Hi All. Shoulderholster is absolutely right. I know because I e-mailed a pic to the Burma Star Organisation and they confirmed it does belong to V-Force.
****got1**** You're a star! and I am an idiot. Unbelievably they were sown on back to front. Peter Garratt of the excellent Rhodesian Militaria web site was able to say they are definitely NOT Rhodesian.
http://www.rhodesianmilitaria.com/index.php?page=sas
I believe because of their condition and what looks like modern machine stitching that they're repro.
Right, I've got a real Heinz here. I don't believe it's the work of a walt. They'd be better informed through all the books they've read. Whereas they would make mistakes it would probably be more believable. I think it's more likely some lads rifled his dads collection and stuck them on the jacket to make it look more 'trendy'. Students have been doing this since the 60's and from the 80's with the Stone Roses to the present day with the Arctic Monkeys camouflage jackets have been popular fashion items.
So that leaves me a grade 1 combat jacket, 1 repro SAS 'Sabre' wings from which regiment and era is unknown and 1 V-Force flash from Burma. Trust me this has come from a real soldeirs effects. Obviously he couldn't have served with V-Force as he didn't join up until 1955. His father was an officer in the Royal Navy, maybe an uncle?