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SAS / SIR DAVID STIRLING MEMORIAL 

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Traveling back from Scotland I came across this memorial which turned out to be the SAS / DAVID STIRLING MEMORIAL ..A stunning memorial which remembers the fallen of the special air regiment who gave there lives to uphold the principles of freedom and justice...Sat on the hill of row I was very much taken aback by how peaceful it was ... deff worth a visit if you passing .
wikipedia info
.Second World War and the founding of the SAS[edit]
Lieutenant Colonel Stirling with Lieutenant Edward McDonald and other SAS soldiers in North Africa, 1943
Stirling was commissioned into the Scots Guards on 24 July 1937.[3] At 6 feet 6 inches (1.98 m) with an athletic figure, Stirling was training to climb Mount Everest when the Second World War broke out in September 1939.[4]: 8-10  In June 1940, he volunteered for the new No. 8 (Guards) Commando under Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Laycock, which became part of Force Z (later named "Layforce"). On 1 February 1941, Layforce sailed for the Middle East, in support of the capture of Rhodes, but were soon disbanded after suffering heavy casualties in the Battle of Crete and the Battle of the Litani River. Stirling remained convinced that due to the mechanised nature of war, a small team of highly trained soldiers with the advantage of surprise could attack several targets from the desert in a single night.[4]: 7, 12-13, 23-24 
Believing that taking his idea up the chain of command was unlikely to work, Stirling decided to go straight to the top. On crutches following a parachuting accident, he stealthily entered Middle East headquarters in Cairo (under, through, or over a fence) in an effort to see Commander-in-Chief, Middle East Command General Sir Claude Auchinleck.[5] Spotted by guards, Stirling abandoned his crutches and entered the building, only to come face-to-face with an officer with whom he had previously fallen out. Retreating rapidly, he entered the office of the deputy chief of staff, Major General Neil Ritchie. Stirling explained his plan to Ritchie, immediately after which Ritchie persuaded Auchinleck to allow Stirling to form a new special operations unit. The unit was given the deliberately misleading name "L Detachment, Special Air Service Brigade" to reinforce Dudley Clarke's deception of a parachute brigade existing in North Africa.[4]: 25-28 
Stirling's new special operations unit was, at the outset, short of equipment (particularly tents and related gear) when the unit set up at Kibrit Air Base. The first operation of the new SAS was to steal from a nearby well-equipped New Zealand regiment various supplies including tents, bedding, tables, chairs and a piano. After at least four trips, they had a well-stocked camp.[4]: 34-35 
After a brief period of training, an initial attempt at attacking a German airfield by parachute landing on 16 November 1941 in support of Operation Crusader proved to be disastrous for the unit. Of the original 55 men, some 34 were killed, wounded or captured far from the target, after being blown off course or landing in the wrong area, during one of the biggest storms to hit the region. Escaping only with the help of the Long Range Desert Group (LRDG) - who were designated to pick up the unit after the attack - Stirling agreed that approaching by land under the cover of night would be safer and more effective than parachuting. As quickly as possible he organised raids on ports using this simple method, bluffing through checkpoints at night using the language skills of some of his soldier .Under Stirling's leadership, the Lewes bomb, the first hand-held dual explosive and incendiary device, was invented by Jock Lewes. American Jeeps, which were able to deal with the harsh desert terrain better than other transport, were cut down, adapted and fitted with Vickers K machine guns fore and aft. Stirling also pioneered the use of small groups to escape detection. Finding it difficult to lead from the rear, Stirling often led from the front, his SAS units driving through enemy airfields in the Jeeps to shoot up aircraft and crew.[6]
Members of the 'French Squadron SAS' (1ere Compagnie de Chasseurs Parachutistes) in Tunisia. Previously a company of Free French paratroopers, the French SAS squadron were the first of a range of units 'acquired' by Major Stirling as the SAS expanded.

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25 май 2024

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Комментарии : 33   
@patrickwest3076
@patrickwest3076 Месяц назад
Superb. Been there many a time.Great man Great regiment. THE BEST.
@fergiet18
@fergiet18 Месяц назад
Passed it many times, lovely situation for the statue.
@gavRirvine
@gavRirvine Месяц назад
You should read the book Ben MacIntyre's SAS Rogue Heroes. Been up there many a time
@stevenmoses5807
@stevenmoses5807 Месяц назад
A great man. Look what he gave to England the greatest special forces units on the planet
@user-gn7cm6db2d
@user-gn7cm6db2d Месяц назад
ENGLAND
@bigbird6039
@bigbird6039 Месяц назад
UK Steve 👍
@JohnConnor-jh4xp
@JohnConnor-jh4xp Месяц назад
Gave to britain,a scot.
@gavRirvine
@gavRirvine Месяц назад
You on a fishing trip?
@YARROWS9
@YARROWS9 Месяц назад
He is Scottish mate. The same as Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding. Chief of Fighter command. Battle of Britain. Admiral Andrew Cunningham.CNC Medditerranian Fleet. General Roy Urquhart. Commander British Airborne. Arnhem. Only Two star General to kill an enemy soldier in battle in the war. Give us a bit of credit. All British hands to the pumps.
@readmylisp
@readmylisp Месяц назад
Dunblane.
@andrewashdown3541
@andrewashdown3541 Месяц назад
Appalling man .. nothing good can be said about him
@hamneggs345
@hamneggs345 Месяц назад
Nice boys don't play rock n roll
@Alex-yu3wg
@Alex-yu3wg Месяц назад
And you are a unprincipled arse.
@gavRirvine
@gavRirvine Месяц назад
You thinking about Paddy Maine?
@stevenmoses5807
@stevenmoses5807 Месяц назад
You need a history lesson. Without the sas( long range desert group) the allied forces would have struggled without them as they destroyed so many German airfields and planes which could have been catastrophic for us
@andrewashdown3541
@andrewashdown3541 Месяц назад
@@stevenmoses5807 I did history for 3 years at Manchester, so I don't need a lesson - thankyou. I don't doubt it made a contribution - IMO negligible - but that does not for one moment award him an admirable personality, any more than Stalin winning the war on the Eastern front.
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