David Stirling: The Phoney Major: The Life, Times and Truth about the Founder of the SAS

David Stirling: The Phoney Major: The Life, Times and Truth about the Founder of the SAS

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Author: Gavin Mortimer

Format: Hardback

Number of Pages: 448


Aristocrat, gambler, innovator and special forces legend, the life of David Stirling should need no retelling. His formation of the Special Air Service in the summer of 1941 led to a new form of warfare and Stirling is remembered as the father of special forces soldiering. But was he really a military genius or in fact a shameless self-publicist who manipulated people, and the truth, for this own ends? In this gripping and controversial biography Gavin Mortimer analyses Stirling's complex character: the childhood speech impediment that shaped his formative years, the pressure from his overbearing mother, his fraught relationship with his brother, Bill, and the jealousy and inferiority he felt in the presence of his SAS second-in-command, the cold-blooded killer Paddy Mayne. Stirling lived until old age, receiving a knighthood and plaudits from military forces around the world before his death in 1990. Yet as Mortimer dazzlingly shows, while Stirling was instrumental in selling the SAS to Churchill and senior officers, it was Mayne who really carried the regiment in the early days. Stirling was at best an incompetent soldier and at worst a foolhardy one, who jeopardised his men's live with careless talk and hare-brained missions. Drawing on interviews with SAS veterans who fought with Stirling and men who worked with him on his post-war projects, and examining recently declassified governments files about Stirling's involvement in Aden, Libya and GB75, Mortimer's riveting biography is incisive, bold, honest and written with his customary narrative panache. Impeccably researched and with the courage to challenge the mythical SAS 'brand', Mortimer brings to bear his unparalleled expertise as WW2's premier special forces historian to dig beneath the legend and reveal the real David Stirling, a man who dared and deceived.



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S
Stephen Hay
The true brains and brawn of the SAS revealed, and neither of them belonged to David Stirling

I was spurred to buy the book after watching the [mercifully] short series "Rogue Heroes" in which Blair "Paddy" Mayne was portrayed as a working class catholic sometime poacher and full time drunkard and thug. Nothing could be further from the truth, and whilst there is for me no shame in being working class it certainly does not apply to Mayne, who was upper middle class, protestant and a practicing solicitor. It goes deeper. The SAS was not the brainchild of David Stirling but of his eldest brother William. William turned control of the SAS to David in the hope that he would make it a success, he having failed at just about everything else except for one thing, selling, and chiefly selling himself. Under David's control the SAS became a "boys club" full of upper class fops and twits, many of whom had absolutely no talent for warfare or leadership. Enter "Paddy" Mayne, a man with almost a surplus in talent for leadership, planning and warfare. A man who very much led from the front and took care of the men under his command. In fact David Stirling became so jealous of Mayne he relegated him to training in the hope that he, Stirling, had a change of equaling Mayne's record of success. Under Mayne's command (after Stirling being taken prisoner in the most embarrassing of circumstances) the SAS went from strength to strength. Post war Stirling interfered enough to see the SAS become mercenaries, prostituting them for his own gain.
And lastly, the German's never called him the Phantom Major, that nickname Stirling made up for himself.

B
Bruce Paton
Great read

Informative, illuminating and entertaining

I
Ian Stiles
Exposed at last

A well researched book by a respected author of British Special Forces on the life of David Stirling who wrongly received the glory of creating the Special Air Service. Ian Bagzar Stiles 2 x Tours of South Vietnam with 3 SAS Sqn and member of C Sqn Rhodesian SAS 1973-75

Description
Author: Gavin Mortimer

Format: Hardback

Number of Pages: 448


Aristocrat, gambler, innovator and special forces legend, the life of David Stirling should need no retelling. His formation of the Special Air Service in the summer of 1941 led to a new form of warfare and Stirling is remembered as the father of special forces soldiering. But was he really a military genius or in fact a shameless self-publicist who manipulated people, and the truth, for this own ends? In this gripping and controversial biography Gavin Mortimer analyses Stirling's complex character: the childhood speech impediment that shaped his formative years, the pressure from his overbearing mother, his fraught relationship with his brother, Bill, and the jealousy and inferiority he felt in the presence of his SAS second-in-command, the cold-blooded killer Paddy Mayne. Stirling lived until old age, receiving a knighthood and plaudits from military forces around the world before his death in 1990. Yet as Mortimer dazzlingly shows, while Stirling was instrumental in selling the SAS to Churchill and senior officers, it was Mayne who really carried the regiment in the early days. Stirling was at best an incompetent soldier and at worst a foolhardy one, who jeopardised his men's live with careless talk and hare-brained missions. Drawing on interviews with SAS veterans who fought with Stirling and men who worked with him on his post-war projects, and examining recently declassified governments files about Stirling's involvement in Aden, Libya and GB75, Mortimer's riveting biography is incisive, bold, honest and written with his customary narrative panache. Impeccably researched and with the courage to challenge the mythical SAS 'brand', Mortimer brings to bear his unparalleled expertise as WW2's premier special forces historian to dig beneath the legend and reveal the real David Stirling, a man who dared and deceived.