Author: | Venter Al J. | ISBN: | 9781935149934 |
Publisher: | Casemate | Publication: | April 21, 2008 |
Imprint: | Casemate | Language: | English |
Author: | Venter Al J. |
ISBN: | 9781935149934 |
Publisher: | Casemate |
Publication: | April 21, 2008 |
Imprint: | Casemate |
Language: | English |
Mercenaries have been with us since the dawn of civilization yet in the modern world they are little understood. While many of today's freelance fighters provide support for larger military establishments others wage war where the great powers refuse to tread. In War Dog Al Venter examines the latter world of mercenary fighters effecting decisions by themselves. In the process he unveils a remarkable array of close-quarters combat action. Having personally visited every locale he describes throughout Africa and the Middle East Venter is the rare correspondent who had to carry an AK-47 in his research along with his notebook and camera. To him covering mercenary actions meant accompanying the men into the thick of combat. During Sierra Leone's civil war he flew in the front bubble of the government's lone Hind gunship piloted by the heroic chopper ace "Nellis" as it flew daily missions to blast apart rebel positions. In this book the author not only describes the battles of the legendary South African mercenary company Executive Outcomes he knew the founders personally and joined them on a number of actions. After stemming the tide of Jonas Savimbi's UNITA army in Angola (an outfit many of the SA operators had previously trained) Executive Outcomes headed north to hold back vicious rebels in West Africa. This book is not only about triumph against adversity but also losses as Venter relates the death and subsequent cannibalistic fate of his American friend Bob MacKenzie in Sierra Leone. Here we see the plight of thousands of civilians fleeing from homicidal jungle warriors as well as the professionalism of the mercenaries who fought back with one hand and attempted to train government troops with the other in hopes that they would someday be able to stand on their own. The American public as well as its military largely sidestepped the horrific conflicts that embroiled Africa during the past two decades. But as Venter informs us there were indeed small numbers of professional fighters on the ground defending civilians and attempting to conjure order from chaos. In the process their heroism went unrecorded and their combat skill became known only to each other.
Mercenaries have been with us since the dawn of civilization yet in the modern world they are little understood. While many of today's freelance fighters provide support for larger military establishments others wage war where the great powers refuse to tread. In War Dog Al Venter examines the latter world of mercenary fighters effecting decisions by themselves. In the process he unveils a remarkable array of close-quarters combat action. Having personally visited every locale he describes throughout Africa and the Middle East Venter is the rare correspondent who had to carry an AK-47 in his research along with his notebook and camera. To him covering mercenary actions meant accompanying the men into the thick of combat. During Sierra Leone's civil war he flew in the front bubble of the government's lone Hind gunship piloted by the heroic chopper ace "Nellis" as it flew daily missions to blast apart rebel positions. In this book the author not only describes the battles of the legendary South African mercenary company Executive Outcomes he knew the founders personally and joined them on a number of actions. After stemming the tide of Jonas Savimbi's UNITA army in Angola (an outfit many of the SA operators had previously trained) Executive Outcomes headed north to hold back vicious rebels in West Africa. This book is not only about triumph against adversity but also losses as Venter relates the death and subsequent cannibalistic fate of his American friend Bob MacKenzie in Sierra Leone. Here we see the plight of thousands of civilians fleeing from homicidal jungle warriors as well as the professionalism of the mercenaries who fought back with one hand and attempted to train government troops with the other in hopes that they would someday be able to stand on their own. The American public as well as its military largely sidestepped the horrific conflicts that embroiled Africa during the past two decades. But as Venter informs us there were indeed small numbers of professional fighters on the ground defending civilians and attempting to conjure order from chaos. In the process their heroism went unrecorded and their combat skill became known only to each other.