The Paras Portugal's First Elite Force  9781911512486

The Paras Portugal's First Elite Force

Product code 9781911512486

€ 22.89

:
Add to cart

Series Africa @ War 28

Publisher/Brand Helion & Company

Author John P Cann

Format a4

No. Pages 80

Version Soft cover

Language English

Category Aviationbooks

Subcategory World Wars Books » War in Africa

Availability only 2 remaining

Add this product to my wishlist

This product was added to our database on Thursday 12 December 2019.

Your reliable Aviation Book Source since 1989


Also in this series:
ProductPublisher/BrandSeries/scalePrice €
Congo Unravelled Military Operations from Independence to the Mercenary Revolt 1960-68. Revised Edition Congo Unravelled Military Operations from Independence to the Mercenary Revolt 1960-68. Revised EditionHelion & CompanyAfrica @ War 40€ 24.72
Ethiopian - Eritrean wars volume 1: Eritrean war of independence 1961-1988 Ethiopian - Eritrean wars volume 1: Eritrean war of independence 1961-1988Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 29€ 24.72
Great Lakes Conflagration: Second Congo War, 1998-2003 Great Lakes Conflagration: Second Congo War, 1998-2003Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 14€ 24.72
Koevoet Volume 1: South West African Police Counter-Insurgency Operations during the South African Border War, 1978-1984 Koevoet Volume 1: South West African Police Counter-Insurgency Operations during the South African Border War, 1978-1984Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 60€ 24.72
Minurso United Nations Mission for the referendum in Western Sahara: Peace Operation Stalled in the Desert, 1991-2021 Minurso United Nations Mission for the referendum in Western Sahara: Peace Operation Stalled in the Desert, 1991-2021Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 64€ 24.72
Sanctuary Lost Volume 1: The Air War for Guinea 1961-1967 Sanctuary Lost Volume 1: The Air War for Guinea 1961-1967Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 59€ 24.72
Sanctuary Lost Volume 2: Portugal's Air War for Guinea, 1961-1974. Debacle to Deadlock, 1966-1972 Sanctuary Lost Volume 2: Portugal's Air War for Guinea, 1961-1974. Debacle to Deadlock, 1966-1972Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 67€ 24.72
The Flechas: Insurgent Hunting in Eastern Angola 1965-1974 The Flechas: Insurgent Hunting in Eastern Angola 1965-1974Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 11€ 21.06
The Fuzileiros: Portuguese Marines in Africa 1961-1974 HEL0553The Fuzileiros: Portuguese Marines in Africa 1961-1974Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 25€ 21.06
War of Intervention in Angola, Volume 2. Angolan and Cuban Forces at War 1975-1976 War of Intervention in Angola, Volume 2. Angolan and Cuban Forces at War 1975-1976Helion & CompanyAfrica @ War 34€ 21.06

Product description

Portuguese paratroopers or "paras" began as a stepchild of the army and found a home in the Portuguese Air Force in 1955. Initially, the post-World War Two Portuguese Army seemed to have had mixed emotions about the need for elite, special-purpose forces that operated in small units with the attendant flexibility and elevated lethality. Shock troops have been traditionally controversial, and even the vaunted military theorist Baron Karl von Clausewitz saw little point in them. The history of the paras in the Portuguese Army is illustrative of this ambivalent view. Nevertheless, in a "war of the weak" in which insurgents avoid government strengths and exploit its vulnerabilities using agility, deception, and imagination, such small, crack government units are particularly well suited to counterinsurgency operations. This appreciation emerged with the threat of a new kind of war in Portuguese Africa, an insurgency, and the new and visionary Air Force well understood the potential of paras when combined with the mobility of the helicopter. The Air Force saw an urgent need for troops who could fight an unconventional war, who could not only defeat an enemy but separate him from the population in which he sought concealment and support and on which he depended for funding, recruits, and intelligence. These were specialised warfighters who in one minute were physically destroying an insidious enemy and in the next administering aid and support and protecting a vulnerable population. These were just the troops that Portugal would require for military success in its approaching battle fought between 1961 and 1974 to retain its African possessions, and this vision would be realized on the African battlefield with devastating consequences. This book tells the paras' story as researched from Portuguese sources. It details how they were formed and trained and how they developed their imaginative, effective, and feared tactics and applied them in operations to protect the population from insurgent predations and destroy a vicious enemy.