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Willem Steenkamp & Helmoed-R??mer Heitman MOBILITY CONQUERSHardcover with dust jacket, 1152 pages

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Willem Steenkamp & Helmoed-R??mer Heitman MOBILITY CONQUERS

Hardcover with dust jacket, 1152 pages with 61 maps, c 400+ photos, 2pp of colour (badges & insignia) In very good condition.


More than two years in the writing, this book is the story of the birth, career and death of the South African Defence Force's 61 Mechanised Battalion Group (1979-2005), generally acknowledged as the best fighting unit in Africa in its time. 61 Mech was structured as a combined-arms unit with integral infantry, armoured and artillery components the first in Africa and arduously trained in a fast-moving mobile warfare doctrine which was not based on adapted European tactics but was specifically designed for fighting modern bush wars in the forbiddingly difficult African battle-space. It was mounted in various versions of the Ratel armoured fighting vehicle, which was locally designed for African campaigning in frequently indescribable terrain conditions, and whose cross-country mobility and heavy firepower provided the means for applying the new doctrine. Backing it up were heavy weapons of local design such as the world-class G-5 155 mm artillery piece, then the longest-ranged medium gun in the world, and its huge self-propelled wheeled version, the G-6. Led by some of the brightest officers in the Army, 61 Mech played a major role in the often hard-fought incursions into Angola between 1978 and 1988 and won all its battles, even though the South Africans were always vastly outnumbered by the armed forces of Angola with their abundant Soviet weaponry and Russian and Cuban advisors, and usually with an unfavourable air situation. Written in an easy-to-read narrative style by two veteran military authors, the book includes many personal accounts by 61 Mech's officers and men, some of them in harrowing detail, and describes the preparations for the various operations and the on-going evolution of both the doctrine and the weaponry and equipment. But it also covers the broader context, including revealing glimpses into the hitherto almost unknown Angolan/Soviet/Cuban side of the conflict. Among other things it explains how and why the SADF became involved in the struggle against the South West African People's Organisation, pin-points for the first time the moment when the counter-insurgency campaign in SWA / Namibia became entangled with the Angolan civil war, and objectively analyses the much-debated question of whether there was ever a Battle for Cuito Cuanavale. It is also salted with short snippets of information which help to make it an entertaining read for people from anywhere in the world. Backing up the narrative are many specially drawn maps and a large number of photographs, of which most are not generic but directly related to the events in the narrative. For anyone needing a single blueprint on how to fight a successful conventional war in Africa, this is the book to read.


Willem Steenkamp has been a journalist, soldier, writer of fact and fiction, military tattoo producer and specialist tour guide. A military reservist, he was called up for military service on various occasions from 1976 onwards and took part in four external operations, including an attachment to 61 Mech on its first real test of strength: 1980's 'Operation Sceptic'. After the end of the border conflict in 1989, he served on a presidential advisory council and as a security advisor during the 1994 election, as well as helping to write the seminal 1996 Defence Review. Subsequently, he was a consultant to the SA National Defence Force and Ministry of Defence on several occasions. He is the author of 18 factual books and novels, co-writer of a stage play and two television scripts, and has won three literary prizes.


Helmoed-Rmer Heitman is an independent defence and national security analyst and writer. He has advised parliamentarians, the Ministry and Department of Defence, the combat services, the State Advocate and South African and foreign defence firms. He advised various parties during the drafting of the 1996 White Paper on Defence, and served on a workgroup of the later 1998 Defence Review, as well as serving on the 2011/14 Defence Review Committee. He is the South African correspondent for Janes Defence Weekly and other defence periodicals, and has written several books on the South African armed forces. He served as a reservist in the South African Army from 1970 to 1996 in various capacities and holds Economics and Public Administration Degrees from the University of Cape Town and an MA in War Studies from Kings College, London.


Helion & Company Limited

2016
Very good

For further details and and to bid visit AntiquarianAuctions.com
Willem Steenkamp & Helmoed-R??mer Heitman MOBILITY CONQUERS

Hardcover with dust jacket, 1152 pages with 61 maps, c 400+ photos, 2pp of colour (badges & insignia) In very good condition.


More than two years in the writing, this book is the story of the birth, career and death of the South African Defence Force's 61 Mechanised Battalion Group (1979-2005), generally acknowledged as the best fighting unit in Africa in its time. 61 Mech was structured as a combined-arms unit with integral infantry, armoured and artillery components the first in Africa and arduously trained in a fast-moving mobile warfare doctrine which was not based on adapted European tactics but was specifically designed for fighting modern bush wars in the forbiddingly difficult African battle-space. It was mounted in various versions of the Ratel armoured fighting vehicle, which was locally designed for African campaigning in frequently indescribable terrain conditions, and whose cross-country mobility and heavy firepower provided the means for applying the new doctrine. Backing it up were heavy weapons of local design such as the world-class G-5 155 mm artillery piece, then the longest-ranged medium gun in the world, and its huge self-propelled wheeled version, the G-6. Led by some of the brightest officers in the Army, 61 Mech played a major role in the often hard-fought incursions into Angola between 1978 and 1988 and won all its battles, even though the South Africans were always vastly outnumbered by the armed forces of Angola with their abundant Soviet weaponry and Russian and Cuban advisors, and usually with an unfavourable air situation. Written in an easy-to-read narrative style by two veteran military authors, the book includes many personal accounts by 61 Mech's officers and men, some of them in harrowing detail, and describes the preparations for the various operations and the on-going evolution of both the doctrine and the weaponry and equipment. But it also covers the broader context, including revealing glimpses into the hitherto almost unknown Angolan/Soviet/Cuban side of the conflict. Among other things it explains how and why the SADF became involved in the struggle against the South West African People's Organisation, pin-points for the first time the moment when the counter-insurgency campaign in SWA / Namibia became entangled with the Angolan civil war, and objectively analyses the much-debated question of whether there was ever a Battle for Cuito Cuanavale. It is also salted with short snippets of information which help to make it an entertaining read for people from anywhere in the world. Backing up the narrative are many specially drawn maps and a large number of photographs, of which most are not generic but directly related to the events in the narrative. For anyone needing a single blueprint on how to fight a successful conventional war in Africa, this is the book to read.


Willem Steenkamp has been a journalist, soldier, writer of fact and fiction, military tattoo producer and specialist tour guide. A military reservist, he was called up for military service on various occasions from 1976 onwards and took part in four external operations, including an attachment to 61 Mech on its first real test of strength: 1980's 'Operation Sceptic'. After the end of the border conflict in 1989, he served on a presidential advisory council and as a security advisor during the 1994 election, as well as helping to write the seminal 1996 Defence Review. Subsequently, he was a consultant to the SA National Defence Force and Ministry of Defence on several occasions. He is the author of 18 factual books and novels, co-writer of a stage play and two television scripts, and has won three literary prizes.


Helmoed-Rmer Heitman is an independent defence and national security analyst and writer. He has advised parliamentarians, the Ministry and Department of Defence, the combat services, the State Advocate and South African and foreign defence firms. He advised various parties during the drafting of the 1996 White Paper on Defence, and served on a workgroup of the later 1998 Defence Review, as well as serving on the 2011/14 Defence Review Committee. He is the South African correspondent for Janes Defence Weekly and other defence periodicals, and has written several books on the South African armed forces. He served as a reservist in the South African Army from 1970 to 1996 in various capacities and holds Economics and Public Administration Degrees from the University of Cape Town and an MA in War Studies from Kings College, London.


Helion & Company Limited

2016
Very good

For further details and and to bid visit AntiquarianAuctions.com

Online Rare Books, Maps & Prints and Photography Auction

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