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256 pages, Paperback
First published October 15, 1987
‘Paddy was the best professional killer I have ever seen,’ says Chalky White. He adds: ‘The best thing that happened to the regiment was when David Stirling was captured. He was too much of a gentleman – in our job you needed a killer. You knew not to mess with Paddy. It was not that he was menacing, but people knew there was a line never to cross.' Martin Dillon, Rogue Warrior of the SAS, (Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing, 2012),135–136.
Major-General David Lloyd Owen clearly remembers greeting Paddy at the rendezvous after a raid on Fuka. He asked ‘How were things tonight?’ ‘A bit trickier tonight,’ replied Paddy. ‘They had posted a sentry on nearly every bloody plane. I had to knife the sentries before I could place the bombs.’ ‘And he had, too,’ adds Lloyd Owen. ‘He must have knifed about seventeen of them.’ Martin Dillon, Rogue Warrior of the SAS, (Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing, 2012), 50