In an emotional interview, Reid recalled seeing the soldiers being taken from their car and dragged to a sports ground. He said: "They put the two of them face down on the ground and I got down between the two of them on my face, and I had my arm around this one and I was holding this one by the shoulder ... I can remember the atmosphere ... I can remember thinking, 'They are going to shoot these men'."
The IRA took the soldiers away and Reid heard two shots. He found the soldiers and tried to help them, but they were dead, so he anointed then. Two women then came over with a coat and put it over the head of one of the soldiers, saying, "He was somebody's son."
The priest concluded: "I felt I had done my best to save them, but I had failed to save them. I felt it was a tragedy that I had tried to stop and didn't."
The programme traces a sequence of events that began with the SAS killings in Gibraltar of three IRA members who were intent on blowing up a British army band. As their funerals were taking place in Belfast, a loyalist gunman, Michael Stone, attacked mourners, killing three of them.
These incidents, followed by the killing of the two British soldiers, convulsed Northern Ireland, but are now viewed by many as a turning-point which helped move the peace process forward, with Reid seen as a vital element in the process.
-Independent