The unbelievable SAS mission that remained secret for 80 years

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  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025

Комментарии • 760

  • @ronaldfraser2789
    @ronaldfraser2789 3 месяца назад +140

    Respect to all who have served in the sas.
    Glad you guys are on our side.

    • @andydudley1775
      @andydudley1775 3 месяца назад +17

      respect to all servicemen .

    • @John-l3t7g
      @John-l3t7g 21 день назад +1

      Even the ones who murder innocent civilians for fun? Perhaps you should examine your morality?

    • @martinbrown7587
      @martinbrown7587 13 дней назад

      @@John-l3t7g Don't believe everything you you read in the MSM they were not there at the time.

    • @WildBill1992
      @WildBill1992 7 дней назад +2

      @@John-l3t7ggoes without saying, but of course you felt the need to say it.

    • @meganjb10
      @meganjb10 3 дня назад +1

      Were and when ?

  • @TerryKnight-hw3pg
    @TerryKnight-hw3pg 3 месяца назад +111

    My father was in the SAS during WW2 served in France, Belgium, Norway, Holland. I think he would have enjoyed this war story he also had some great stories.

    • @WyeExplorer
      @WyeExplorer 2 месяца назад +12

      Like my father I imagine he was a decent man - we got the best of the bunch. Peace.

    • @HappyBear376
      @HappyBear376 Месяц назад +6

      I am ever so proud of my country.

    • @ohyeah2816
      @ohyeah2816 Месяц назад +7

      My old man too, North Africa and Northern Europe.

    • @TerryKnight-hw3pg
      @TerryKnight-hw3pg Месяц назад

      ​@@ohyeah2816Hi , l was wondering if your Dad ever mentioned being in Norway to accept the U boat crew's surrender as they came in after the war was over ,also did your Dad ever work with the Canadians in Holland ?l understand if you don't wish to respond.

    • @TerryKnight-hw3pg
      @TerryKnight-hw3pg Месяц назад

      ​@@ohyeah2816Hi , l was wondering if your father was involved with taking the crew's from the U boats in Norway into captivity at wars end or if your father ever worked with the Canadians in Holland ? I understand if you don't want to respond, Cheers.

  • @regolith1350
    @regolith1350 Год назад +304

    This story reminds me so much of the old 1965 film Von Ryan's Express, starring Frank Sinatra and Trevor Howard. Although it's a very different story, it does involve the escape of Allied prisoners of war from a detention camp in Italy using a commandeered train running through Nazi-controlled territory. I wonder if someone involved in this raid worked on the script or whispered some secrets to one of the writers.

    • @GLYDR
      @GLYDR Год назад +15

      Great movie

    • @andrewlongcake6446
      @andrewlongcake6446 Год назад +17

      all stories have an elimante of truth in them. Its very possible that the writers of the dilm had heard of the raid and thought that would make a good plot

    • @jimmorrish6771
      @jimmorrish6771 Год назад +22

      thought the very same thing

    • @keithprinn720
      @keithprinn720 Год назад +15

      often the movie makers made US involved in so many events and ops not involved.

    • @sanctifiedandsaved5298
      @sanctifiedandsaved5298 Год назад +7

      Yes, this account sounded like Von Ryan's express in reverse😃

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson7435 Год назад +75

    This is another in the list of distinguished acts of inventive heroism in the history of The SAS.
    In re not getting even the famous 'little oak leaf badge' for the effort, at least my old dad, being a staff sergeant in a less glamorous outfit but the same Italian show, got his, for nagging his world-weary captain into letting him drag a Bren gun in a canvas bag a distance forward by night, digging himself in and, with the aid of an improvised (premeditated) blind periscope, shooting up a square encampment of white tents containing some 50 or so each Hitler Youth & Waffen SS officers.. Interestingly, I've seen a photo of the world weary captain, who was my dad's good friend and he looked a lot like E. Blackadder 😅.. Thanks for posting this. I bet those lads, had it been possible, would've been pleased with a Mention In Dispatches, these were highly prized.
    The gallantry of The SAS is conspicuous, even if the gongs aren't. To all present serving members and all, a belated Happy New Year. ⭐👍

    • @dalisdavies3326
      @dalisdavies3326 3 месяца назад +3

      Let's hope that if ever they make a film of this train rescue, it's more Spielberg than Richie.

  • @MrJhughs1
    @MrJhughs1 9 месяцев назад +53

    SAS above any other unit. Intelligence with action gave incredible success!!!

  • @kourtourafi
    @kourtourafi Год назад +137

    If one takes into consideration the insanely disproportionate ratio of unit size to range of missions - achievements - impact on enemy morale and how Stirling's 'baby' essentially became a role model for all the special forces that followed in many countries, I think it's safe to say that the SAS is the most iconic, legendary and impactful unit not only of WWII but of warfare since the dawn of time...

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 Год назад +10

      Might want to study Australia Sparrow Force and Special Z Force.. most daring of rowing fold out canoes in to Singapore and sinking Japanese ships was more daring.
      Sparrow Force most successful longest behind enemy lines of WW2 special Forces had to eat off the land as supplies were barely able to reach them
      Even today out of 120 Special Z Force missions are top secret classified.
      Sparrow Force so successful Japanese said needed 10 times the men to defeat them and sent whole Divisions to Timor that were meant for the Aussies on New Guinea.
      Vietnam Australia SASR were most feared even being named Ma Rung Phantoms of the Jungles and can see why by their missions. their tactics were trained to Navy seals and famous MACV GROM and even members of it who to this day none have publicly gone on interviews and many have tried.
      British SAS leaders even came to Nui Dat SASR HQ and studied their tactics.. Was a report Stirling came to Australia and studied Sparrow Force tactics..
      not all is British SAS lol
      British SAS changed a tactic of shoot and scoot.. meaning fire and run away once in contact after a investigation of them leaving one dead SAS member behind and leaving a Aussie SASR soldier behind because SASR did not have a tactic or run away and stayed and fought.. he had to evade Indonesians for 2 days and lucky made it to the extraction zone.

    • @kourtourafi
      @kourtourafi 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@highcountrydelatite Why not say toddlers? They are younger and more clueless than kids...

    • @brigitteschauble6311
      @brigitteschauble6311 3 месяца назад

      What? Hallo, Deutschland ist der alleinige Schuldige und Verlierer mit ca 80 Millionen Einwohnern und die Alliierten hatten zusammen ( ALLE ANDEREN UNSCHULDIGEN) sicherlich mehrere hundert Millionen. Da seh ich irgendwie keine Übermacht????
      Wie die Wahrnehmung doch differieren kann.

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad 3 месяца назад +5

      @@nedkelly9688 What is never mentioned is the fact that New Zealand Troops were in fact formed into the LRDG ,before the British. The Kiwis (one of my Uncles was amongst them) volunteered to become a Mobile group whose job was to head into the desert and seek out German and Italian groups and either raid them Guerrilla style or report their position .None of them ever received any decorations etc as there presence was also meant to be a secret. The Movie,Ice cold in Alex has a very very brief mention of LRDG setting a fuel dump hidden in an oasis. I think it's only time they were ever mentioned in a movie.

    • @alwynvanwyk1851
      @alwynvanwyk1851 3 месяца назад +2

      And now a NZer jumps into the "wannabe wall of fame, 80 years later...

  • @paulfitz61
    @paulfitz61 Год назад +74

    All credit to Damien Lewis for his research and writing this story which needs to be told, I am ordering my copy, Damien's book are excellent

    • @t5ruxlee210
      @t5ruxlee210 3 месяца назад +2

      The initial new Chevy trucks of the SAS were procured from the GM branch office in Cairo. They were built at the Oshawa plant in Canada and shipped in to pay in part for raw cotton imports used in Canada's textile mills. Needless to say, Canadian tourists visiting USA in those days were stunned by the high quality and low prices of forbidden American cotton products.
      Great Depression economics and international trade were often fairly nightmarish for ordinary shoppers with thin wallets.

    • @alwynvanwyk1851
      @alwynvanwyk1851 3 месяца назад


      What did I miss?
      Where are you falling out with the trucks and cotton story... You are missing the train, bro...

  • @portaltwo
    @portaltwo Год назад +82

    Incredible that this remained buried for so long. I was a voracious reader when I was young and I used to get a carefully chosen hardcover book from my father on every birthday. For my 12th (just looked at the inscription - Oct, 1962) he gave me "The Phantom Major", by Virginia Cowles. It tells the story of David Stirling and the formation of the SAS. I almost never reread a book, but I did for that one.

    • @klackon1
      @klackon1 Год назад +2

      Cracking book, which I read years ago.

    • @JohnFairchild-w3i
      @JohnFairchild-w3i Год назад

      May. God. Save. The. King& Queen. And. America. Bob13

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 Год назад +2

      @@highcountrydelatite Even Stirling came to Australia and studied Sparrow Force and Special Z Force tactics in late 1950's.
      Sparrow Force was longest behind enemy lines and most successful of all special forces in WW2.
      Australia SASR still to this day are most elite at jungle warfare and long recon units in the world those tactics what made them most feared in Vietnam also.
      And even in Afghanistan held record for longest out on patrol special forces of 50 days straight,
      Have to wonder if SASR did what Bravo Two Zero did in Iraq if would of succeeded in the mission.
      They did similar in Iraq 2003 inside Iraq on 18th 2 days before invasion with no losses or any incidents..

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 Год назад +3

      @@highcountrydelatite Nice need more telling Australia stories as even today most think USA did more in South Pacific then Australia. Yes Navy and Airforce but ground troops Australia outnumbered USA until Germany war was over and then they flooded in

    • @e.chambers2973
      @e.chambers2973 7 месяцев назад +1

      A hagiography and a David Stirling puff piece (The Virginia Cowles' effort) according to Gavin Mortimer. He convincingly dissects Stirling in his book, David Stirling The Phoney Major: the Life, Times and Truth about the Founder of the SAS. Claims David Stirling, a charming idea man short on execution abilities, mischeviously elevated his role in SAS history by minimizing and in some cases ignoring the efforts and importance of his own brother, Bill, and Blair (Paddy) Mayne.

  • @Sociologist66
    @Sociologist66 4 месяца назад +8

    Excellent video. Thanks for sharing it with us.

  • @tonys1636
    @tonys1636 Год назад +69

    Operations are often classified for periods of 50, 80 or 100 years not just for National Security but often for the safety and security of those who took part and their families, children and grandchildren for years after.

    • @IHZ3185
      @IHZ3185 Год назад +1

      Almost correct

    • @cacambo589
      @cacambo589 Год назад +5

      ...and to avoid prosecutions?!?

    • @stuartmccall5474
      @stuartmccall5474 Год назад +14

      @@cacambo589 : Just be glad there are shadowy people that allow you to sleep soundly in bed at night.

    • @EeeEee-bm5gx
      @EeeEee-bm5gx Год назад

      ​@@stuartmccall5474lol. Maybe caca is the one who doesn't sleep soundly knowing that SAS may raid concentration camps he supports

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 Год назад +4

      Special Z Force WW2 over 120 missions and only 2 or 3 are public and rest are still classified. google say only operated in Pacific region but they did missions in Malaysia and Phillipines also.
      Australia SASR are ranked 9th and barely mentioned but even Vietnam were most feared of all and nicknamed Ma Rung by Vietnamese.
      Iraq 2003 SASR were inside Iraq on 18th 2 days before invasion only made public not long ago and still barely talked about.
      Afghanistan SASR not talked about and some say are rubbish but heavily awarded by USA with medals of honor and gallantry awards.
      .Even Australia 2nd Commando unit who recently had 2nd longest sniper record is barely spoken about
      Australia very secret.

  • @What_If_We_Tried
    @What_If_We_Tried Год назад +60

    Not British, but I've always had massive respect for the SAS.

    • @Caroline.123
      @Caroline.123 4 месяца назад +1

      In those days they were English men not British.

    • @ralphraffles1394
      @ralphraffles1394 3 месяца назад +10

      @@Caroline.123They were commanded by an Ulsterman at this point, previously by a Scot.

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 3 месяца назад

      ​@@Caroline.123David Stirling was a Scot.

    • @SunofYork
      @SunofYork Месяц назад

      Rubbish... Britain was formed in 1707... Are you National Front or EDL ?

    • @davidmcintyre1258
      @davidmcintyre1258 Месяц назад

      English stupid comment

  • @asanulsterman1025
    @asanulsterman1025 Год назад +147

    Paddy Mayne an Ulsterman to be proud of

    • @haroldkane9714
      @haroldkane9714 4 месяца назад +26

      The entire allied world should be grateful for Sir Paddy Mayne, was in the thick of action before America even entered the War.....proud to be British because of the likes of Sir Paddy

    • @AABradyKK
      @AABradyKK 7 дней назад

      He was Irish

    • @asanulsterman1025
      @asanulsterman1025 6 дней назад

      @ Actually he was British, born in the UK, in Newtownards which is in Northern Ireland, Ulster.

    • @oliverreedslovechild
      @oliverreedslovechild 2 дня назад

      @@haroldkane9714 He wasn't knighted. He wasn't awarded the VC either despite having the citation signed by Montgomery as well as other high ranking officers.

  • @garyjohnstone6422
    @garyjohnstone6422 Год назад +38

    What men they were. Such flair and heroism.

  • @dtaylor10chuckufarle
    @dtaylor10chuckufarle Год назад +193

    They were the Greatest Generation... we stand on the shoulders of giants. 🇬🇧

    • @tomellis487
      @tomellis487 4 месяца назад +15

      We sit at their feet.

    • @Dannyboy32145
      @Dannyboy32145 Месяц назад +8

      We stand in their shadows......

  • @j.johnson3520
    @j.johnson3520 Год назад +34

    This needs to be done as a movie.
    It'll give the chaps involved the recognition that they so thoroughly deserve.

    • @raypurchase801
      @raypurchase801 Год назад +5

      Couldn't make the movie today unless Idris Elba played the commander.
      With a subplot about transgender SAS soldiers seeking acceptance in the face of transphobia.

    • @j.johnson3520
      @j.johnson3520 Год назад

      😅 That's a bit jaded.
      I can't see the next Bond movie reflecting that.
      But I get your point.

    • @robsilvester3068
      @robsilvester3068 Год назад +3

      Impossible it would have include a transgender major, 3 black troopers and a non -binery medic.

    • @j.johnson3520
      @j.johnson3520 Год назад +3

      So that means that the gay medic in the movie Wild Geese was quite forward thinking for a seventies movie. It hadn't even crossed my mind.
      But proves it was being done nearly 50 years ago.
      I think a movie that simply reflects the reality would suffice.

    • @robsilvester3068
      @robsilvester3068 Год назад

      @@j.johnson3520 sas mission was ww2 wild geese was 70s, it was legal then.

  • @DanBeech-ht7sw
    @DanBeech-ht7sw Год назад +46

    But why was this raid carried out? The SAS were used to attack targets of military value. This raid is very different indeed. There must have been people in this concentration camp who had real value for the war effort.
    That's the real gem of information and it's missing.
    What was the purpose of the raid? If it was purely humanitarian, then it would have been publicized.

    • @tombristowe846
      @tombristowe846 Год назад +5

      It all sounds a bit over-hyped to me.

    • @rowanshole
      @rowanshole Год назад +3

      Someone very important they couldn't risk taking out alone and having easily identified if they were recaptured- "oh- who is this person you did all of this to rescue"- so they took the whole crew.

    • @DanBeech-ht7sw
      @DanBeech-ht7sw Год назад

      @@rowanshole but why the secrecy after all this time?

    • @tombristowe846
      @tombristowe846 Год назад +7

      Guys; there's a difference between evidence and what might be called "constructing a narrative around known facts". I suspect it was just a small affair in the middle of a huge operation.

    • @DanBeech-ht7sw
      @DanBeech-ht7sw Год назад +6

      @@tombristowe846 like enough, but it's a very odd mission for the war time SAS who were used to damage the enemy's ability to wage war.
      I don't doubt that this raid happened, or that it achieved its objectives. But for the life of me I don't see what the military result was.

  • @phillipreynolds4305
    @phillipreynolds4305 Месяц назад +1

    Absolutely incredible. Brilliantly told by Damien Lewis as usual !

  • @laurencehastings7473
    @laurencehastings7473 Год назад +161

    There have been so many full feature films depicting heroic events during WWII both purely fictional and based on true events but this one was apparently swept under the carpet, or at least into a corner and forgotten about. It's time this was mission is filmed and the true story shown to the whole world. In a world where fascism and authoritoryism is on the uprise it must be shown to be possible that a small unit of heroes can make an enormous impact. The heroic efforts of Ukrainians during this ongoing war with Russia are starting to be filmed now , so someone has to get in quick, verify the mission, collect the history and data, write a script and produce the film. Events like these should never be forgotten.

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain Год назад

      My friends in the Regiment (I'm an oddity, they asked me to join them, I said no because their political leadership had killed the guy whose job I was to fill) would hate that. The amount of fake macho that surrounds them is not their way.

    • @scallopohare9431
      @scallopohare9431 Год назад +20

      Ya just had to bring current events into this. Could you not just appreciate the accomplishment?💩

    • @laurencehastings7473
      @laurencehastings7473 Год назад +16

      @@scallopohare9431 It's because I appreciate the accomplishment that I think it should be brought to the attention of everyone now, not lie forgotten somewhere and the best way to do that now would be a film or documentary.

    • @norbertrossi7925
      @norbertrossi7925 Год назад +1

      Ron Munsterman includes a depiction of this event in his fictional WWII “Sgt. Dunn” series.

    • @beverleyparkey6388
      @beverleyparkey6388 Год назад +6

      @@norbertrossi7925 looked it up and adding to my list. Thanks for sharing. Saw recent obit for Mike Sadler. Last of SAS died at 103.

  • @Jeffybonbon
    @Jeffybonbon Год назад +94

    My father was in the Desert and he said the Higher ups had no time for the SAS and listening to this I think he was correct If this had been the paras or the Commandos the story would have been told long before now

    • @charlieyerrell9146
      @charlieyerrell9146 Год назад

      The higher ups in the British army were an ignorant bunch of armchair officers. After the wars end we now know that some of them were the most useless officers in the British army.

    • @abody499
      @abody499 Год назад +21

      nonsense. it was behind enemy lines raids that won north africa and let them move on to sicily. if any higher ups "had no time" for them, it was through jealousy of losing good soldiers to other units.

    • @Jeffybonbon
      @Jeffybonbon Год назад

      I think your answer is infront of you the SAS was just about disbanded after WW2 why was that who cut them back and why I quote this as factAt the end of the war the British government saw no further need for the force and disbanded it on 8 October 1945 @@abody499

    • @sugarkane4830
      @sugarkane4830 Год назад +27

      Of course they had no time for them. Because they were mavericks and didn’t have a lot of time for authority. And thank goodness for them.

    • @Jeffybonbon
      @Jeffybonbon Год назад

      They were different from any other unit and thats why they were so special the staff at the time were old school guardsmen ect who did not understand the work they would carry out and i think envy was at the bottom of the issues @@sugarkane4830

  • @mikehughes4969
    @mikehughes4969 Год назад +3

    This absolutely needs to be a movie.

  • @parallelsuns1
    @parallelsuns1 Год назад +138

    Keeping the SAS, SBS, reconnaissance or any other special forces group secretive is pretty important and the British seemed to have sussed this. Nobody had really heard of the SAS until the Iranian hostage seige for instance

    • @abody499
      @abody499 Год назад +18

      I knew about them before that. It's not "nobody".

    • @plebius
      @plebius Год назад +14

      Their exploits were widely published. Raids were used for propaganda all the time by both sides. They were then widely known, however all their exploits weren't published. There is a big difference. For example Operation Chariot was widely purported to be a failure at the time by the Germans. They ran a broadcast on the radio explaining how it failed and had Soldiers from the SAS being interviewed on it. (There is some murkiness in this, as the soldiers claim that they thought they were being interviewed by the Red Cross for sending messages home and were being recorded secretly.) This whole propaganda by the Germans at the time was a bluff as they had knocked the Docks out of use when the HMS Campbeltown blew up.

    • @H4CK61
      @H4CK61 Год назад +10

      HOW?​@@highcountrydelatite

    • @seedy80
      @seedy80 Год назад +15

      Meanwhile, every SEAL has a book deal as part of their enlistment.

    • @midas61
      @midas61 Год назад +15

      Absolute rubbish. The SAS were well known over here in the UK I was reading about them when I was a kid in the 1960's

  • @nickm-rack8561
    @nickm-rack8561 2 месяца назад +1

    Thankfully, the brave soldiers who took on this incredible mission weren't picked by the same person who decided the narrator's mad, jolly over the top tone was absolutely spot on for such serious content.

    • @patrickpaganini
      @patrickpaganini 2 месяца назад +2

      During the war, there were narrators with extremely jolly and over the top tones - I don't think you should be to hard here, I thought the narrator sounded good.

  • @Stumblebum-lc4zu
    @Stumblebum-lc4zu Год назад +13

    I think the reason this was kept secret is that if you broadcast the success of the mission, then the enemy will take precautions to prevent similar missions in the future. Unfortunately they kept this one so secret that they forgot about it.

    • @sblack48
      @sblack48 4 месяца назад +1

      and I bet inter service jealousy and politics played a role. It always has. The SAS were not popular. They bypassed normal channels.

  • @chrismadge5472
    @chrismadge5472 Год назад +12

    I would still like to see a film based on Christopher Lee The famous actors involvement was with the SAS during the war and after too. From what i have read, he was the real deal, just incredible story you would never had guessed or knew about.

    • @Tele-fk4cu
      @Tele-fk4cu Месяц назад

      And David Niven!

    • @derekowens1817
      @derekowens1817 25 дней назад +1

      He was a Walter Mitty type and his supposed exploits have been debunked numerous times over the years.
      Bangor University use him as an example of someone who embellished their military service.
      Do a search on The Spectator - Christopher Lee debunked.

  • @mentalcog2187
    @mentalcog2187 Год назад +4

    Such an utterly amazing feet of heroism and panache!
    The families of these brave souls should be alerted of their family's significant history, ancestry and pride.
    When I learned of my great grandfather's deeds, Medal of Honor and then my own father's medal received for saving lives,.. it warms my heart to know I'm from, represent and stand for a family legacy worthy of handing down giving strength to those that follow. Absolutely brilliant story of history!

  • @connell212
    @connell212 Год назад +10

    I tried reading the book, and it meanders around so much, that it was difficult to find out what the raid actually was/was about. Gave up. So nice to get this where it is all described succinctly.

  • @RosemarieStars
    @RosemarieStars 23 дня назад

    Thanks for telling this story. The SAS stories are really incredible.

  • @tonybmusic1166
    @tonybmusic1166 20 дней назад

    I love all his books and glad that he took the time to cover the SAS during WWII. Those guys were tough….and pretty much were the genesis of the commando type of warriors.

  • @willkerslake8820
    @willkerslake8820 3 месяца назад +1

    Good on you for scouring thr archives.

  • @kevindelaney1951
    @kevindelaney1951 Год назад +7

    A brilliant operation hidden for far too long. Excellent post.

  • @drscopeify
    @drscopeify Год назад

    Fantastic thanks for the report on this daring operation!

  • @GregoryFoster-e8i
    @GregoryFoster-e8i 4 месяца назад +1

    this event absolutely needs to be made into a movie

  • @The-Spanish-Inquisition490
    @The-Spanish-Inquisition490 Год назад +60

    Just when you think your sick of Britain and what its become...... you here tale like this..... makes you proud to be british again.
    It makes me think we can be that proud nation we once was. Regardless of your race we stand united and this tiny island will overcome anything!

    • @YARROWS9
      @YARROWS9 Год назад +9

      The SAS, was all British hands to the pumps🇬🇧.🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿☘️🇬🇧🇬🇧

    • @NiSiochainGanSaoirse
      @NiSiochainGanSaoirse Год назад +10

      Speak for yourself.
      The Bradford I knew and loved is as divided as it can get, and yes, race IS a huge dividing factor.

    • @petermoreton5313
      @petermoreton5313 Год назад +4

      'Once were' - not 'once was' - PLEASE.

    • @philipprice171
      @philipprice171 Год назад +2

      ​@@petermoreton5313Oh Peter, stop picking nits and instead concentrate on the sentiment of the post. Regards

    • @brianpilley3801
      @brianpilley3801 Год назад +3

      Kiwis and Aussies plus others also.

  • @eizol568
    @eizol568 Год назад +23

    Great men of our time!

  • @Buckbury
    @Buckbury Год назад +1

    Wow, what a story, what bravery and what a subject for the book and a block buster film.

  • @price724
    @price724 Год назад +10

    Needs to be a movie

  • @fastair8546
    @fastair8546 9 месяцев назад +10

    Italian guards vs the SAS, that must have been messy.

  • @namesake-mx9nl
    @namesake-mx9nl Год назад +3

    Absolutely amazing , truly the stuff of legends , and nobody knew about it until now .

  • @mikejohnston4265
    @mikejohnston4265 Год назад

    I am so glad see this video. Kudos to those brave men. This made my day.

  • @ttnyny
    @ttnyny Год назад +21

    I have always admired the audacious exploits of the WW2 SAS, and this raid is yet another example, but I take exception to the suggestion that there was "nothing else like it" in WW2. What about the Slovene Partisans, Special Operations Executive (SOE), and MI9 raid at Ožbalt in Aug. 1944? And the Filipino guerrilla and 11th Airborne Division raid on Los Baños in Feb. 1945?

    • @dravmtp385
      @dravmtp385 Год назад +3

      Well the guy being interviewed isn't promoting a book he wrote about any of those, so take his hyperbole with a large serving of salt

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 Год назад

      Also Australia Special Z Force Operation Jaywick rowed little fold out canoes in to Singapore sinking 4 Japanese ships. think weight was 30,000 tonnes.
      Did over 120 missions throughout Pacific Asia and still most are classified.
      Australia Sparrow Force said to be most successful longest behind enemy lines of any special forces of WW2 18 men against whole Divisions of Japanese doing jungle warfare. they had to eat off the land even at times sat hiding waiting for Japanese to cook food before killing them all and sitting and eating their food.
      Australia SASR still train to do long recon missions and eating off the land and became most feared and successful in Vietnam because of this.
      Europe, Africa special force missions look like normal battle missions compared to Pacific war.
      Food was not a issue so much in Europe.

    • @floydisnutz8443
      @floydisnutz8443 11 месяцев назад

      And look what Australians have become. Sad. Just like the British.

  • @noonsight2010
    @noonsight2010 Год назад +8

    A tale of true heroes.

  • @liamato1
    @liamato1 Год назад +9

    This should surely be made into a film, depicting the heroic actions of those involved.

    • @darkmatter6714
      @darkmatter6714 Год назад +1

      SAS Rogue Heroes - mini series on BBC

    • @liamato1
      @liamato1 Год назад +1

      @@darkmatter6714, I saw that, very enjoyable. I was suggesting a film about that rescue operation, it’s incredible.

    • @DrMikeOckhertz
      @DrMikeOckhertz 7 дней назад +1

      This would only be made into a film if it was a) an American unit instead (U-571 anyone?), b) there's a "maverick" American who shows the stuffy English how it's done, c) the rescued camp inmates include a beautiful woman (who, oddly, remains beautiful despite being in a concentration camp) and she falls in love with the "maverick" American. d) there's an anachronistic fast-talking black GI in the unit.

  • @martinkemp9397
    @martinkemp9397 Год назад

    More please
    This was brilliant

  • @merrylmarsh9037
    @merrylmarsh9037 4 месяца назад

    Fabulous!!!
    Hope Damien can drive this venture to make it a movie. 🤞

  • @MegaWillieo
    @MegaWillieo 11 месяцев назад +3

    I have never heard this story before. It could have been the plot Von Ryan’s Express was based on. How many other stories like this one are still unknown 80 years on

  • @conradnelson5283
    @conradnelson5283 Год назад +2

    That is an incredible story. Reminds me of the mission to free. I think it was MacArthur‘s son or nephew, or son-in-law, in the Philippines, which did not go over near as smoothly as this one. Would love to hear more.

    • @kiwifruit27
      @kiwifruit27 Год назад

      Sounds like Pattons mission to rescue his son in law in Europe. It didn’t go so well though

  • @elviramcintosh9878
    @elviramcintosh9878 Год назад

    Amazing story! Thanks for sharing it.

  • @MrDREWASIDE
    @MrDREWASIDE 6 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing. Imagine the shock of anyone on the platform at pisticci. A train steams in and all hell breaks loose.

  • @andresdeks
    @andresdeks 11 дней назад +2

    Their fighting spirit lived on in SAS C Squadron, Rhodesia and just like the founding SAS heroes, C Squadron stories will never all be told.

  • @wobby1516
    @wobby1516 4 месяца назад +1

    Masterful and amazing, god bless those brilliant brave soldiers.

  • @jaymac7203
    @jaymac7203 Месяц назад +1

    Imagine how grateful those prisoners were? 😮 What a fascinating mission.

  • @fToo
    @fToo Год назад +14

    it's one thing not giving medals at the time - but surely medals should have been awarded at the end of the war?

    • @DeclanShanahan-f7g
      @DeclanShanahan-f7g Год назад +3

      The SAS were disbanded after the war, they weren't like by the top brass. Paddy Mayne was never given a VC when he probably earned the right to 3. They were seen as thieves, pirates, chancers who went against the stiff upper lip Sandhurst tradition. They were appalled that Mayne shot a load a German pilots eating their dinner one night in their mess. Never mind that these same pilots would be shooting down Allied planes and Soldiers the very next morning. They basically embarrassed the officer class in North Africa and Italy with what they achieved in small numbers. They got away with it because Churchill loved their unorthodox tactics and organisations like SOE. The SAS caused more damage on foot in small jeeps then what the RAF did in the air in North Africa.

    • @sblack48
      @sblack48 4 месяца назад +1

      @@DeclanShanahan-f7g absolutely. politics killed careers and decorations all the time.

  • @robfielding100
    @robfielding100 18 дней назад +1

    This would make a brilliant film … like The Train!

  • @nickjanssens
    @nickjanssens 21 день назад +1

    soldiers from conflicts going back a thousand years have had the same balls, all it took was someone to say go on then.

  • @Jaccadee
    @Jaccadee 16 дней назад +1

    My father was in the first Free French SAS unit in north africa 1943 , these french units and the brave french men names have never been mentioned in all SAS books issued

  • @johnpullen7320
    @johnpullen7320 8 дней назад

    This needs to be a film!

  • @davidmiller3709
    @davidmiller3709 Год назад +1

    There are missions that will remain unacknowledged in the official record, that is the nature of these operations. And not just special forces. A modern opponent would glean information from the the details of the conduct, so satisfying the curiosity of the public is a balancing act.

  • @DrewJPS
    @DrewJPS 11 дней назад +1

    Reg Seekings famously walked across a field garded by German machine guns. They were so stunned that nobody shot at him. When he got to the Germans he asked "How many of you are there?" They replied "Zwei!" (Two) "That's what I thought. My men were worried there were more" Then walked back, collected a few men then killed the Machine gunners. Reg was also almost blind. And took a bullet in his neck which he didn't allow to be operated on for few months after.
    Make no mistake, the SAS are not like anything else, ever.
    And you are welcome to fact-check any of that.

  • @DamienRowatt
    @DamienRowatt 18 дней назад

    Fascinating history. Cheers 🇬🇧

  • @neddyseagoon9601
    @neddyseagoon9601 4 месяца назад

    As a kid living in Caterham Barracks, with a dad in a Guards Regiment, this tale was, among many others, heard when dads were nattering while we played.
    The story hinged around an assault in Italy using a captured steam train... I don't recall if the objective was mentioned with young kids around...
    Another bit of 1960s common knowledge was the "nuclear bombing" by V bombers of America...
    To explain... There were still many older veterans of WWII still in the army and they knew of or were involved in so called secret actions...
    Look up Dougie Wright MM... A Grenadier and SBS and SAS veteran commanded at times by Anders Lassen VC of Operation Postmaster fame... I briefly knew Dougie Wright to talk to, through my dad, as a kid...

  • @robsin2810
    @robsin2810 Год назад +5

    All involved, should be given the recognition they deserve 🙏🙏🇦🇺👍

  • @MelchizedekKohen
    @MelchizedekKohen 27 дней назад

    My grandfather was there with L detachment. He lost his best friend from school my mum and gran said he was never the same and would screem in his sleep these men deserved so much better when demobed they were just sent home and families were left to deal with the choas.

  • @robinlogan8099
    @robinlogan8099 3 месяца назад +1

    The SAS are legendary then & now. These are extraordinary people.

  • @ciarandoyle4349
    @ciarandoyle4349 Год назад +2

    I would be interested to know how the conditions in the Italian concentration camp at Pisticci compared with those at Ferramonte. The latter, in the "toe" of Italy, was quickly liberated during the Allied invasion of the Italian mainland: conditions there were more benign than in German or Russian concentration camps.

  • @danielcrawford4042
    @danielcrawford4042 Год назад +2

    Reminded me also of Von Ryan's Express, but it would still be a good movie.

  • @petegarnett7731
    @petegarnett7731 Месяц назад +1

    The SAS were never awarded medals or mentioned in depatches in those days. It would have meant acknowledging their existence and putting them at more risk. I cannot believe this was "secret" for 80 years. It existed in my memory long before now, but I am not sure where I heard of it.

  • @GeorgeWafer
    @GeorgeWafer 27 дней назад +1

    Hero’s one and all god bless the SAS old and new thank you for your service! Respect!

  • @GreasyBelcher
    @GreasyBelcher Год назад +12

    I met a former SAS man, who was in his 60s about 10years ago. I asked him what he did in the SAS and he asked if I had ever heard of the “Raid on Entebbe?” I knew nothing about it at the time. He explained how idi Amin was giving refuge to terrorists who had captured a plane full of Jewish passengers and were making demands from Entebbe airport in Uganda. Israelis wanted to send in some anti terror personnel, but they had no jungle combat skills. The SAS guy I spoke with, said he was one of 4 SAS men sent to work out the best plan of attack. The SAS men formulated a plan to drive into the airport in cars with dark windows posing as Idi Amin and his entourage. They instructed the Israeli special forces to ignore all attempts to stop the vehicles and drive through all checkpoints without stopping, as the terrorists would never shoot the vehicles if they suspected a car contained Idi Amin. The plan faltered when one of the Israelis stopped at a checkpoint and a firefight started at a distance from the compound enclosure where the hostages were. It turned into pandemonium, but ended well with almost all of the hostages Fred’s and all of the terrorists killed. The SAS involvement could not be acknowledged at this would have involved Britain in potential reprisals.

    • @ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13
      @ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13 3 месяца назад

      Why did they need jungle experience for?? They we're on a PLANE which was at the AIRPORT TERMINAL yes they moved some of the passengers but to housing nothing to do with any jungle the guy you talked too probably read it in a book and isn't SAS..

    • @GreasyBelcher
      @GreasyBelcher 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13 There’s no official record of the SAS being involved. It was too politically sensitive for the British to be known to be involved. The initial thought was an attack in darkness coming out of the foliage to avoid roads in case the terrorists had people on lookout along aproach roots. In the end the decided the fastest way was to speed into the airport with Idi Amins flags on cars with blacked out windows. I understand your skepticism but the guy telling me this was wearing shorts and a tee shirt, he told me he had been shot 6 times during his army career, and I could see the scar tissue where he had been hit once in the leg. I spoke with him at his house, there were military crests, memorabilia on the wall. The reason he told me these things is initially he was asking me about the real estate market as he wanted to know if his wife out be OK after he died. He told me he was terminally ill with cancer, when I expressed my condolences he said, “I just want to set things up for my wife, I’m not worried about myself at all”. I asked how he could be so together under that weight. Then he told me about being in the SAS, getting shot etc.”. I asked what he did and that’s when Entebbe came up. He wasn’t boasting, he just told me to look it up.

    • @orbiradio2465
      @orbiradio2465 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13 It was probably not about jungle experience at all. It is well known, that the SAS supported the German GSG9 in Mogadischu one year later. Apparently the SAS had a detailed plan how to storm a plane.

  • @charleswillcock3235
    @charleswillcock3235 19 дней назад +1

    The very best of the UK. Great work.

  • @Sociologist66
    @Sociologist66 4 месяца назад

    The late British journalist and author Charles Foley mentioned this mission in his book "Commando Extraordinary" in the last part of this novel, dedicated to the British SAS and Commandos.

  • @williamarmstrong1050
    @williamarmstrong1050 3 месяца назад

    puts a whole new light on Von Ryan's Express always thought that was a strange story but cool

  • @helveticaification
    @helveticaification 13 дней назад

    A further tribute to these men is that this story remained untold for so many decades - shows the mettle and character of those who took part. NO MEDALS !!! Thank you, 'Boys' - if any are still alive! Bless 'em all - The Long and the Short and the Tall.

  • @FlyTyer1948
    @FlyTyer1948 Месяц назад

    Much respect to the courage & skill of the SAS then & now.

  • @andrewcharles459
    @andrewcharles459 Год назад +12

    Now I need to go watch "Von Ryan's Express" again for about the hundredth time....

  • @noosadave1
    @noosadave1 Год назад

    I remember reading a book called the phamtom magor when i was a young teen i will allways remember paddy mayne and david sterling a lot of old photos in it as well.

  • @unclescipio3136
    @unclescipio3136 Год назад +4

    I wonder if the SAS would even exist right now if the founders hadn't been mad as a brush.

  • @marksstudio
    @marksstudio 11 месяцев назад

    What a terrific video.

  • @stankygeorge
    @stankygeorge Год назад +1

    You never tell the enemy how you defeated them, because your next enemy will learn from the mistakes of your last enemy and they will defeat you with that knowledge.

  • @gunshipzeroone3546
    @gunshipzeroone3546 Год назад +4

    I know the sas are like a stealth unit, but can they call in an air strike if need or air support.

    • @eventingcrazy
      @eventingcrazy Год назад

      Yes. Current SF work in conjunction with the Special Forces Support Group who have forward air controllers as part of their number.

  • @jimmyyu2184
    @jimmyyu2184 4 месяца назад +1

    @2:28 So the train reached its maximum carry? What did SAS do with the rest? Left them behind? And if so, how was the rescuees determined? Health and physical conditions?

  • @trevor9934
    @trevor9934 Год назад +4

    I find it curious that the reason claimed for there being no record, decorations etc. is to stop people demonizing the Germans and increasing their resistance, given that at the Casablanca conference, held in January of that year, so many months before, had called for 'unconditional surrender' from the Axis powers. This, combined with the oath of loyalty to Hitler personally that each serviceman had to make, pretty much guaranteed that this was already pretty much guaranteed that same result.

    • @robbie9629
      @robbie9629 Год назад +1

      I agree, his explanation does not ring true.

  • @user-vv6sy2ox4q
    @user-vv6sy2ox4q Год назад

    The MoD owes these men official recognition, through awards, memorials etc...

  • @oldguy8177able
    @oldguy8177able Год назад +5

    what a great story

  • @jameshunter3867
    @jameshunter3867 3 месяца назад

    ...My Great Grandfather was in SAS during the war...he had been sworn to secrecy, so I never really got to hear any of his endeavors.

  • @TheMilpitasguy
    @TheMilpitasguy Год назад +27

    But what about the prisoners liberated? Wouldn't they have spoken out about it beforehand?

    • @NeilLewis77
      @NeilLewis77 4 месяца назад +1

      Literally millions of liberated prisoners have told their stories and to be honest I've barely ever heard one from Italian concentration camps.

  • @davidharris4062
    @davidharris4062 Месяц назад

    This raid was covered in Saul David book SBS: Silent Warriors, The authorised wartime history of the Special Boat Service, first published in 2021

  • @Spiderdan-60
    @Spiderdan-60 23 дня назад

    The nearest i came to the SAS was meeting a few of them during my service years! 2RRF ⚔️🇬🇧

  • @greva2904
    @greva2904 Год назад +9

    I read one of Damian Lewis’s SAS books once. He’s very given to over the top hyperbole, which belittles the actual achievements of the men he’s writing about. Avoid.

    • @copferthat
      @copferthat Год назад +2

      Is hyperbole possible when dealing with such men and their exploits?

    • @sblack48
      @sblack48 4 месяца назад

      well he is trying to sell books

  • @USNveteran
    @USNveteran 2 месяца назад

    Kind of reminds me of the Ritchie Boys and some of their stories which are pretty amazing. There is a special on I believe netflix or prime called camp confidential, and there is also a 60 minutes story about them. To me the SAS is the grand daddy of the special forces of all free nations, and this just furthers their motto of "Who dares wins". FLY NAVY!!!

  • @asicdathens
    @asicdathens 7 месяцев назад +1

    Rogue Heroes season 2 is about the Italian campaign, so I expect a reenactment of this operation

    • @dmac3183
      @dmac3183 5 месяцев назад

      Yea that sounds cool, looking forward to it. I suppose some liberties are taken for drama purposes but Series 1 gave a good sense of what those warriors got up to.

  • @bipolarbear9917
    @bipolarbear9917 3 месяца назад +1

    There was a movie called ‘Von Ryan’s Express’ starring Frank Sinatra and Trevor Howard, that could have been inspired by this secret mission.

  • @WhatWeDoChannel
    @WhatWeDoChannel Год назад

    Wow! That really should be made into a movie!

  • @brianbranson2306
    @brianbranson2306 Год назад +1

    the thing that frustrates me about SAS tales, is that no one can ever point to any of the places on a map. makes me wonder if this guy has any coordinate info. talking about north Africa of course. this tale seems straight forward enough.

  • @velvetindigonight
    @velvetindigonight 4 месяца назад

    Hope Steve Knight got to hear of this and added it to the second series?…..
    Fab nuggett. Thank you

  • @tomhenry897
    @tomhenry897 Год назад +9

    Will never know all that they did

  • @drumcdoo9050
    @drumcdoo9050 3 месяца назад

    It's amazing how the Ninja warriers from the 12th centuary used the same tactics of speed, aggression and suprise, combined with espionage, infiltration, evasion and deception for their primary methods of both defence and attack in exactly the same way as the SAS...

  • @samjones9232
    @samjones9232 17 дней назад

    That's my great grandfather Thomas ginger jones with the cigarette in his mouth on the left of Paddy Mayne on the thumbnail/ group photo!!! He was a member of L detachment the SAS originals recruited in Northern Africa.

  • @cozmcwillie7897
    @cozmcwillie7897 Год назад

    I can understand keeping quiet until wars end, for the reasons you mention, but not 80 years.

  • @garthwick19
    @garthwick19 Год назад +9

    RIP Mike Sadler. Til Valhalla.

  • @Grommok
    @Grommok 25 дней назад

    Outstanding mission. So brave. It is undoubtedly because of the nature of the raid that it was kept secret.