Main centres: | 1-3 business days |
Regional areas: | 3-4 business days |
Remote areas: | 3-5 business days |
This is a story about 32 Battalion and its people. In this book the casualties of war aren't just numbers, the author puts a name to the wounded and the dead and we get to know many of them personally (if only briefly in some cases), while living through their vividly retold stories.
Dr Bothma chronologically interweaves his own path to becoming a 32 Battalion platoon leader with the history and activities of the Battalion, providing both a comprehensive third-person retelling as well as an engaging personal account. The difficult early years of the unit perhaps makes for the most fascinating (and also tragic) reading. On top of the challenges of honing ill-disciplined troops from various factions into a cohesive fighting unit, there were many other problems: plagued by language barriers, poorly equipped, inexperienced and without air support once they crossed the border (not even casevacs were allowed) these men had a hard time against the more experienced and better equipped SWAPO insurgents, resulting in many avoidable casualties, often from friendly fire incidents or accidents.
It's a fascinating look into this "secret" unit, and the author manages it without any disrespect to either friend or foe on the battlefield. He reserves his anger and contempt for the politics and politicians behind the war, who forced these men to shed blood for them and then sold them out and threw them away
Paperback, 406 pages
Published, 2nd edition 2007
¿¿