,
therefore, would soon be coming my way and so I was keen to speak to my Desk
Officer.
‘I see from your personal file that you’re keen on learning foreign languages,
Tony,’ he said by way of introduction.
‘What makes you think that?’ I asked, rather mystified.
‘You indicated in one of your annual confidential reports in 1965 that you would
like to learn Russian,’ he replied. ‘I have it here in front of me.’
I thought back. Then I remembered. In late 1965, following the demise of the
Valiant, I had indeed included in my preferences for next posting a wish to go
on the Russian language course with a view to being posted to Moscow as the
Assistant Air Attaché. That was the time when most V Force aircrew would clutch at any
straw to get out of the V Force and back into the 'normal' air force.
‘That was more than ten years ago,’ I said, rather lamely.
‘We’ve a long memory here at PMC,’ replied my desk officer, sounding very
pleased with himself. ‘We like to please. Anyway, I’m sending you for a
language aptitude test at North Luffenham next week. These days we always put
potential language students through an aptitude test before sending them on a
full-time course. Saves wasting time and money on someone who can’t hack it.
Hope you enjoy it.’
‘Does that mean I’ll be posted to Moscow if I pass the aptitude test?’
‘There are postings other than in Moscow that need Russian speakers,’ he
said, mysteriously. ‘Just get through the aptitude test. The full-time course
lasts at least 12 months. By the way, it won’t be easy learning a new language
at your age. You know that, don’t you?’
I didn’t, but with that rather unkind and worrying barb, he rang off leaving me
pondering. I had from my schooldays always been keen on foreign languages, not just Russian,
but I was actually more keen on learning about languages and their grammar than
learning thousands of new words. Still, ever since my tour in Pakistan I'd
fancied a tour in the diplomatic world.
During my drive on 16 March to the RAF’s Language School at North Luffenham in Rutland
for the aptitude test, I heard
on the car radio the astonishing news that Harold Wilson had just announced,
to his stunned Cabinet, that he was retiring as Prime Minister.
The aptitude
test was interesting to say the least. It was conducted entirely in a language
laboratory - the first time I'd experienced such a thing. Part of the test
required candidates to memorise lists of words read out to them and then repeat
them back several minutes later. I thought a synthetic language was
being used but I learned later that it was one of the rarer Asian languages –
Tibetan or Vietnamese or something like that. I've always found that in order to learn lists of vocabulary I need to
see the words written down and then I need to write them down myself. I never found
learning words merely by listening was easy although I suppose I must have
managed that when I was a baby. I reckoned I did particularly badly on that part
of the aptitude test and not much better on the rest of it.
Before leaving North Luffenham I mentioned to one of the staff that I thought I
might have failed the test.
‘Don’t worry about it, sir', said the cheerful sergeant. 'No-one fails – not
senior officers anyway. You were sent here by PMC so they must have decided
already where they’re going to post you. Nothing we say will make any
difference.’ Then he added as an afterthought, ‘You won’t find it easy learning
Russian at your age!’ As it happens, he was correct on both counts.
Some weeks later, as he came in to ‘Morning Prayers’ at Marham, the Station
Commander, Group Captain David Parry-Evans handed me my Posting Notice. It said
that after successfully completing the long Russian Course I was to be posted to Berlin as
Officer Commanding Number 26 Signals Unit. I'd never heard of 26 SU and had no idea what its role was
but the prospect of a posting to Berlin was enticing - even at my age! The
posting notice was, however, wrong in one important respect.
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