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Portuguese Commandos - Feared Insurgent Hunters, 1961-1974 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R471
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Portuguese Commandos - Feared Insurgent Hunters, 1961-1974 (Paperback)
Series: Africa@War
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List price R583
Loot Price R471
Discovery Miles 4 710
You Save R112 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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During the 13-year insurgency (1961-74) in Portuguese Africa, more
than 800,000 men and women served in the Portuguese armed forces.
Of this number, about 9,000 served as commandos (or about 1
percent). Yet their combat losses 357 dead, 28 missing in action
and 771 wounded represented 11.5 percent of the total casualties (a
percentage 10 times that of normal troops). It is well established
that these warriors were responsible for the elimination of more
insurgents and capturing more of their weapons than any other force
during the war. Great pains were taken to stay abreast of the
latest enemy operational methods and maintain the 'warrior edge' in
the force. This edge, in essence, was an approach to fighting that
pushed the commandos always to think of themselves as the hunter
rather than the hunted. Officers returning from contact with the
enemy were rigorously debriefed, and commando instructors regularly
participated in operations to learn of the latest enemy
developments. This information was integrated with intelligence
from other sources gathered by the military and national
intelligence services, and from this current knowledge, training
was constantly revised to remain attuned to the enemy and his
behaviour. The commandos became a breed apart - and their
reputation was such that when insurgents discovered a unit deployed
into their area, they would generally withdraw until the killers
left. This commando training - and its sympathy with the fighting
environment - made the commandos the most effective ground force in
the Portuguese Army. The commandos were expert practitioners in the
art of counterinsurgency, and their practice of destroying the
enemy in great numbers quickly and quietly served as inspiration
not only to South Africa and Rhodesia, but to the enemy himself.
This is the story of the Portuguese commandos: their beginnings,
their unique operations and their legacy and influence in
subsequent sister units such as the Buffalo Battalion of South
Africa.
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