Who Dares Wins

Flying Pig

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Who Dares Wins

Flying Pig

This is an essay on the history of the Special Air Service, the most famous branch of the British special forces. The SAS (known as the Regiment or the Service among its member) was one of the first dedicated special forces regiments in the world, and continues to be the role model for most of the similar units in the world. It is almost unique in the British army in that its members are not allowed to admit to belonging to it; each man is considered to be a member of his former regiment (civilians are not allowed to join). This essay is an attempt to educate people a little on both history and to dispel a few myths.

Nothing contained herein is confidential. In the case of living members, I have used their pen-names or names that they go by, and in accordance with regimental tradition I have changed the names of dead soldiers in the Bravo Two Zero section (Andy McNab received quite a bit of flak from the regiment for his use of real names in his book, and I want to avoid that). Most of this can probably be found on the internet. As usual, unclear language is unintentional, and I will not comment on anything that you can't find written here or on Google. If any information about the SAS is classified, it is always for a good reason.

The Formative Years


The Africa Campaign


The chief founder of the SAS was the then Lieutenant David Stirling, who was with the Scots Guards, as L Detachment, SAS Brigade, as an volunteer airborne force to conduct raids and sabotage far behind enemy lines in the desert. The SAS name was one of the common pieces of deception practised in the war; since what would eventually become the Parachute Regiment was named the 11 SAS Battalion, so the newly Captain Stirling's detachment was named to make the enemy believe that the British airborne forces (it is important to remember that at this time the SAS was almost identical to the Long Range Desert Group; and so similar to the modern Royal Marine Commandos) were far more powerful than they actually were. What is now known as the Special Boat Service was then formed as D Squadron.

Uniquely for an infantry regiment, the SAS use cavalry terminology, so a unit under a Lieutenant is a troop, and a battalion-sized unit is a Squadron. The regiment used the title of Parachutist for a basic soldier, which later changed to Trooper in line with the cavalry. There was no selection test like there is today; troops were invited based on their commanders' opinion of them.
The new regiment only made one operation by parachute during the entire war - Operation Squatter, which was carried out on the night of November 16 1941. The objective was to destroy enemy aircraft and therefore provide air superiority for the 8th Army before they carried out their own Operation Crusader. 54 men dropped into two sites, containing in total five aircraft, in five Bristol Bombay aircraft. However, the planners had not planned for massive winds, which caused the units to scatter during the drop, and so the mission was aborted and the unit fell back to its emergency rendezvous (ERV) with the Long Range Desert Group. During the operation one aircraft was lost, along with its entire crew and five SAS soldiers. 28 were captured, and only 21 managed to RV with the waiting patrol.


Stirling was not daunted by this, and he soon organised another attack on enemy airfields with a similar objective; attacking three airfields and being transported by the ground vehicles of the Long Range Desert Group. This mission was more successful; they took out a large number (their records and those of the Axis do not agree how many) of aircraft for no casualties. The operation was done in two stages; the first mission was intended to be the final raid, but for reasons unknown they did not engage and instead made a recon of the area, and then the second, full-scale, assault destroyed the aircraft. The regiment (by now re-named 1 SAS) was augmented by another regiment raised by David Stirling's older brother William known as 2 SAS. This gave it a strength comparable to a normal infantry regiment of the time.

Operations in Europe

During the invasion of Italy, the SAS provided the advance elements of the invasion. They took the first prisoners of the campaign, but later moved on to sabotage and denying the enemy supplies, by operations such as attacking convoys and derailing trains. Another battalion, the 'Allied SAS', was formed from counter-axis insurgents found by the British. Towards the end of the campaign one SAS unit was to have huge success; they raided the HQ of the German V Corps and killed the commanding officer.

During the war in France, the SAS operated in 'sticks' (nine-man units, as opposed to a four-man 'brick'), to assist the French Resistance troops in the area rising up against the Germans. However, they adopted new tactics for the theatre; travelling by day when the Allied air support gave them a clear route and then attacking the enemy, who moved along roads in convoys, by night. Most of the troops inserted in their sticks, although at one point 144 troopers were dropped in, complete with vehicles and all of their supplies. Their actions were so worrying to the Germans that Adolf Hitler himself issued an order saying that all SAS personnel captured by the Germans were to be executed (although some generals, notably Erwin Rommel, refused to carry out this order).

The SAS Victoria Cross

During the war in Italy, the SAS received its only Victoria Cross - Anders Lassen, a major, won a posthumous award. The major had already migrated to the United Kingdom from Denmark shortly after the war broke out, and he had served with the British Commandos in almost all of the North African theatre. On 9 April 1945 at Lake Comacchio, Major Lassen lead a decoy operation on the north shore of the lake, taking a patrol and masquerading as a full-scale landing. The enemy had a lot of men there, but he still managed to take out three enemy positioned. When the unit tried to evacuate Major Lassen, mortally wounded, refused to be evacuated in case it held up the rest of his men. The award was cited:

In Italy, on the night of 8/9 April, 1945, Major Lassen was ordered to take out a patrol and raid the north shore of Lake Comacchio. His task was to cause casualties, capture prisoners and give the impression of a major landing. The patrol was challenged and came under machine-gun fire. Major Lassen himself attacked with grenades and silenced two enemy posts, capturing two prisoners and killing several Germans. The patrol had suffered casualties and was still under fire. Major Lassen moved forward and flung more grenades into a third enemy position, calling upon the enemy to surrender. He was then hit and mortally wounded, but whilst falling he flung a grenade, wounding more of the enemy and enabling his patrol to capture this last position. Finally, he refused to be evacuated lest he should impede the withdrawal and endanger further lives. His high sense of devotion to duty and the esteem in which he was held by the men he led, added to his own magnificent courage, enabled Major Lassen to carry out with complete success all the tasks he had been given.

By the end of the war, the SAS had five battalion-scale units (which were known, and continue to be known, as regiments): 1 and 2 SAS were British, 3 and 4 were French (which are now in the French army as the 1er RPIMa) and 5 SAS was Belgian. The SBS was now a separate unit, although it kept the SAS cap badge and was generally considered a brother unit. In total, about 2500 personnel served with the SAS during the war. On 15 August 1945, the SBS was disbanded.

Malaya - Reforming the unit

The War Office followed up by disbanding the entire unit in 1946, however Britain found that before long it needed its heroes once again. Just a year later they reformed the name of the SAS in 21 SAS (the former Artists' Rifles Regiment) as a Territorial Army (TA) unit. In 1948, a terrorist group called the MRLA (Malayan Races Liberation Army) began what came to be known as the Malayan Emergency. in 1950, as a direct consequence of this, the former commander of the Chindits, Mike Calvert (now a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Royal Engineers), reformed a unit similar to his old command known as the SAS (Malayan Scouts),, which recruited from former SAS veterans, serving soldiers recommended by their COs (Commanding Officers) and a special squadron of 21 SAS known as K Squadron which was sent in from Korea.

At first, the strategy was one of damage limitation - defending locations like plantations or mines where it was anticipated that the enemy would be able to strike and cause damage. Later on, the commander there (General Sir Harold Briggs) implemented a strategy known as the Briggs Plan which is still hugely influential in modern counter-insurgency warfare. Without going into too much detail, there were basically two sides to the plan - the first was to cut down support for the guerrillas and shore up support for the British, and the second was to ensure that the guerrillas could not make contact with those civilians who were sympathetic to them.


The plan began by moving those groups known to support the MRLA (mostly the Chinese) from their temporary (and technically illegal) communities on the edges of the forests to new settlements called New Villages, which were newly built and fortified with barbed wire, police positions and searchlights, in order to keep the civilians in (officially, for their own protection) and the guerrillas out. This was originally not very popular, although the way that the camps were built and run lead to good living conditions, so it was widely felt after a while that the British were doing the inhabitants a favour. About 450 of these were built during the war.


Following this this, the SAS (and, in 1954, elements of the Parachute Regiment) began operations to take out the enemy. They sent out patrols, inserting either by tabbing (marching in a state of battle-readiness with full kit), parachute or by helicopter (generally, owning to the terrain, by static line). These patrols typically were about four or five men strong, and carried two weeks' kit with expectation of re-supply. Jungle patrols are incredibly disliked operations by the men - on average there is about one contact every three weeks and while not in contact the conditions are difficult, hot and humid, and there is a constant threat of ambush and enemy traps. Nevertheless, this was to become one of the SAS' specialist operations.

The final stage of the plan was to gather support from the locals and turn them against the guerrillas. This began in 1951, when the SAS began their 'hearts and minds' campaign. They inserted into the jungle normally by parachute, and gave out medical help, food and any other sort of assistance that they could provide (although they were keen to avoid acting as policemen) for free. Coupled with the patrols that were going out at the same time, they drove the enemy deeper and deeper into the forest and cut off their supplies, meaning that the enemy were on an irreversible slide to defeat.
The operation fundamentally changed the way that the SAS worked, and laid the foundations for its modern character. The men learned to track the enemy through the jungle from native troops called the Iban, began to patrol in units of two or four (to this day, the standard tactical unit is either the 'stick' or the 'team' of two), learned first aid (an SAS soldier is as competent in first aid as a regular medic) and began patrolling for up to three months. The jungle also forced them to become competent in CQB (close-quarters battle), which was later to become an important facet of their training. In 1958 (or 1957 for the Parachute Regiment) the operation finished, with five Sabre (front-line) squadrons in action there.

Middle Eastern Operations 1958-1980

After Malaya, the SAS carried out a lot of other operations. They fought in a small campaign in defence of the Sultanate of Oman in 1958-1959 known as the Jebel Akhdar War, which was the first of two times that the SAS was to intervene to keep Oman safe. They also supported the withdrawal of the British from Aden in the mid-1960s, setting up their positions along main roads and volatile areas of the cities. The second time they deployed to Oman was during the Dhofar rebellion, during which they managed once again to keep Oman intact despite its internal problems. These operations were often shared with other army units, especially the Parachute Regiment.

The Battle of Mirbat

On 19 July 1972, in the town of Mirbat, a group of SAS soldiers sent to train the Omani army spotted a movement of men on a nearby Jebel. This was usual for the time of night - there were night pickets of loyal Omanis stationed there to warn the SAS of the enemy when they approached. What was not normal this time was that the men were Adoo - the enemy. They had all killed the night picket and were moving to capture the town and port, killing the SAS team in the process.

The team was under the command of a good, well-respected officer called Mike Kealy. He assumed that the men on the ridge were the night picket coming back to warn of an assault. After a short while, at which point the Adoo were about 1000 metres from the BATT (British Army Training Team) house in which the SAS were stationed, Captain Kealy realised his mistake and ordered the men to open fire with SLR rifles, a 'gimpy' or GPMG and an infantry mortar. Among his men were two Fijians, known as Tak and Laba, and a medic who had just joined the regiment. His name was Trooper Tommy Tobin.

A short way from the BATT house was - they moved it to the Imperial War Museum after the British left Aden - a 25-pounder field gun, which is a gate guard to an Omani special forces billet. This is a weapon normally crewed by three men of the Royal Artillery, whose role it was to provide covering fire while the night picket ran off the Jebel. Laba, realising that the Adoo were far too numerous to defeat with small arms and out of effective range - half a mile - anyway, ran across the desert and into the gun pit, all the while under automatic fire from the Adoo. The other men of the SAS covered him with rifles, machine-gun and mortar fire. He managed to not only reach the pit but fired the weapon, distracting the enemy from the other eight men in the BATT house. For an infantryman to operate this weapon alone would normally be unthinkable, but Laba was hugely strong - the very archetype of a Fijian in the British army - and the heavy shells were nothing to him. The Adoo were confused by this, and moved so that about half of them were attacking each SAS position. All the while Laba had been trying to convince the Omani troops from their fort, but without success.

Laba managed to put out a round a minute for quite a while. Eventually he radioed back to the BATT house that he had been shot in the face, and was alive but wounded. Captain Kealy asked for a volunteer to go and aid him, to which the other Fijian in the team, Tak, agreed. He went to help operate the gun, since Laba had managed somehow to bandage up his face. He shouted to the Omani soldiers to come and help, at which one of them ran out of the door and into the gunpit. He was however shot dead almost straight away, leaving the SAS in not much of a better situation. However, the Adoo had managed to come very close to the pit, and the BATT house recieved a message that urgent help, including medical evacuation, was needed. Captain Kealy went to help, and of course the medic Tommy 'Little Tommy' Tobin volunteered. Taking everyone's morphine and as many bandages as he could fit into his gear, he ran for the gun pit. Meanwhile Laba, who had gone to fetch a mortar from a nearby pit, was shot in the head and mortally wounded. Tak was also hit in the shoulder.

The captain made it in one peice, but Trooper Tobin saw that Laba was in a serious state. He went to him, but as he turned his head to look through his kit took a bullet, which killed him instantly. Now two men down, the SAS were in a fairly desperate situation. Tak, who was propping himself up against the sandbags on the side of the gun pit, was hit again in the stomach but still fired his SLR at the enemy. By this time, the RAF had arrived and provided air support, which coupled with the timely arrival of G Squadron drove off the Adoo and saved the day. Laba recieved a MID (which many people believe should have been a VC), Captain Kealy a DSO, and Tak won a DCM.


During this period, the SAS evolved into something far more recognisable as its current form. Although it never, like the US Delta Force, denied its own existence, it became normal for members to hide their identity and for the regiment to operate on missions that they could deny, generally wearing the uniform of other units or civilian clothes (with the notable exception of the start of Operation Banner), and the government began the policy of not discussing anything about the regiment. Medals awarded to the men were, and still are, credited to the man's former unit. It also began working in VIP Protection (BG) and Counter-Revolutionary Warfare (CRW) operations.


Borneo

From 1963-1966, the SAS intervened in the undeclared war over Borneo between Indonesia and Malaysia. In 1963 a squadron deployed in to gather information about the (at the time not confirmed) movements of Indonesia troops into the border between the two states on Borneo, which expanded to 3 squadrons of 22 SAS and 2 of the SBS. The operation was commanded by a veteran of Malaya, who used the lessons learned there to develop a new strategy based on close co-operation between combat units (including the Navy and Air units in the area), reconnaissance to gather information quickly and accurately, fast movement, secure positions and control of area, and later on trying to win over the local people.


However, there were still only 5 squadrons in operation there for a thousand-mile border that needed to be patrolled. They fixed this problem by actually making new units: the GIPC (Guards Independent Parachute Company, which was already a recon unit for the 16 Parachute Brigade), the Ghurkha Independent Parachute Company (an entirely new unit), bringing in more SBS sections (which were mostly used for amphibious attacks) and men of the Parachute Regiment, which made two new companies (C and D). They got more men in 1965 when the Australians and New Zealanders sent in their men, the Australian SAS and the New Zealand Rangers.

The war provided even more scope for the British to learn the art of jungle warfare. Tactics centred around moving with minimal equipment and on foot, being impossible to track for the enemy, and being self-sufficient for a long time without the need for a noisy and potentially compromising re-supply. They operated on what is now known as 'hard routine' which means that it can be literally impossible to spot the unit at very short range and completely impossible to track them down - strict silence was maintained via the use of hand signals, de-odorant with any sort of perfume was banned, as was anything else that smells including cooked food and any sort of flame or boiling. Most operations were 'stick patrols' although on occasion larger raids took place. Sections would move in single file - the lead scouts went first, then the section IC (commander), the main body of the section, and finally the rear man or 'tail-end Charlie) who was normally armed with some sort of LSW (light support weapon). Battle drills became sophisticated and important, notably crossing obstacles and contact drills, which meant that the commander needed little input for his men to make a good attack. The idea of an ARD (all-round-defence) camp also began here. When the section gave contact, it was almost always in the form of an ambush; taking out convoys, enemy patrols or even bases through sudden, unexpected and decisive action. After Operation Claret, in which the British seized the initiative with considerable help from the SAS, the conflict was resolved.

Storming the Embassy - Onto the World Stage

The SAS' most famous operation was their attack on the Iranian Embassy, London, in 1980. This happened when, on 30 April at about midday, six men from the DRMLA (Democratic Revolutionary Movement for the Liberation of Arabistan) stormed the embassy, taking 26 hostages and demanding independence for Arabistan (also known as Khuzestan), in south Iran, and the release of 91 members of their group imprisoned in Iran.

Over five days, the police tried to wear down the group by sending in supplies of food and cigarettes, which lead to the release of five hostages. The situation got worse when the terrorists made a statement (released on Radio 2) stating that they were going to kill a hostage, prompted by the fact that they found out that they had been mislead by their commander, who had promised them that the ambassador from Jordan would intervene on their behalf. B Squadron 22 SAS, who were currently involved in a CRW (Counter-Revolutionary Warfare) role, although not actually in action, were placed on standby. They spent the first five days of the siege nearby, staying in a nearby barracks and listening to news reports on the situation, as well as practising for any assault (which was generally thought fairly likely) in a mock-up of the embassy that they had built with architectural plans and information from the freed hostages (it has been said that the real motto of the SAS is not 'who dares wins' but 'check and test, check and test' due to their huge emphasis on planning).


The squadron was given the go order (the notification that they were about to attack) on the sixth day, when the terrorists inside killed a press man and threw him outside. The Prime Minister herself sent a note to the MoD (Ministry of Defence) stating 'this is now a military operation'.

Unfortunately for the assault team, not only was the final of the world snooker championships on (and pretty much the entire squadron was watching it) but there were news teams camped outside the embassy. To stop the terrorists having any idea that they were going in, the SAS made the reporters broadcast the events some time after they really happened. To further ensure that they could enter the building without the enemy anticipating them, aircraft from Heathrow were instructed to fly lower over the embassy while road works began nearby, creating a lot of noise inside the embassy.


They knew that the first two floors had bulletproof windows, so that they would need explosives to get into the embassy in the first place, and that there were two skylights - one in a bathroom on the top floor and one on the roof of the second floor. They therefore decided to have five bricks insert at the same time: the famous one through the balcony on the first floor, one through the second floor skylight, one to abseil from the roof onto the second floor balcony, and two through the door, of which one would clear the basement and the other sort out the ground floor. They were to carry out a classic building assault, using MP5 sub-machine guns in short bursts, Browning pistols (this was one of the few operations where every man was able to find a sidearm; they're normally in huge demand from the squadron stores) and flashbangs (grenades that do not fragment, but instead stun everyone in the room). When a room is assaulted (normally by at least two men) a flashbang goes in, and everyone with a weapon gets three rounds from a submachine gun (since there is no burst setting on an MP5, three is the easiest number above 1 to get off quickly without wasting too much ammunition) and two from a pistol (known as a double tap). This ensures that rooms are taken without civilian casualties or danger to the attackers.

At 1923 hours, the attack began. The second-floor skylight was blown with a large explosive charge, power to the building was cut, and the team tasked to enter it went it. The famous first man on the balcony as seen on the television was a Warrant Officer and the commander of the mission, John McAleese, whose son Paul has recently been killed in Afghanistan serving with 2 Rifles. All of the hostages save one, who was killed by the terrorists, were saved. Only one man from the SAS was wounded - Staff Sergeant "Tak", who was tangled in his abseiling gear while entering with team 3 and caught in a fire started by a flashbang. Two of the terrorists left the embassy - they were posing as hostages and taken out by the SAS. One was killed when a real hostage recognised him coming down the stairs, and he was shot when he entered the 'killing zone' where the SAS could shoot without injuring anyone else, and someone shouted 'he's got a grenade!'. The other was identified outside the building, and would have been taken back inside and shot had an NCO not pointed out to the trooper about to do it that the news teams were watching.
 
The Falklands

The Falklands was the sort of campaign that the SAS are built for - with extreme conditions, supplies hard to come by (one patrol ended up living on tea whitener mixed with sugar and water when the rations ran out) and a need for long-range reconnaissance, they came into their element and proved to be a vital part of the task force.

South Georgia

The first action of the war was an SAS raid on South Georgia, known as Operation Paraquet. The first mission, on 22 April, failed; since terrible blizzards trapped the men on a glacier and so three helicopters were sent in to recover them, however one helicopter crashed while taking off, so the other two took on its crew and soldiers, dumping some fuel to compensate for the extra weight. By this time, it was almost impossible for the pilots to see, so one helicopter which was equipped with radar flew ahead of the other, however this aircraft crashed onto a small ridge, and did not respond to radio transmission. The other helicopter then came back to the crash site, but it was impossible to land, so they managed to hook up radio links and confirmed that there were no serious casualties, before returning to their ship (HMS Antrim) and returning when there was a break in the weather. The pilot was awarded the DSO.

On the 23 April 2 section of the SBS inserted by helicopter, along with men from Boat Troop, D Squadron of 22 SAS. Two of the five boats from D Squadron suffered engine failure, the passengers from one swam to shore while a helicopter picked up the others. The troops went back, however the next day, more troops were dropped in and the original units went in by helicopter. This group then marched to the main settlement on the island, which surrendered as soon as they reached it. Another enemy position at Leith also surrendered, and the missing SAS patrol (which had swum to shore) was picked up by helicopter from the south of the island.

To cover the main landing at San Carlos Bay, the night before it was due to take place 60 men, again from D Squadron, attacked the large Argentine garrison at Goose Green. They used machine-guns and missiles to pretend to the enemy that they were a whole battalion attacking (similar, in fact, to the later attack by 2 PARA on that location). Early in the morning, when they heard that the landing at San Carlos had gone ahead, they pulled out.

The Raid on Pebble Island

One of the most valuable SAS missions of the campaign was the raid on the night of the 14-15 May at Pebble Island. Pebble Island is just a little north of West Falkland, and was home to eleven aircraft. Captain Gavin 'John' Hamilton lead twenty of D Squadron's Mountain Troop to attack the airstrip, with support from HMS Glamorgan. The area was bombarded with naval gunfire, mortars, M203s (an Armalite M16 with a grenade launcher attached) and 66s (single-shot anti-tank weapons) to drive the enemy to cover, as usual making the enemy believe that the attack was far bigger than it was, and then explosives were fixed to the aircraft, before the SAS withdrew. All of the aircraft were destroyed, dealing a huge blow to the Argentine air force.

The Skirmish At Many Branch Point


This was not enough for the Captain, however, was not enough, and he took command of one of the five bricks inserted into West Falkland to report on the enemy garrisons there. Captain Hamilton had only been serving for five months, and he had already managed to secure command of Mountain Troop, G Squadron. He had taken his men down to Port Howard, on the south-east of the island, however the Argentines had an elite unit in the area which were patrolling the area.

Hamilton and his men had a well-established OP (observation point) overlooking Port Howard, in a small cave. This was against protocol, since a cave is 'obvious cover' and so is likely to be checked by the enemy, but the cold was a factor and so that was probably a chief element in Hamilton's decision. A patrol under the command of one Lieutenant José Duarte was going past when they heard whispered voices behind the rocks, and they congregated in front of them.

The Argentines spotted a dark-skinned man (the patrol signaller) wearing a balaclava, but did not shoot because his uniform was (deliberately) similar to Argentine uniforms. The lieutenant shouted '¿Argentinos o Ingleses?' to the man, just in case he was an unknown friendly soldier. After there was no reaction (the man kept silent to draw out the silence and buy time for two of his patrol to escape) he shouted, in English, 'Hands up! Hands up!'

His response was a three-shot burst, which hit the rocks in front of him. The argentines sent in two grenades, which caused a British soldier (probably the captain) to fire his M203 [grenade launcher]. The Argentines opened fire in force.

Two of Hamilton's men escaped and hid themselves, but Hamilton and his signaller, a corporal, were pinned down on the ridge. Hamilton was wounded, but told his comrade to try and escape while he laid down automatic fire. He was killed shortly afterward, the signaller was captured but the other two men, who had decided not to intervene, were rescued by British troops. It is important to not demonise the two men for failing to assist their CO - the survival of the patrol comes before any of its members, and by surviving and getting evacuated they were able to pass on all of their information to command, although there are many troopers who would have tried to get their commander out of that situation. When Port Howard was captured by the British, Captain Howard was awarded the MC (Military Cross) on the recommendation of Lieutenant Duarte. It is a sad consequence of the way that the SAS operates that the Victoria Cross is almost never awarded, since the act that wins it must be witnessed by an officer and there is very rarely more than one SAS officer in one place, so actions which would win the VC tend to win the MC or, in exceptional cases, the DCM (Distinguished Conduct Medal).

Mopping Up

The SAS were also used for recon duties on East Falkland. Until 26 May, they used the strategic point of Mount Kent, about 65km behind the main enemy lines, as their FOB (Forward Operating Base). This continued until the Argentines moved away to Goose Green, when 3 Commando Brigade moved in to take it, however they were forced back by severe weather. On 31 May, K Company 42 Commando and 2 SAS officers moved into the area, about 2 miles from the summit of Mount Kent, when they saw a firefight in progress. They decided to unload their kit, and while they were doing so the firefight finished. Fearing an enemy attack, they took cover when an SAS major appeared and told them all was well - the SAS had destroyed an enemy platoon in the area.

The last major SAS raid of the war was mounted in East Falkland on the night of 14th June. This involved attacking the Argentinean rear while 2 Para assaulted Wireless Ridge, just a few kilometres west of Port Stanley. A total of 60 men from D and G Squadrons and six men from the SAS, using rigid raiders to assault Port Stanley harbour, set fire to the oil tanks while laying down suppressive fire. The islands were returned to British control; the SAS having played a vital role in that effort.

Northern Ireland


From the early stages of the problems in Northern Ireland, known as Operation Banner in the British Army, the SAS were deployed to Ulster. At first, from their insertion in 1969, they patrolled openly and wore the beret and cap badge, however soon they started working undercover and dealing with terrorism. During their operations they worked closely with police and national security agencies, which gave them access to information about enemy ambushes and positions.

It was SOP (standard operating procedure) during the operation that terrorists were deemed to always be a threat to soldiers and civilians alike if alive, and therefore armed terrorists were almost beyond exception shot dead. This did create some situations where innocent people died, causing some controversy and helping the republican cause somewhat.

The SAS were allowed by non-interference to cross the border to chase down the IRA, although this was technically an act of war, During one such mission, they captured an IRA commander, Seán MacKenna, and gave him over to the main British Army across the border. During the 1970s the IRA started attacking British forces in Europe, leading to SAS operations in Germany and Gibraltar.

Operation Flavius

Operation Flavius was not actually fought in Northern Ireland - it happened against the PIRA (Provisional Irish Republican Army) in Gibraltar. In March 1988, they received word that three men from the PIRA were planning to plant a bomb and detonate it to kill a military band that would be playing for the changing of the guard at the Convent, where the governor lives.

By the time that the SAS had got there, they had been told that the bomb was already planted and that the three PIRA men were just waiting to detonate it. This was not actually the case; they had been misinformed possibly by the Irish police. The SAS stopped them on the road intending to arrest them, but when they made moves towards bags and pockets they were shot dead. A car with the bomb in was later found about 60 miles away in Spain.

The Gulf War

The Gulf War began when Iraq, in 1991, marched troops into Kuwait. An international coalition was put together to drive him out, mostly lead by the US but the second-largest force was British, under the command of General Sir Peter de la Billière, a former member of 22 SAS and Director UK Special Forces during the Iranian Embassy siege. He was and still is hugely popular among the men of the SAS; he is known as DLB and credited with getting the SAS their huge role in the Gulf War. Even though he was meant to be retiring, he managed to convince General Norman Schwarzkopf, the overall coalition OC, to use special forces (Schwarzkopf had a low opinion of them thanks to his time in Vietnam).

The main role of the SAS in that war was to gather intelligence, reconnaissance the ground, and crucially to locate and destroy Scud launchers. The Scud is a weapon that launches either an explosive or an NBC (Nuclear, Biological or Chemical) round, and although it is very inaccurate their use was threatening to draw Israel into the war, which could have split the alliance up. There were many such patrols - including three of the same 'group': Bravo One Zero (B10), Bravo Two Zero (B20) and Bravo Three Zero (B30). The number denotes the call sign - the identification of the unit, used in signalling.

The SAS were hugely successful. By the end of January, the Scuds had stopped firing and they had scored a massive victory for the coalition.

Bravo Two Zero

The ill-fated patrol Bravo Two Zero deserves a special mention here. The mission's objective was twofold: to locate and destroy landline communications (the means by which Scud was taking communications from HQ) near an MSR (Main Supply Route) in north-western Iraq, and then to locate and destroy mobile Scud TELs (transporter-erector-launchers).

There has been much controversy over the events, and I don't really want to get into the argument, even behind a pseudonym. I will however say that I trust what 'Andy McNab' said to be his recollection of events, but that what the patrol went through would have possibly done things to their memories, and I would imagine that they didn't manage to get everything said in the debrief to the mission. You also need to bear in mind that it may have been difficult to tell, for example, the difference between armed civilians and soldiers. The only damnation of anything written in the books I will give is that everyone who came back from the patrol said that 'David Vincent', the patrol 2IC (second in command), did not compromise the patrol; he behaved as an SAS soldier is expected to at all times.

Bravo Two Zero was an eight-man unit. The patrol was under the command of 'Andy McNab', a former member of the Royal Green Jackets, a sergeant, and an exceptional soldier who had so far enjoyed a stellar career. This was his first mission in command of a patrol. The 2IC was another sergeant, 'David Vincent', a huge Swindon man who had been in the regiment for a very long time. He had come from the Royal Ordinance Corps, making him a rarity (non-combat arms soldiers rarely pass selection). Corporal 'Chris Ryan' was another member of the patrol, a former member of the territorial SAS. The signaller was a fairly fresh recruit from the Parachute Regiment, 'John Stevens', and the other patrol members were 'Mike Coburn', formerly NZSAS,' Malcolm MacGown'; an Australian, 'Bobby Swiss', a Royal Marine who had transferred to the Parachute Regiment to join the SAS, and 'Ian Pring', of the Parachute Regiment. I have changed the names of the dead soldiers; an SAS trooper is never identified unless he chooses to be.

The patrol needed to carry more than 100 kilograms of kit per man, and so they decided that they couldn't tab with it, then needed some sort of vehicle. Despite the traditional SAS school of thought (mobility is one of the most valuable assets a patrol can have) and the advice of B Squadron OC and the RSM ( regimental sergeant-major) 'Peter Ratcliffe', the patrol decided on being dropped in by helicopter and tabbing to the MSR, taking out the communications, then locating and destroying the Scud launchers.

They dropped in by Chinook late on 22 January, and then moved on course for the MSR. They moved about 2 km on the first night, which was meant to be 20km (McNab places it there) but there was a navigational error by the RAF, meaning that they were dropped too close. On the first night they found out that their patrol radio was faulty; this was probably an oversight either on the part of Stevens, who was in charge of the signalling kit, or McNab who should have ensured that all checks had been carried out.

The patrol continued on objective until the afternoon of 24 January, when they were spotted by a shepherd and a bulldozer, which they believed to have been an APC (armoured personnel carrier). They were later attacked by a large number of Iraqi soldiers and two APCs. After firing LAWs (single-shot anti-tank weapons), they went forward in a standard section attack drill, breaking the enemy and scoring a mobility kill on one of the APCs, which they destroyed when they reached its location by putting a grenade in. They then pulled back, under fire from S60 AA guns.

The patrol exfiltrated west towards Syria, on the advice of the OC B Squadron but against their own plans, so the SAS back at HQ assumed that they were heading south, as they planned, to Saudi Arabia. They were on foot, since they had decided that vehicles were not suited for a fixed-OP mission (they are hard, though not impossible, to camouflage).

All was going reasonably well until that night, when the patrol tried to use TACBE (TACtical BEacon) to contact a passing aircraft. The SOP is for the IC to give the signal to halt, and then for each man to pass it down the line (which can be very long and so, combined with the darkness, can make it impossible for a man to see further than the man in front of him). However, Vincents had hypothermia and so failed to pass the signal on (although it should have been McNab's job, as the patrol commander, to ensure that the signal was passed on) which caused him, Ryan and MacGown to advance ahead of the rest of the patrol.

On the night of the 25th, the patrol 2IC, David Vincents, who was already suffering severe hypothermia, became unable to hold his weapon. His condition got rapidly worse, and about 2000 hours he was separated from the rest of his group. After an hour-long search which returned nothing, the other two realised that he was dead and continued on. The next day, MacGown went to capture vehicles, but after killing many enemy troops ran out of ammunition and was taken prisoner, leaving only Ryan to carry on. Vincents had been something of a legend in the SAS, being one of the few men to ever have the right to wear the 'big three' Parachute Regiment, Commando and SAS berets (he had served in the ROC, Parachute Regiment, 3 Commando Brigade and the SAS) and had been in the Parachute Regiment cross-country team. If ever there was a soldier whose name should not be dishonoured, it was Vince.

McNab's group then captured a taxi, and drove west to the border. At a border checkpoint, they were forced to try and escape - Swiss was killed by armed civilians, Stevens escaped but died of hypothermia, and all of the others were captured. Chris Ryan escaped to Syria, and the others were interred and tortured horrifically for months, until they were released on March 5. Prisoners shown on the television as 'special forces' were in fact aircrew who had agreed to provide cover for the patrol. For their conduct on the patrol Ryan, Swiss and Stevens were awarded the MM (the MC for other ranks) and McNab received the DCM. Chris Ryan, although his account was far from reliable, had made the largest Escape and Evasion in British Army history. Anyone interested in learning more is advised to read Soldier Five by Mike Coburn, but steer clear of Chris Ryan's book.

Afghanistan and Iraq

The SAS first got involved in Afghanistan as part of Operation Trent, in which they attacked an Al-Qaeda command post which was also a multi-million pound opium facility. They also fought alongside the Americans at the battle of Tora Bora, in which they attacked and defeated - but failed to capture or kill - Osama bin Laden.


They carried out operations against insurgents in Iraq as well; and the first time that they made the news was in 2005, when an RAF Hercules that had dropped off 50 men from G Squadron north of Baghdad was shot down by MANPAD (MAN Portabe Air Defence).

On 23 March 2006 B Squadron assisted in an operation to free British hostage Norman Kember from a town north of Baghdad in Iraq. Most information about the actions of the SAS in the middle east recently is classified.

The Regiment Today



Current Roles

Recently, the work of the SAS has been far less 'green' than selection and training would suggest. Their roles still do include battlefield reconnaissance and 'battle space preparation', meaning operating to destroy the enemy's capability to fight well in an actual battle, but generally they carry out operations of the counter-terrorist sort, whether inside Britain itself or far away. They also train unconventional combatants in their art and fight against them, depending on how the UK's foreign policy is aligned. Each squadron (A, B, D and G) is broken down into four troops - Air (although all SAS troopers are parachute-trained, Air Troop take it to a fine art, learning both HALO (High Altitude Low Opening) and HAHO (High Altitude High Opening) jump techniques. Generally, the troops in this troop are former Parachute Regiment or RAF Regiment), Boat (experts in operating at sea and from boats; sometimes these men train alongside the SBS. This is the popular destination for Royal Marines.), Mobility (trained in operating basically anything with wheels and in maintaining them) and Mountain (another popular RM spot; as the name implies they are trained in arctic and high-altitude warfare. They are typically very good soldiers to have at your side - John Hamilton came from Mountain Troop). A soldier goes into one of these based on his own existing skills and the needs of the Regiment at the time

Selection

SAS selection is justifiably incredibly difficult. Out of about 125 men who normally enter for selection, ten can expect to pass. It should be noted that only experienced soldiers can apply to enter, and that there is no quota for selection - if no man is adequate for regimental duty then all of them will be RTU'd (returned to their original unit), and if everyone is deemed adequate then everyone will be taken into the regiment, or 'badged'.

The first part of the selection process is the endurance stage. This is designed to test a soldier's physical and mental ability to endure difficult tasks, mostly long marches with heavy loads. This is vital in SAS work, since every soldier needs to carry a heavy load and tab a long distance - for example, a patrol wanting to set up an LUP for two weeks can expect to carry over 100 kilos per man in food, weapons, ammunition and supplies for the LUP.

During this stage, candidates are dropped for three weeks in the Brecon Beacons and the Black Hills, in Wales, and they will be tested on a large number of progressively longer hikes with ever-increasing loads on their backs. This process includes the 'Fan Dance'; a 24 km trek over the highest peak in the beacons, Pen y Fan, with a load of 35 pounds. The exercise must be completed in four hours.

The SAS selection course is very different to any other army selection course in that the instructors - known as the DS - do nothing to encourage the candidates. In other regiments, they will shout abuse or encouragement to get soldiers through - in the SAS, a trooper must motivate himself. Never is this more true than at the end of this phase of selection - the 'long drag', a 40 mile tab with a 55 pound bergen. This must be done in 24 hours.

Those who have passed the endurance phase have to then pass jungle training. Training takes place in Belize, in the heart of deep jungles. Candidates learn the basics of surviving and patrolling in the harsh conditions. SAS jungle patrols have to live for weeks behind enemy lines, normally in bricks. Jungle training weeds out those who can't handle the discipline required to keep themselves and their kit in good condition whilst on long range patrol in difficult conditions. Again, there is a major mental component being tested, not just a physical. The SAS needs men who can work under relentless pressure, in horrendous environments for weeks on end, completely independently.

If you survive this, you enter the last phase of selection proper. There is a fairly good chance that an SAS mission will be compromised, and therefore troopers need to be able to escape from the enemy and, if captured, must not compromise other units or higher objectives. For the Escape and Evasion (E&E) phase, troopers are generally given some briefing - generally advice at this stage is limited to 'play the grey man'; meaning that if you are caught your objective is to appear not worth questioning, but not worth killing (which is good advice for all of selection). This often means that serving or former SAS personnel who have been in this situation for real give a brief lecture.

Candidates are then set off in groups wearing greatcoats, and they have to go through a set of checkpoints. They are pursued by about a company of men, normally from the Household Division, with helicopter support. They must evade them for three days, and then (whether or not they were captured) are subject to 'tactical questioning' - an interrogation including light torture.
The TQ phase is the most mentally stressful part of selection. Interrogators try to simulate a real interrogation, often with slaps to the face, dead legs and other short-lasting inflictions of pain, and they will try to weaken your resolve by making you stand in uncomfortable positions for hours on end, playing loud music and occasionally 'beating' you. They will question troopers, and the trooper must respond with either their name, rank, date of birth or number (the big four) or 'I'm sorry, [sir], I cannot answer that question'. If you give out any information other than the big four, you fail. Interrogators will try various tricks to get you to impart information - a favourite is to hand the trooper a jacket or something, and say 'if this information is true, keep the jacket'. The general trick is to say as little as possible, pretend to be stupid, take any food or water offered, and never sign anything or say an answer that could answer another question. One of the things that troops are told is that if you are asked 'do you want some food?' and you reply 'yes', the enemy will replace the question with 'did you murder a village full of children?'. Eventually the trooper will be told that the exercise is over, normally by the doctor (who takes no part in selection other than medical roles, including immediately before the TQ, so that a soldier can trust anything that he says).

Insignia


The famous cap badge is a flaming sword (meant to be Excalibur of Arthurian legend, although some have claimed it to be the sword of Damocles) pointing towards the bottom of the badge. This is placed on top of a crusader-style shield. Uniquely in the British army, it is usual for other ranks of the regiment to wear the badge in cloth, sewn into the beret. Originally the beret was white, but to reflect the regiment's origins it was changed to sand-coloured. Finally, members wear distinctive 'wings' (the badge to show competence in use of a parachute) which are in fact the ancient Egyptian Ibis wings. Attached personnel, for example Royal Engineers and clerks, wear the sandy beret but keep the badge of their own corps.

Today, the SAS is probably the finest regiment in the world; versatile and generally capable at anything that they are asked to do. Perhaps nothing sums them up so well as the text on their memorial at Credenhill, which every new trooper is made to memorise, from The Golden Journey to Samarkand:

But who are ye in rags and rotten shoes, you dirty-bearded, blocking up the way?

We are the Pilgrims, master: we shall go
Always a little further: it may be
Beyond that last blue mountain barred with snow
Across that angry or that glimmering sea
 
:goodjob: very good read
 
Great stuff FP. Thanks for sharing.
 
Nice article. I had meant to get to it sooner, but it slipped my mind.

Question, you say "can expect to carry over 100 kilos per man in food, weapons, ammunition and supplies for the LUP." 100 kilos is 220 pounds. How is that possible?
 
I'm glad it's held in that much awe - unfortunatly, my sums are right. I remember one patrol where I had 260 lb (not counting two rifles and a pistol), and that was for a month. If, as is often the case, a unit is expected to insert, observe a position for an extended period of time and retain capablity to engage a roughly section to platoon scale attack you need a lot of kit. Most of that is LUP equipment (sandbags, claymores etc) and ammo (the good thing about SAS kit is that it almost all of it loads the 5.56 round, which is nice and light, and the weapons are a lot lighter than standard ones). Bravo Two Zero (the famous patrol with Andy McNab) carried about 250lb, although it was suggested by some of the other men (including the squadron OC) that they should have taken Land Rovers (or pinkies, as they are known) to carry it and maintain an effective pace. It depends on the mission - as I said, they decided taht they would probably not be able to conceal the machines (although I personally would have dropped them off a day's tab away from the LUP, then had them picked up by a heli).
 
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