Description
Book SynopsisThis highly illustrated title traces the development of mercenary soldiering from individuals and small units in the African wars of the 1960s90s to today''s state-employed corporate military contractors.The phenomenon of mercenary soldiering has constantly recurred in the news since the 1960s and has always attracted lively interest. The concept of mercenaries' began in the former Belgian Congo during the 1960s when men such as Mike Hoare and Bob Denard assembled hundreds of military veterans to ''do the fighting'' for a particular leader or faction. This idea soon evolved into small teams of individuals training and leading local forces with varying success; wars in Rhodesia and on South Africa''s borders attracted foreign volunteers into national armed forces, and veterans of these conflicts later sought employment elsewhere as mercenaries. The wars in the former Yugoslavia also attracted foreign fighters inspired as much by political and religious motives as by pay. T
Table of ContentsINTRODUCTION AFRICA -Katanga and the Congo: 1960–68 -Rhodesia: 1964–79 -Angola: 1975–76 -South Africa’s border war: 1966–89 INDIAN OCEAN -Comoros and Chad: 1978–95 -Operation
Anvil, Seychelles: 1981 SOUTH AMERICA -Suriname: 1986–91 -Operation
Phoenix, Colombia: 1988–91 THE BREAK-UP OF YUGOSLAVIA -1991–95 WAR IN THE 21ST CENTURY -Private military companies -Iraq and Afghanistan DEALING WITH THE FALL–OUT SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX