Orbost |
06-16-2005 11:56 PM |
Quote:
Originally posted by RoSs_bg2_rox:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Orbost:
Currently re-reading "Bravo Two Zero" by Andy McNab, his true account of a British SAS mission during the first Gulf War that went horribly wrong.
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A good read, I'd say one of his best. There was a documentary on about this before, in dispute of the accuracy of numbers. It was very interesting. The part I find scariest (if indeed it was real) and hardest to believe (not that it really bothers me either way) is when he mentions the tank fire and heavy military fire against 3 guys or how ever many it was, and they were running with their full kit, and they got away, with an army after them basically. </font>[/QUOTE]Early on in the mission they are compromised by a couple of APCs and atruck load of soldiers, which they attack. It was pitch black and the attack evidently took the Iraqis by surprise. In the confusion and darkness the SAS team managed to slip away.
The Bravo Two Zero seems to have developed a mythology of its own. The McNab book was the first. Chris Ryan then wrote the story from his point of view (he was The One That Got Away - the only squad member to escape to Syria), which painted him rather than McNab as the real hero. Then various accounts came out questioning the accuracy of these versions, and suggesting that there may have been substantial exaggeration of the truth. Its hard to know the truth as two of the survivors are now wealthy authors who have a strong vested interest in maintaining the myth.
Returning to the subject of the book. Yes it is well written, and his subsequent fiction books are actually very good. In contrast to Chris Ryan who is a hack writer at best.
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