Each jeep was a mobile fortress, bristling with twin Vickers K machine guns —rapid-fire weapons originally designed for aircraft. These guns were loaded with tracer and incendiary ammunition, ready to turn the airfield into an inferno. The Phantom’s Flare
Stirling’s target was , a vital Luftwaffe airfield complex roughly 235 miles west of Cairo. For months, his Special Air Service (SAS) had specialized in stealthy, foot-based sabotage. But tonight, he was pioneering a new, louder form of warfare: a high-speed vehicle assault. Stirling’s Desert Triumph: The SAS Egyptian Air...
Seeing his opening, Stirling fired a into the sky. Each jeep was a mobile fortress, bristling with
Stirling's Desert Triumph: The SAS Egyptian Airfield Raids 1942 For months, his Special Air Service (SAS) had
The Egyptian night of July 26, 1942, was illuminated by a full moon, casting a ghostly silver glow over the shifting dunes of the Qattara Depression. Deep behind enemy lines, 18 heavily modified jeeps moved in two disciplined columns, their engines a low hum against the vast silence of the desert. At the head of the convoy sat Major David Stirling, the man the Germans would soon fear as the . The Bold Strategy