Nov 082013
 

Andy McNabb

Andy McNabb

“This is a worthy cause”

Sergeant Andy McNab DCM, MM (born 28th December 1959) is the pseudonym of an English novelist and former SAS operative and soldier.

McNab came into public prominence in 1993, when he published his account of the Special Air Service (SAS) patrol, Bravo Two Zero, for which he had been awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal in 1991. He had previously received the Military Medal in 1980, awarded for an action whilst serving with the Royal Green Jackets in Northern Ireland during 1979.

In addition to Bravo Two Zero he has written two other autobiographies and a number of fiction books.

McNab was born on 28th December 1959. Found abandoned on the steps of Guy`s Hospital in Southwark in a Harrods shopping bag, he was brought up in Peckham, with his adoptive family. He did not do well in school, dropped out and worked at various odd jobs, usually for friends and relatives, and was involved in petty criminality, finally being arrested for burglary in 1976. Partly inspired by his brother’s time in the army, he wanted to join the British Army. He failed the entry test for training as an army pilot, but enlisted with the Royal Green Jackets at the age of sixteen.

He was posted to Kent for his basic training, and boxed for his regimental team. After basic training, he was posted to the Rifle Depot in Winchester. In 1977, he spent time in Gibaltar as part of his first operational posting, while with 2 RGJ.

From December 1977 to June 1978, he was posted to South Armagh, Northern Ireland, as part of the British Army ‘s “Operation Banner”. In 1978 and 1979, he returned to Armagh as a newly promoted Lance Corporal, and claimed to have killed for the first time during a firefight with the Provisional IRA. McNab wrote of the incident: “I remember vividly the first time I had to kill someone to stay alive. I was a 19-year-old soldier in Keady, South Armagh, and my patrol stumbled across six IRA terrorists, preparing for an ambush. When the shooting started, they were just 20 metres away from my patrol. I was scared, very scared.” He was awarded the Military Medal for this incident. However, security sources later reported that the person McNab shot was only wounded and died as a result of injuries from a separate shootout later that day.

In 1982, after eight years with the Royal Green Jackets, he attempted SAS selection. After failing his first attempt, he passed in 1984, and transferred to the SAS. During his 10 years with Air Troop, B Squadron, 22 SAS, McNab served with Al Slater,Frank Collins and Charles “Nish” Bruce. In a November 2008 Interview with the Daily Telegraph, McNab describes Bruce as one of my heroes.

McNab worked on both covert and overt operations including counter terrorism and drug operations in the Middle East and Far East, South and Central America and Northern Ireland. McNab trained as a specialist in counter terrorism, prime target elimination, demolitions, weapons, tactics, covert surveillance roles and information gathering in hostile environments, and VIP protection. He worked on cooperative operations with police forces, prison services, anti-drug forces and Western backed guerrilla movements as well as on conventional special operations. In Northern Ireland, he spent two years working as an undercover operator with 14 Intelligence Company, going on to become an instructor.

During the First Gulf War, McNab commanded Bravo Two Zero, an eight man SAS patrol that was given the task of destroying underground communication links between Baghdadf and north-west Iraq and with tracking Scud missile movements in the region. The patrol was dropped into Iraq on 22 January 1991, but was soon compromised, escaping on foot towards Syria, the closest coalition country.

Three of the eight were killed, and four captured (including McNab) after three days on the run; one member, Chris Ryan, escaped. The captured men were held for six weeks before being released on 5th March. By that time, McNab was suffering from nerve damage to both hands, a dislocated shoulder, kidney and liver damage, and hepatitis B . After six months of medical treatment he was back on active service.

Awarded both the Distinguished Conduct Medal (DCM) and Military Medal (MM) during his military career, McNab claims to have been the British Army’s most highly decorated serving soldier when he left the SAS in February 1993

McNab assumed his pseudonym while writing Bravo Two Zero. When he appears on television to promote his books or to act as a special services expert, his face is shadowed to prevent identification. As Larry King put it, when McNab appeared on the Larry King live show on CNN: “We have Andy in shadows. He’s wanted by terrorist groups.” According to the book The Big Breach, by Richard Tomlinson, a renegade MI6 spy, McNab was part of a special training team after the Iraq war, training MI6 recruits in sabotage and guerrilla warfare techniques.

Due to the extremely sensitive nature of his work while serving with the SAS, McNab has a legally binding contract obliging him to submit his writings to the British Ministry of Defence for review. He is still believed to be wanted by a number of the world’s terrorist organisations; he therefore chooses not to reveal either his face or his current location.

After leaving the Army, McNab developed and maintained a specialist training course for news crews, journalists and members of non-governmental organisations working in hostile environments. He spent time in Hollywood as a technical weapons advisor and trainer on Michael Mann`s film Heat. He was also the technical advisor on the 2005 crime film Dirty.

In February 2007, McNab returned to Iraq for seven days as The Sun newspaper’s security advisor with his old regiment, the Royal Green Jackets. There, he researched the background forCrossfire (2007).

McNab has written about his experiences in the SAS in three best-selling books, Bravo Two Zero (1993), Immediate Action (1995), and Seven Troop (2008). Bravo Two Zero sold over 1.7 million copies, with Immediate Action selling 1.4 million in the UK. It has been published in 17 countries and translated into 16 languages. The CD spoken word version of Bravo Two Zero, narrated by McNab, sold over 60,000 copies and earned a silver disc. A BBC film of Bravo Two Zero, starring Sean Bean, was shown on prime time BBC One television in 1999 and released on DVD in 2000.Immediate Action, McNab’s autobiography, spent 18 weeks at the top of the bestseller lists following the lifting of an ex-parte injunction granted to the Ministry of Defence in September 1995.

The veracity of McNab’s first book, Bravo Two Zero, has been questioned by Michael Asher, an explorer, Arabist, and former SAS soldier, who visited Iraq with a Channel 4 film crew, and interviewed many eye-witnesses. Asher concluded that much of what McNab wrote was a fabrication, and that there was no evidence that the Bravo Two Zero patrol accounted for a single enemy casualty. Moreover, McNab’s account and that of his comrade Chris Ryan are contradictory on many points. This has been corroborated by Peter Ratcliffe, who was regimental sergeant major of 22 SAS Regiment during the Gulf War, who stated that, in a debriefing to the entire Regiment, recorded on video, none of the patrol members mentioned contacts with large numbers of enemies or any of the other extraordinary incidents included in the books. Asher’s conclusion was that the book’s claim to be ‘the true story of an SAS patrol in action’ was a fraud. Despite threats from their lawyers, neither McNab nor Ryan have brought a libel action against Asher for his conclusions, which were accepted by the Ministry of Defence to the extent that they issued a letter to the parents of deceased patrol-member, Vince Phillips, exonerating him from blame for compromising the patrol, as claimed in the books.

McNab is the author of a number of action thrillers. He has been officially registered by Nielsen Book Scan as a best-selling British thriller writer.

Nick Stone Missions is a successful series based on an ex-SAS soldier working on deniable operations for British intelligence. The series draws extensively on McNab’s experiences and knowledge of Special Forces soldiering. TheBoy Soldier Series was written with the cooperation of Robert Rigby and follows a boy named Danny Watts and his grandfather Fergus, apparently a rogue ex- SAS soldier.

Andy McNab has also written books for Quick Reads, a charity that supports World Book day. BBC raw words offers exclusive audio versions of the latest Quick Reads by Andy McNab, Last Night Another Soldier (2010), read by Rupert Degas. Other fiction books include Audio Stories, Men at War series, Battlefield 3, Tom Buckingham series, and two young adult series: Dropzone Stories and The New Recruit series

After his work on the Miramax film Heat, Miramax acquired the film rights to the first four of McNab’s novels, and Echelon (2012) is currently[when?] in production, based on the book Firewall(2000). McNab will co-produce and co-write the script and also act as technical adviser. According to McNab on his 2011 book signing tour, either Jason Statham or Tom Hardy will play the lead role of Nick Stone.

He now lives in New York

He is also a director of military service recruitment, mentoring and Foundation organisation, ForceSelect. McNab is also a board member of a private security company.

He worked with Dice on perfecting various situations involving techniques on gun fighting, stance and other war-related issues for Battlefield 3.

Sourced from Wikipedia