From the Author:
Their enemy: the Armies of the Warsaw Pact - over 1 million strong.
Their mission: Buy NATO time in the event of a Soviet attack against Europe.
The odds against them: Suicidal.
These days we often hear of the exploits of special military units like "Delta" and the SEALs. But what about the unit that led the way in the field of unconventional warfare and counterterrorism?
"No force of its size has contributed more to peace, stability and freedom."
That's what the former head of US Army Special Operations Command, Lieutenant General Charles Cleveland said about the unique subject of this book.
This is the history of a unique US Army Special Forces Detachment and the men who served in it. Known initially as Detachment "A" Berlin, it was stationed far behind the Iron Curtain in West Berlin, inside the Soviet-controlled German Democratic Republic. This unit existed for one reason: to cause havoc behind the enemy's lines.
Like all American Special Forces units, Detachment "A" traced its origins to the Office of Strategic Services, but its methods of operation were unlike those of any other "SF" unit. The book describes the unit's origins and the reasons for its existence through recently declassified files and first person histories of those who served there. These voices will show the unit's evolution as the enemy and the environment changed. The men relate the details of their improbable mission, how they prepared, and how it was to be accomplished. It is told from the soldiers' viewpoint along with the strategic overview from the top.
Special Forces Berlin's wartime mission was classified Top Secret and was largely unchanged throughout its existence, but it had a second important peacetime mission. In the late 1960s, unrest struck the capitals of Europe as left-wing radicals and Palestinian nationalists began to use terrorism to achieve their political goals. In response, the US European Command ordered the unit to prepare for a new mission: Counterterrorism. The level of expertise it achieved, along with its skills in urban unconventional warfare, led to its participation in the attempted rescue of the American hostages in Teheran, Iran.
Although the ill-fated Iran Hostage Rescue Raid has been generally covered elsewhere, this book tells an aspect of the story that has never been covered - the Detachment's mission and its men on the ground who led the way for the main force. The history ends with the fall of the Berlin Wall, but the unit left a legacy that served as a guide for the creation of a new kind of Special Mission Unit.
How can I tell the story? I was there. I served in the unit twice and know the men, mission, and environment well. But this is not my story or my history - it is the history of everyone who served in the unit before, with, and after me. It is told with their stories alongside the history from the unit's files and with images to illustrate the activities from the early days until the end.
This is a history that may only be told once. Few records remain and many of the men who served in the units are gone. No official history was written and the words contained in this work may well be the definitive history of this very unique US Army unit.
From the Back Cover:
The previously untold history of a highly classified US Army Special Forces Detachment covertly stationed in West Berlin, Germany during the Cold War, poised to act if war ever broke out.
"With this excellent telling, James Stejskal has made an important contribution on several levels to our acknowledged history of US Army Special Forces and the development of today's American special operations capability. The book recognizes a unit, the members of which were among the most impactful of giants on whose shoulders the current special operators stand, whether in the SF groups or in the most clandestine of our special operations "SMU" outfits. ... Their exploits, known to few by design, but long rumored can now be shared with the public and SOF professionals. It is fi tting too that the unit be recognized and her members honored before time finishes with these great men."
- LTG Charles T. Cleveland, US Army Retired
"Jim has done an exceptional job capturing and portraying the operational challenges and spirit of commitment by unit members to the mission. Det A was my third Special Forces duty assignment and 4th ODA experience. ... Special Forces existed to make the seemingly impossible feasible and it was a technically sparse time where only the men made success possible. ... The teams going over the wall, I did not envy. However, the psychological pressures of potentially operating in an urban unconventional warfare environment under Soviet occupation were far different that operating in mountains or jungle and many fine folks preferred the open cross wall mission or chose to move on to 1/10 SFGA in Bad Tolz and we recruited from them in return. A great time, outstanding folks, and cherished memories. Special mention for SGM Jeff Raker who was a mentor to all and the glue that bound us together. Any potential for success derives from his influence on the unit."
- Ron Sheckler, ODA3
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