by Shaun Clarke
The so-called ‘Confrontation’ in Borneo had shown the necessity of having troops who could solve the unique problems raised by an ‘undeclared’ war where British forces could not overtly take the fight into enemy territory. It also confirmed once and for all that the kind of hearts-and-minds campaign devised by the SAS in Malaya could work wonders where direct military action was not a viable option.
As with every SAS campaign, the men who took part in the Confrontation in Borneo were affected by it in different ways.
The ‘newcomer’, Terry Malkin, returning from Borneo as a toughened, experienced trooper, was sent almost immediately to take part in the counter-insurgency campaign in Aden. There he became one of that legendary group of men who, disguised as Arabs, infiltrated the souks and bazaars to assassinate leading members of the National Liberation Front by use of the ‘double tap’ – firing a 9mm Browning High Power handgun at close range – as part of the daring ‘Keeni Meeni’ operations.
Corporal Alf Laughton, who had survived the horrors of the Telok Anson swamp in Malaya approximately five years before his Borneo experience, was deeply shocked by the loss of his best friend, Pete Welsh, and emotionally drained by his two gruelling campaigns. At his own request he was sent for treatment to ‘the thinking man’s Belsen’ – Ward 11 of the British Army Psychiatric Unit – where he was gradually coaxed out of his depression and returned to the regiment to become a ruthlessly efficient member of the Directing Staff at 22 SAS Training Wing, Hereford.
Like Corporal Laughton, Sergeant Richard Parker had physically survived the horrors of both jungle campaigns, but was psychologically scarred by his experiences, as well as by the loss of so many good friends. Eschewing psychiatric help, Dead-eye solved his problems in his own way, mainly by spending most of his spare time alone, reading books on military theory, and by training himself to live without the need for friends who might be killed in battle. In 1972, by then dubbed ‘Soldier C’ by some snooping journalists, he was one of those who took part in the fight to clear the fanatical Adoo guerrillas from the summit of the mighty Jebel Dhofar in Oman. He survived that as well.
‘Tell me in one sentence,’ Terry Malkin said in the Paludrine Club in the SAS base at Hereford, just before they were shipped out to Aden, ‘how you’ve managed to survive all that shit.’
‘Who dares wins,’ Dead-eye told him.
Discover other books in the SAS Series
Discover other books in the SAS Series published by Bloomsbury at
www.bloomsbury.com/SAS
Soldier A: Behind Iraqi Lines
Soldier B: Heroes of the South Atlantic
Soldier C: Secret War in Arabia
Soldier D: The Colombian Cocaine War
Soldier E: Sniper Fire in Belfast
Soldier F: Guerillas in the Jungle
Soldier G: The Desert Raiders
Soldier H: The Headhunters of Borneo
Soldier J: Counter Insurgency in Aden
Soldier K: Mission to Argentina
Soldier L: The Embassy Siege
Soldier M: Invisible Enemy in Kazakhstan
Soldier N: Gambian Bluff
Soldier O: The Bosnian Inferno
Soldier P: Night Fighters in France
Soldier Q: Kidnap the Emperor!
Soldier R: Death on Gibraltar
Soldier S: The Samarkand Hijack
Soldier T: War on the Streets
Soldier U: Bandit Country
Soldier V: Into Vietnam
Soldier W: Guatemala – Journey Into Evil
Soldier X: Operation Takeaway
Soldier Y: Days of the Dead
Soldier Z: For King and Country
This electronic edition published in 2013 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
First published in Great Britain 1993 by Bloomsbury Publishing
Copyright © 1993 Bloomsbury Publishing
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eISBN: 9781408842249
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