Beyond No Mean Soldier: The Explosive Recollections of a Former Special Forces Operator

Beyond No Mean Soldier: The Explosive Recollections of a Former Special Forces Operator

by PeterMcaleese (Author)

Synopsis

Peter McAleese needs little introduction... His classic book No Mean Soldier was an immediate bestseller and set the bar for the modern military memoir. Few have since met its match. This completely revised and expanded edition sees a philosophical McAleese revisiting his time with Britain's Parachute Regiment, the SAS, Rhodesia's SAS and the South African Defence Force's 44 Para Brigade. Oh, and a few other adventures in and between - Colombia, private military companies and near fatal skydiving accidents; mercenary, soldier of fortune or flawed ideologist? Now's your time to consider this and more - as has McAleese himself. It's a compelling read - and with the addition of previously unpublished photos from McAleese's private collection, there's no other way to describe it. Beyond No Mean Soldier does exactly that, going deep and further beyond the experience of No Mean Soldier . Over many months and into the early hours, McAleese reflected on his wide and expansive experiences - the men he's served with and the operations he'd conducted. Here in startling detail are the Aden insurgency, covert operations with the Rhodesian SAS and one of the first ever operational HALO inserts in British military history. Heart pumping assaults on SWAPO positions with 44 Para's Pathfinder Company and the sheer terror of flawed mercenary operations in Angola with the likes of 'Colonel Callan'; near death in Colombia when an assassination attempt went terribly wrong. McAleese recounts all of this with amazing clarity and even more humility. 'I'm just an ordinary person who happened to find himself doing extraordinary things' he says. Yes, perhaps that's true to a point, but what rides through all of McAleese's narrative is his total commitment to the profession of arms - soldiering. His attention to detail, his consummate knowledge of military skills from field craft to skill at arms; airborne operations to the tactics of small unit SAS operations.... All of this echoed by the commentary of the numerous individuals that served with McAleese. From around the world, dozens have contributed perspective, commentary and reflection. Pete does not take fools gladly and this is based upon his comprehensive combat experience where idiots will cause casualties Alistair Mackenzie - Former 22 SAS Officer. I managed to get myself into some very nasty but also exciting scraps while latching on to the Pathfinders to see how they were shaping up as the so-called 'Philistines'. They did excellently while under fire, proof that Peter's selection and training regime paid high dividends Colonel Jan Breytenbach - Former Commander 44 Para Brigade Pathfinder Company, Founder 32 Battalion. These are just two of the contributions featured in Beyond No Mean Soldier . In an age where we debate courage and leadership, it's all here. Go Beyond No Mean Soldier, it will certainly change the way you see soldiering.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 296
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Helion and Company
Published: 30 Mar 2015

ISBN 10: 1910294012
ISBN 13: 9781910294017

Author Bio
Originally from Glasgow, Peter McAleese found a way out of the slums by joining the British Army. He joined the Parachute Regiment and found himself in the Mortar Platoon - traditionally the hardest platoon in any Battalion. He went onto the SAS and saw action in Borneo before being sent back to the Parachute Regiment in disgrace for fighting... Things started to go wrong after he was demobbed from the army, when he found himself detained once or twice at Her Majesty's pleasure. On release, he endured the horrors of the Angolan civil war as a hired gun where many of his colleagues were murdered at the hand of Colonel Callan and his associates. Service in the Rhodesian SAS followed and thereafter, South Africa's 44 Para Brigade, where he saw extensive action in the, then, South West Africa, now Namibia. Security work in South Africa followed. Here McAleese was to dice even closer with death when his canopy failed during an exhibition skydive. Lucky to retain the use of his legs and troubled by injuries that still persist today, McAleese went on to an assassination 'job' where his helicopter crashed, leaving him injured and stranded on a mountain for three days. From this, he moved to a private military company working in Algeria for eleven years. Now residing in Birmingham in the UK, McAleese is quietly planning his next adventure. From the maps spread put on his desk, it looks like it could be the Middle East.