History of War

THE SAS FRAUD?

On 5 May 1958 The Phantom Major was published. Written by the American author and former war correspondent Virginia Cowles, the book was an authorised biography of David Stirling, founder of the SAS and, according to Cowles, “a well-established legend”.

The book was timely. Britain’s confidence was low, what with the ongoing break-up of the empire and humiliation at the Suez Canal in Egypt 18 months earlier. The nation needed a hero, a reminder of past glories. David Stirling fitted the bill.

The reviews of The Phantom Major were ecstatic. The Daily Express made the bold claim that Stirling “shortened the war for us”, and the Birmingham Post hailed him a genius. Across the water in Northern Ireland, the Belfast Telegraph praised the breathless prose of Cowles in describing Stirling’s “incredibly audacious sabotage”. Nevertheless, the paper respectfully pointed out that many of the SAS exploits in North Africa in 1941 and 1942 had been inspired by “the late R. Blair Mayne”.

The mention of that name would have pricked Stirling’s conscience. Robert Blair Mayne, ‘Paddy’ to his comrades, had finished the war with a DSO and three bars, and a reputation as a brilliant guerrilla fighter. Agile, innovative and extraordinarily brave, the former international rugby star was everything Stirling wanted to be but was not. He spent the years immediately after the war bitter and resentful, but when Mayne was killed in a car crash in December 1955 Stirling spotted an opportunity. The story of how the SAS came to be formed would now be told, and Stirling, not Mayne, would be the dashing

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from History of War

History of War1 min read
Ride Into History On Warfare’s Most Iconic Fighting Machines
Discover the WWI roots of the tank, get to grips with some of the most famous models ever to grind into battle, pick through the debris of the greatest armoured clash in history and find out how these weapons of war are evolving. ON SALE NOW Ordering
History of War4 min readInternational Relations
Timeline Of The greek Civil War
Winston Churchill orders British troops to intervene, stating: “We have to hold and dominate Athens.” It takes three weeks for the British to gain the upper hand. Meanwhile, the Greek government falls apart, delaying the return of King George II, whi
History of War3 min readInternational Relations
Dekemvriana: Battle Of Athens
The power vacuum left in the wake of the Axis retreat in 1944 was immediately contested by two major political and military groups. One party claiming power was the communist National Liberation Front (EAM) supported by its military organisation the

Related