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As the sun rose,[url=http://www.moncler-sale.org]discount moncler jackets[/url], soldiers appeared one after another in their beige uniforms, ready to march through yet another day in this hostile wilderness. These men were from the French Foreign Legion, a force which, uniquely, draws its soldiers from many nationalities. Traditionally it is prepared to draw a veil over a candidate s background or criminal record. But today many Eastern Europeans or South Americans join up simply because they can earn a lot more money than they would with their own countries armies. We ve just left planet Earth and we re now on Mars, a Romanian legionnaire shouted. We were climbing a steep hill, over jagged and slippery rocks, at the time. Continue reading the main story From Our Own Correspondent Insight and analysis from BBC correspondents,[url=http://www.moncler-sale.org]moncler down jackets[/url], journalists and writers from around the world Broadcast on Radio 4 and BBC World Service Listen to the programme Download the programme From the top we hoped to get a view of the whole valley below. With flak jacket on, helmet, r #file_links[D:\keywords4.txt,1,S] ucksack, TV and radio equipment, enough food for the day and six litres of water, we were carrying more than 30 kilos in weight. The soldiers, with their weapons and ammunition, each carried twice that weight. By 9am, we had been walking for three hours and it was over 40 degrees Celsius. The heat waves were actually visible in the air, and as an Australian corporal put it to me: A bit of wind feels like someone aiming a blow-dryer right into your face. The legionnaires were searching the desert for jihadi fighters. They had discovered plenty of their hideouts already. In some, established ne #file_links[D:\keywords5.txt,1,S] ar the rare wells in this dry and arid landscape, militants had grown their own vegetable gardens. The #file_links[D:\keywords1.txt,[url=http://www.moncler-sale.org]moncler on sale[/url],1,S] soldiers loved the fresh tomatoes and onions - delicacies after days of military rations. One legionnaire pointed towards his boots - they were so destroyed by the rocks that he was happy to find a pair which had been abandoned by the enemy. He swapped his boots and joked about wearing jihadi shoes . Most of the soldiers had served in Afghanistan. One said that the trickiest thing there was that as soon as they engaged the enemy, they would melt away into the villages. Here, though, they can be anywhere around us. And they fight to the death. We did not run into a firefight during the two days we spent marching with the Legion. But we found explosives and other items left behind by the jihadis. We had seen the remains of suicide bombers in the northern town of Gao. Now we were looking at the sort of explosive belts they used. A French de-mining engineer explained that they were very sophisticated with detonators made of copper, which is harder for metal detectors to spot. There were also drums filled with nitrate for making bombs. The French blew them all up before we moved on. We entered a dry sandy riverbed, which led to a long stretch of flat desert. We had to reach a hill on the far side and the officer in charge, Captain Clement, was worried we would be too exposed, out in the open: We won t be able to take cover if anything happens. But there was no other way. We had to do it in one go, and fast. As we started to sprint, the captain explained that one of his men had been shot and wounded by a sniper a few weeks before. 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