A SUPERBLY ILLUSTRATED ACCOUNT OF ONE OF THE KEY MILESTONES IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN US SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES, THE HUGELY COMPLEX
POW RESCUE AT SON TAY.
On November 21, 1970, a meticulously prepared force of US Special
Forces in HH-53 helicopters, supported by more than a hundred combat
aircraft, raided the POW camp at Son Tay, North Vietnam, just 23 miles
west of Hanoi, seeking 61 American prisoners. Having trained for
months in secret, and utilizing the best troops and air crews
possible, the raiders executed the mission flawlessly. No Americans
were killed and only two aircraft were downed, with the raiders
killing several dozen North Vietnamese. It was the epitome of joint
commando operations and regarded as an unheralded success. Except, the
prisoners were missing. The raiders had come up empty handed.
Illustrated with original artwork and maps, and drawing on both
declassified documents and new interviews with participants, in this
book diplomat and historian Justin Williamson explains the
significance of this highly complex commando mission, deep inside
enemy territory. A joint Army-Air Force assault, with the Navy flying
diversionary missions, the Son Tay raid was the first operation to be
conducted under the direct command of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and
ranks among the most important moments in the development of modern US
Special Operations Forces.
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The Operation Ivory Coast POW rescue mission
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472863027
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter