Inside Delta Force: The Story of America's Elite Counterterrorist Unit
Inside Delta Force: The Story of America's Elite Counterterrorist Unit book cover

Inside Delta Force: The Story of America's Elite Counterterrorist Unit

Paperback – July 29, 2003

Price
$35.89
Format
Paperback
Pages
416
Publisher
Dell
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0440237334
Dimensions
4.25 x 1.25 x 6.75 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

"In this rapidly changing and dangerous world, U.S. Special Forces are vital to the security of all Americans. CSM Eric Haney is perhaps the World's foremost expert on military special ops. Read INSIDE DELTA FORCE and learn what we are really up against." --Bill O'Reilly, Anchor, Fox News Channel "A book that could not be more timely, written by a warrior who knows what he's talking about.."--James Webb, author of Fields of Fire and Lost Soldiers“A rousing chronicle of what it’s really like to be a special-ops guy.” --Esquire“Compelling memoir...a book that you won’t want to put down.” --Playboy“Perfect for military enthusiasts.” --Kirkus Reviews From the Inside Flap Delta Force. They are the U.S. Army?s most elite top-secret strike force. They dominate the modern battlefield, but you won?t hear about their heroics on CNN. No headlines can reveal their top-secret missions, and no book has ever taken readers inside?until now. Here, a founding member of Delta Force takes us behind the veil of secrecy and into the action-to reveal the never-before-told story of 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-D (Delta Force). INSIDE DELTA FORCETHE STORY OF AMERICA?S ELITE COUNTERTERRORIST UNIT He is a master of espionage, trained to take on hijackers, terrorists, hostage takers, and enemy armies. He can deploy by parachute or arrive by commercial aircraft. Survive alone in hostile cities. Speak foreign languages fluently. Strike at enemy targets with stunning swiftness and extraordinary teamwork. He is the ultimate modern warrior: the Delta Force Operator. In this dramatic behind-the-scenes chronicle, Eric Haney, one of the founding members of Delta Force, takes us inside this legendary counterterrorist unit. Here, for the first time, are details of the grueling selection process?designed to break the strongest of men?that singles out the best of the best: the Delta Force Operator. With heart-stopping immediacy, Haney tells what it?s really like to enter a hostage-held airplane. And from his days in Beirut, Haney tells an unforgettable tale of bodyguards and bombs, of a day-to-day life of madness and beauty, and of how he and a teammate are called on to kill two gunmen targeting U.S. Marines at the Beirut airport. As part of the team sent to rescue American hostages in Tehran, Haney offers a first-person description of that failed mission that is a chilling, compelling account of a bold maneuver undone by chance?and a few fatal mistakes.From fighting guerrilla warfare in Honduras to rescuing missionaries in Sudan and leading the way onto the island of Grenada, Eric Haney captures the daring and discipline that distinguish the men of Delta Force. Inside Delta Force brings honor to these singular men while it puts us in the middle of action that is sudden, frightening, and nonstop around the world. From the Hardcover edition. "In this rapidly changing and dangerous world, U.S. Special Forces are vital to the security of all Americans. CSM Eric Haney is perhaps the World's foremost expert on military special ops. Read INSIDE DELTA FORCE and learn what we are really up against." --Bill O'Reilly, Anchor, Fox News Channel "A book that could not be more timely, written by a warrior who knows what he's talking about.."--James Webb, author of Fields of Fire and Lost Soldiers“A rousing chronicle of what it’s really like to be a special-ops guy.” --Esquire“Compelling memoir...a book that you won’t want to put down.” --Playboy“Perfect for military enthusiasts.” --Kirkus Reviews ERIC L. HANEY, Command Sergeant Major, USA (ret.), served for more than twenty years in the United States Army’s most demanding combat units: as a combat infantryman, a Ranger, and ultimately as a founding member of Delta Force. In his retirement, Haney has protected princes, presidents, and CEOs alike. He has negotiated with Latin American guerrillas for the safe return of hostages, rescued American children kidnapped around the world, and provided security for international oil companies operating in the most dangerous regions on earth. Today Haney lives and writes in the relative peace and quiet of Marietta, Georgia. From the Hardcover edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction I am a nomad, son of an ancient line of nomads. The larger part of my family line is made up of the Scots-Irish, a people descended from that peculiar mixture of the Celts of the northern British Isles and the invading Danes and Norsemen. The result was a landless, illiterate, anarchic, and warlike people who were always difficult, if not downright impossible, to govern. They were a race the British Crown rightfully viewed as dangerous rebels, and consequently exiled to the New World by the tens of thousands. On arrival in the American colonies, these people fled as far as possible from government control, many of them crossing the Blue Ridge Mountains, and migrating from there throughout what eventually became the highlands of the southern United States. They were the original "backwoodsmen" of American history. In their new home these renegade peoples tended to travel together in interrelated clans that also married and bred quite readily with the Cherokee and Creek Indians of the region. Both sides of my family were landless sharecroppers and mountain people as far back as I can determine. There is no written record of ancestry, for my parents were the first of our people to read and write and to own a little property. Inherited wealth may be something easily squandered, but inherited poverty is a legacy almost impossible to lose. What did I receive from this lineage? Things I consider to be very valuable: a good raw intellect and a good tough body. A sense of independence and a realization that wherever I am is my home. A sense of humor. A sense of personal honor that results in a touchiness common to our people. We are easily offended and prone to violence when offended. When the only thing you own is your sense of honor, you tend to protect it at all costs. I inherited a sense of wanderlust and a curiosity about the world. I inherited a warlike attitude; we have always been good soldierly material if properly disciplined and broken in. I inherited a sense of spirituality rather than "religion," which has served me well, especially in trying times. I am self-confident and resilient. My psyche is self-cleansing. I love life. I grew up in the mountains of north Georgia during the fifties and sixties. It was then part of the "third world," and some say it still is. Electricity came to our home when I was a young boy. Indoor plumbing followed some years later. Though I have some fair native intelligence, I never received any direction in school and was often an indifferent student. But I loved to read and would consume all my textbooks at the start of the year and then coast after that. I preferred roaming the mountains, hunting, fishing, and exploring. I would become the first of my family to graduate high school, and for us that was considered a pretty good achievement, as our expectations weren't very high. It isn't that my parents were against education, it's that neither of them had gone further than elementary school and they just didn't have the ability or the understanding to help. Though we may not have been scholars, we did know how to go into the military. I had grown up listening to the war stories and tales of my family and friends and I was determined to join up just as soon as I was able. I enlisted in the Army in the spring of 1970, while still in high school, with a reporting date immediately after graduation. I fell in love with the Army as soon as I met her. I became a professional soldier, and that is what I will be until I die. The military is a profession that brands itself on the soul and causes you forever after to view the world and all human endeavor through a unique set of mental filters. The more profound and intense the experience, the hotter the brand, and the deeper it is plunged into you. I was seared to the core of my being. For twenty years, I served America in the most demanding and dangerous units in the United States Army. As a combat infantryman, as a Ranger, and ultimately, as a founding member and eight-year veteran of the Army’s supersecret counterterrorist arm, Delta Force. Close brutal combat puts a callous layer on each individual who undergoes the experience. With some men, their souls become trapped inside those accrued layers and they stay tightly bound up within themselves, unable or unwilling to reach outside that hard protective shell. For others, the effect is just the opposite. That coating becomes like a looking glass, highlighting and magnifying the things that are really important in life. Every sensation becomes precious and delicious. Even the painful ones. Sometimes especially the painful ones. I feel that's what my experiences have done for me. I hate the destructiveness and waste of warfare, but I love the sensation of it. In combat, mankind is seen in absolutes--at his very best or his very worst. There are no in-betweens. No one has a place to hide. War has also taught me that each one of us contains every ingredient of the human recipe. By varying measure we are all cowards and brave men, thieves and honest men, selfish and selfless men, malingerers and champions, weasels and lions. The only question is how much of each attribute we allow--or force--to dominate our being. In combat, there are no winners. The victors just happen to lose less than the vanquished. One side may impose its will on the other, but there is nothing noble or virtuous about the process. People are killed and maimed, homes and communities are destroyed, lives are shattered, families are broken apart and scattered to the wind—and just a few years later, we can barely remember why. Above my desk is a picture taken in 1982 of B Squadron, my old Delta unit. It is one of the very few group photos ever taken within our organization. It shows a group of hardened Special Operations combat veterans. In the course of the next decade, nearly every man in that photo would be wounded at least once, some multiple times. Many were maimed or crippled for life. A number would be killed in action. All of us are freighted with the memories of those times and events, and all of us are better men for the experience. This is my story of that perilous yet fascinating world, as seen through my eyes and lived in my skin, told as honestly and faithfully as I can. I can do no more than that. And in honor of my fallen comrades, I can do no less. INSIDE DELTA FORCE During the 1970s, the United States became the favorite whipping boy for any terrorist group worthy of the name. They had come to realize that American interests could be struck with practical impunity throughout the world, and as the decade unfolded, the pace and severity of those assaults quickened. America, the Gulliver-like giant, had sickened of warfare in Vietnam and was both unable and unwilling to slap at the mosquitoes of terrorism. For years, famed Special Forces officer Colonel Charlie Beckwith had been the lone voice crying in the wilderness about the terrorist threat facing the nation, and what it would take to effectively confront that threat. He had seen the need within the U.S. military for a compact, highly skilled, and versatile unit able to undertake and execute difficult and unusual "special" missions. Modeled along the lines of the British commando organization, the Special Air Service (SAS), such an element would be the surgical instrument that could be employed at a moment's notice to execute those tasks outside the realm of normal military capability. It was Charlie's tenacity that finally won the day and set the wheels in motion that would ultimately bring such a unit into existence. But creating that organization and bringing it to life within the hidebound hierarchy of the Army was a task not dissimilar to electing a pope. As a rule, armies hate change--and no one hates change more than the ones who have benefited most by the status quo: the general officers. Now and then, innovative thinkers do happen to wear stars on their collars, and Colonel Beckwith's loud and persistent calls for a national counterterrorism force had found the ears of two such men: Generals Bob Kingston and Edwin "Shy" Meyer. Kingston was stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and he readily saw the possibilities of the type of force Beckwith was proposing. But he knew that presenting the idea through Army bureaucracy was like walking in a minefield--it could be killed in a thousand different ways. To make headway would require someone with horsepower and a mastery of the military political system, and Shy Meyer was that man. General Meyer was serving as the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Army, and rumor had it that he would soon become the Chief Beckwith and Kingston floated their idea of a counterterrorism force to Meyer and immediately realized they were preaching to the choir. Meyer, too, had entertained ideas along that same line, and now the three men enthusiastically shared their thoughts on the subject. The need was evident, but creating a force from whole cloth was going to be extremely difficult. First they had to determine what types of missions their fictional unit would be tasked with, because the mission dictates a unit's size. With that they were able to build a Table of Organization and Equipment (TO&E), which outlines unit configuration, rank structure, and arms and equipment. The completed TO&E allowed them to forecast a budget for both start-up and annual costs. Once their "straw man" was complete, from his position in the Pentagon, Meyer started digging, looking for the places to extract the money and the men for the outfit. It may come as a surprise, but the Army does not just have men hanging around and unemployed. Every unit has a manpower quota, and every soldier is assigned to a unit, even if he doesn't work there. But sometimes there are units that are alive on paper but not actually in existence at the time, with t... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Now the inspiration for the CBS Television drama, "The Unit."
  • Delta Force. They are the U.S. Army's most elite top-secret strike force. They dominate the modern battlefield, but you won't hear about their heroics on CNN. No headlines can reveal their top-secret missions, and no book has ever taken readers inside—until now. Here, a founding member of Delta Force takes us behind the veil of secrecy and into the action-to reveal the never-before-told story of 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-D (Delta Force).
  • Inside Delta Forece
  • The Story of America's Elite Counterterrorist Unit
  • He is a master of espionage, trained to take on hijackers, terrorists, hostage takers, and enemy armies. He can deploy by parachute or arrive by commercial aircraft. Survive alone in hostile cities. Speak foreign languages fluently. Strike at enemy targets with stunning swiftness and extraordinary teamwork. He is the ultimate modern warrior: the Delta Force Operator.In this dramatic behind-the-scenes chronicle, Eric Haney, one of the founding members of Delta Force, takes us inside this legendary counterterrorist unit. Here, for the first time, are details of the grueling selection process—designed to break the strongest of men—that singles out the best of the best: the Delta Force Operator.With heart-stopping immediacy, Haney tells what it's really like to enter a hostage-held airplane. And from his days in Beirut, Haney tells an unforgettable tale of bodyguards and bombs, of a day-to-day life of madness and beauty, and of how he and a teammate are called on to kill two gunmen targeting U.S. Marines at the Beirut airport. As part of the team sent to rescue American hostages in Tehran, Haney offers a first-person description of that failed mission that is a chilling, compelling account of a bold maneuver undone by chance—and a few fatal mistakes.From fighting guerrilla warfare in Honduras to rescuing missionaries in Sudan and leading the way onto the island of Grenada, Eric Haney captures the daring and discipline that distinguish the men of Delta Force.
  • Inside Delta Force
  • brings honor to these singular men while it puts us in the middle of action that is sudden, frightening, and nonstop around the world.
  • From the Hardcover edition.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Eric Haney's Character, Integrity, Eloquence Trumps All

No sober, rational person could read Inside Delta Force and come away with the opinions voiced by reviewer Clark Kent above.

Add that to the fact that Kent's only other review is for an already-out-of-print book by Bucky Burruss, the lead dog in the attack on Haney, and it doesn't take a covert operative to suspect collusion between Clark Kent and the attack team.

Haney is far from the first writer to cover the subject of Delta Force. He is simply one of the most gifted. That's why his book continues to captivate.

The founder of the unit, Charlie Beckwith, published his infinitely more detailed (weapons/tactics) book in the early 1980s. Logan Fitch, one of the men in the Tampa "expose", also authored an article on Desert One back in 1984 -- just a few years after the bodies were buried -- and both weapons and tactics were still in use.

Burruss himself filled two books of fiction with every mission Delta had ever undertaken in 1990. But those books came and went like the haboob that doomed Desert One. Professional jealousy is no small motivator for Mr. Burruss. How could it not be?

There are two primary differences in those books and Haney's. First, those books were written by officers who, with the remarkble exception of Col Beckwith, seem to believe they alone owned the Delta franchise and should profit from it. All of those books were also written within 4-8 years of the missions they covered.

Haney's book was written 15 years after his life in Delta Force and covered missions some 20 years in the past. Most had been covered before, by Beckwith and others. The prose is eloquent, gracious, and never boastful. His book was the first to list the names of the NCOs who did the dying at Desert One and at the Beirut Embassy Bombing and he heaped praise upon them and upon his beloved Col, Charlie Beckwith.

Throughout the book we see a man with a deep, abiding respect for his comrades. In the case of the men who spoke against him in that stew of self-serving gossip, jealousy and anger wrongly dignified as news, that respect seems ill-placed.

Was it coincidence that this public tirade followed closely on the heels of Haney's public stand against the Bush adminstrations position on torture and its prosecution of the war? Hardly. Now with the "Revolt of the Generals" in full swing -- Zinni, Swannack, et al coming out with much stronger language calling for Rumsfield's resignation, we can expect similar vitriol to be directed at them.

Inside Delta Force remains a primer about a man who used the force of his own intelligence to discern right from wrong -- and continues to do so today.

That's what I call a super man.
18 people found this helpful
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Is Haney another Swift Boat phony?

The one star is for chutzpah. Haney comes in for some pretty heavy criticism in a just-published expose by Richard Lardner in the Tampa Tribune. Lotsa ex-Delta guys are quoted in the report saying Haney exaggerates shamelessly and fabricates events. They say the command ranks he claims to have attained while in Delta actually came after he'd left the unit. They feel he sold out his former comrades. I read the book. I found it entertaining, but so was Mission Impossible. Two thumbs down.
16 people found this helpful
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It's about the book, guys.

Did I miss something? When did Amazon become a place where people come to debate newspaper stories versus books? Especially newspaper stories as biased and subjective as the one that both Clark Kent and Norman Hawthorne seem to hold in such high esteem.

Since a debate has been launched, I'll join. At least I have the advantage of having read both the book and the story. And I know all the parties involved.

At least it seems likely that JB Edwards has read Haney's book. All I can tell that Hawthorne and Kent have read is a story written by a reporter who has been in bed with his sources for the last five years.

Without reading Inside Delta Force, Hawthorne is not in a position to know for a fact what Haney has and has not said. More than one SF vet, upset by that story, has troubled to read the book and then come back and said, 'hey wait a minute....he never said this or that or the other.' They've used the term "gangbang" and I think it applies.

Example: In the story, Logan Fitch called Haney a liar because Haney's book mentioned his getting punched in the nose at Desert One. Well, time does funny things to memory. A nose punch wouldn't seem to warrant the calling a man "liar" in my book, but hey. But Fitch didn't seem to mind when Haney credited him for saving his life at Desert One. I wonder why? Was the nose punch embarassing? Could it really be that simple and silly?

A medically retired Staff Sergeant friend (paralyzed in Grenada) gave me a great analogy about the founding member fracas. He said that you can found any unit you want in the Army on paper. But until you have skilled soldiers in it ready to rumble, it isn't much of a unit. Sort of like Teddy Roosevelt and the Rough Riders. Until the cowboys came in, there wasn't much "rough" about it.

But in the book, Haney goes to great lengths to honor the men who worked hard to bring Delta to life. Most of all, the late Charlie Beckwith. There were three names on the orders cut to found Delta (Nov 77?) and he is clear about that. He is clear about the date he came into the picture (Sept 78?) and the day the unit was validated by the National Command Authority (Nov. 79). Any man in the unit on that day could (and many do) consider themselves a founding member because they refined/created/formalized the institutional knowledge of strategy and tactics that was the foundation of Delta Force. All of that knowledge nearly burned to death at Desert One. Eric Haney was on that airplane and was the last man on the ground that day, pulled onto the airplane by Rodney Headman and Logan Fitch.

That is the memory Mr. Fitch did not dispute.

This is an honorable book, written by an honorable man who served his country well in very demanding elite units. He was and is respected by his former comrades and the soldiers who served under him. He respected all his comrades, even the ones in that story.

Could you guys just knock it off now? I've got a country to protect.
14 people found this helpful
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Practice makes perfect

If a single ability can be said to distinguish a combat veteran from a raw recruit, it is the ability to hit his target while under fire. Delta troops spend more time practicing accurate fire under every conceivable situation in a month than any other professional soldier spends in a life time. This small unit consumes MILLIONS of rounds of ammunition. When they see a target, they shoot and kill it nearly every time. This stacks the odds of survival, of vanquishing the enemy, in their favor by a ratio of easily 10:1--and probably a lot more. No wonder the Rangers pinned down in Mogadishu were heartened by the arrival of a small Delta contingent. At last soldiers who brought the fight to the enemy instead of enduring unremitting enemy pressure.

Acquiring such skill and the confidence it engenders, results in a major reorientation of how you conduct close quarter combat. You no longer cower when "outgunned," you attack--and win.

This excellent book describes how this top secret force of irregular operatives was formed, how it trains, and a bit of what it has accomplished. Some of their feats border on the incredible, proving that if you want to do something well, select the absolute best, and then train them beyond any level of skill of any possible adversary. The book also describes the antipathy of tradition commanders to the hippy-like Delta culture of free-wheeling soldiering, where the first order of business is to be an effective killing machine, with encumbering military discipline falling far down the list. All the discipline resides in completing the mission. Thus, Delta forces accept assignments only as goals, without the usual long list of how desk-bound planners want them to achieve it. (President Jimmy Carter's travesty of ordering a Delta rescue mission in which he micromanaged every detail of the incursion and personally ordered our troops in hostile Iran not a to use lethal means (!!!) is the opposite pole of that philosophy.)

The book is a must-buy for those fascinated by the trade-craft of special operations. It goes far to explain how superb selection and training can result in extraordinary performance, but not just the physical skills. Also required is a high order of street smarts, aggressiveness, and the determination to get the job done regardless of Command niceties--and egos. A great read and one that-once again-makes one proud to be an American.
13 people found this helpful
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G - Mac from Alabama

I read this book some time ago. It is one of the most fascinating books I've ever read. Eric Haney is one of the most fascinating people I've ever met. A very confident but unassuming person, that once you meet you realize he has no need to embellish his life's in Delta story with accounts based in fantasy.

Eric Haney is the real deal and a genuine person. Eric is a true leader and a brilliant man.

I am absolutely appalled at some of the claims made about Eric being less than honest in his book. What a shame that such a good American has to be trodden over by cheap and meaningless gossip. Jealousy is a terrible thing.

By the way, I believe much of the gossip is fueled by Eric Haney's comments about the Iraq war being a debacle. You simply can't go unscathed when you refuse to worship at the foot of the golden calf of the George W. Bush Iraq War.

Great book!!! Great American!!!

Gary McClaran

B'ham, AL
11 people found this helpful
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Definitely worth reading

There's been a lot of debate over the content of this book and whether Haney should have written it. Friend's of mine in the spec ops community have called Haney a traitor for writing it. Former members of Delta have pointed out inaccuracies in Haney's book. Apparently he is persona non grata in the Delta community now. These are things worth considering when reading the book, but I don't think there's any question whether the book is worth reading. Anyone with a serious interest in specops or Delta would be foolish to pass this one over. It's full of information you're just not going to get anywhere else. Memories are fallible and vary from man to man. I don't see any justification for calling Haney a traitor from this book. He is scrupulous about not revealing sensitive tradecraft, and withholds the identities of those still active with Delta. He is patriotic and very complimentary of his former comrades. It seems to me that Haney is perceived within the Delta community the way Beckwith was perceived within the SF community in general. From his account of events at Desert One, it's clear that Haney didn't review Beckwith's account before publsihing his own. For one, he claims that the helo pilots simply lacked the guts to go ahead with the mission, but Beckwith makes it clear that he steadfastly refused to continue the mission with only five helos. He was certain the mission would fail if they attempted it. I reccomend that anyone who reads this book read Beckwith's book as well. I highly reccomend both books. I also reccomend reading the review by Mrs. Haney found just above mine.
10 people found this helpful
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Outstanding reading on the most courageous men on the planet

I was mesmerized from the beginning page to the end. Delta Force, America's elite counterterrorism unit have to be the most prepared, professional, and deadliest warrior soldiers in the world. I began watching The Unit on CBS a few months ago and was fascinated right away with the program. I noticed during the credits that Eric Haney, a founding member of Delta Force, was instrumental in writing the story lines for the show. I immediately bought his book. If you have any patriotism running through your blood and support our military, you will absolutely love this book. From selection just to be given an opportunity to join, to the immense training in firearms, explosives, espionage, and everything else imaginable, these men thrive on danger like it was a narcotic. Haney could have been an author in another life because he writes this true story like it was a Tom Clancy novel. I was literally gripping the chair as I read about his ordeal in final selection on the hills of the Uhwarrie Forest in North Carolina. These men were tested to the limit in every way physical, but probably more so mentally. Haney tells of the horrors he witnessed in Beirut, Lebanon in the 80's, and numerous other missions. I don't know any of these men personally who have served as an "operator" or who may be serving now, but if any of you are reading this, I thank you from the bottom of my heart for protecting my freedom and this great nation. God bless all of you and...Oh Yeah...Have a good 'un
7 people found this helpful
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An Honest Warrior - Silly Debate

Inside Delta Force is a great book. Very well done. Haney spends much more time crediting friends and comrades than he does patting his own back. Seems to be a guy who does some soul-searching. There's not much here that could resembles ego at all. If he's half the gentleman he seems in the book, his bonafides are fine by me.

The review Hawthorne dismissed made me curious about Clark Kent. Kent's now reviewed every single one of this guy Bucky Burruss' books. He even reviewed Charlie Beckwith's book but used the review as a pitch for Burruss! What's up with that?
7 people found this helpful
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Interesting debate

The book is well written. I'd give it 5 stars if Sgt. Haney's purported bonafides could be establshed beyond his own account and those of his publicists.

I've also read the Lardner article in the Tampa paper. It raises some serious questions about Sgt. Haney's claims.

I find Mr. (or is it Ms.?) Edwards' "review" amusing, in that he/she takes everything Sgt. Haney says as gospel, and dismisses the Lardner article as a front for "an attack team."

I would hope that a serious discussion of Sgt. Haney's claims could take place in a public forum away from the biased arguments of sycophants and others with hidden agendas.
7 people found this helpful
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You don't read this book - you live it.

This is quite simply the greatest SpecOps book written and probably the greatest autobiography of a soldier written on top of that. Eric Haney's humanity is the key. The operations and experiences are just utterly visceral and you'll find yourself frozen, jaw slightly open, while reading them. But it's Haney's own internal commentary that lifts the book from being a series of intense action pieces to something greater. When Haney writes about cradling the head of a Cuban-trained guerilla leader he just shot and killed and reflects on the waste of war, the bravery of the man in his arms and how that moment erases all differences among men...you know you're reading something very, very special. As with Chuck Pfarrer, Haney is a thinking man's warrior - philosophical yet possessing truckloads of the intestinal fortitude necessary for doing the things these men are tasked with doing. He is at once measured, reflective, almost stoic, and exuding honesty. Carnal episodes are absent. You won't find the acronym "LBFM" in this book. What you will find is an unflinching, honest account of incredible things witnessed by an incredibly measured man.

I first came to know Delta Force though Mark Bowden's classic "Blackhawk Down" and I was as impressed as everyone else with the cool professionalism of the men. Haney's book, like Delta-founder Charlie Beckwith's own "Delta Force," begins with the formation of the unit. Unlike Beckwith's book though, which is understandably focused on Pentagon turf battles and paperwork, you are dropped right in to the selection process along with Haney, sharing his incredulousness at the lack of "spit and polish, snap to and salute" military pomp in the group (the same incredulousness, I should add, that Beckwith felt when he first observed the SAS, Delta's template). You watch along with Haney as candidates drop like flies, some even comically, others through injuries, most from just saying "enough is enough" and quitting. "Inside Delta Force" lives up to its name, and Haney puts you right inside it.

For me one of the most fascinating parts of the book is the operations in Central and South America (Grenada, Honduras). This is a part of American military history that is, at least to me, very fuzzy. Reagan blitzed any and every foothold Castro attempted to make there but because of the scale, it was a battle tailor-made for special operations forces. There is a hair-raising ride in a Blackhawk convoy that gets fired upon in a pre-dawn raid that is one of the many jaw-droppers in the book. Haney masterfully describes the psychological processes at work when you're in the air and streams of tracers are ripping into the helicopter and there's nowhere to go except inward. The accounts of the men in these situations leaves you just speechless as you watch along with Haney as a Delta Commando takes a scalpel to himself to fish a bullet out of his leg while humming a tune. Another's foot hangs by a tiny piece of flesh as it was hit with a large piece of ammunition as they ran the machine gun gauntlet in the Blackhawks. But they are alive and you feel, as surely Haney did, that you are alive too.

Beirut is another of the highlights for me. Unlike the covert ground battles in South America though, Beirut was insidiously deadly by being mundane at the same time. Without warning, a shell could land from far away on the street you were walking down. There are few things I have ever read with more power than Haney's vignettes about the brutal day-to-day reality of living in Beirut, like a father who accidentally shoots his son while firing an AK-47 joyously into the air during his son's wedding (common practice in the Middle East) who then shoots himself. Or boys playing with hand grenades by tossing them into the water, only to accidentally have one boy jump in the water too close to one explosion and be killed. The Middle East has never been portrayed so brutally yet so real and underneath Haney's stoicism you can see a great pity and deep pathos. Haney was tasked with keeping our ambassador alive and left after three tours shortly before the entire embassy was leveled with a truck bomb. He was also at Desert One and inside the plane that was struck by an errant helicopter. You will be in awe of what the man lived through and forever thankful to him for putting these searing experiences into print and doing so with great humanity and an unflinching eye. This book is the best of the genre of special operations autobiographies. No question about it.
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