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The Circuit: An Ex-SAS Soldier's True Account of One of the Most Powerful and Secretive Industries Spawned by the War on Terror | 
enlarge | Author: Bob Shepherd Publisher: Macmillan Category: Book
List Price: £16.99 Buy New: £7.19 You Save: £9.80 (58%)
New (25) Used (4) from £6.95
Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 3479
Media: Hardcover Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.5
ISBN: 0330455737 EAN: 9780330455732 ASIN: 0330455737
Publication Date: April 18, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new. Mint condition! Unwanted gift. Never read.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
An eye-opener July 23, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a great insight into life on the front-line of private security - in the world's most dangerous locations! The author gives a gripping and detailed account of how to stay alive and more importantly keep your clients alive. There are some great anecdotes where the author is visiting US military outposts and drawing on his years of service in the Regiment, has to point out basic failings in US security arrangements. It is a great read which shines a light onto the politics and realities of the murky world of the Circuit.
Honest down to earth comments July 21, 2008 I met Bob in 1975 at RAF Colerne when Bob and my brother-in-law Stefan were on 2 Squadron(Paras) RAF Regiment. A nice quiet sort of bloke. Jack Palmer was the W/O then and another recruit Andy Ramsey who got in 1975 became a long serving W/O of the squadron later on. I had heard that he had joined the SAS and had become the W/O in charge of SAS training later on. I enjoyed that bit about Bravo Two Zero, just about summed up Andy McNab(not a real name). Andy's book was nearly all fiction and I am surprised the senior SAS Officers allowed it to be written. Bravo Two Zero was a disaster from start to finish, all to do with arrogance and lack of leadership and experience.
Interesting June 27, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Bob Shepherd, ex-SAS, tell us the story of his time as a PMC from the days when it was a small, closed market, to today's free-for-all in Iraq. Clearly, Bob knows his stuff. His story is not gung-ho; though clearly a man who knows how to handle himself in dangerous situations, he is often smart enough to know how far to push the envelope. But he understands the job inside and out. In one very revealing chapter, he tells us of a time he was escorting a journalist in Iraq, and ended up advising local American commanders on doing basic counter-insurgency - some of it really simple stuff - it was scary how little they knew about it, and how much of a lack of common sense they had. If this experience of Bob's is any reflection of most of the American units, it certainly explain why such a dog's ear has been made in Iraq. Bob's experience of dealing with modern PMC's in Iraq and Afghanistan also makes for sobering reading - if anything it was scarier than his dealings with the American forces. PMC's are in competition, with an eye on the bottom line. If Bobs' account is anything to go by, safety has been compromised to meet this bottom line. Many of the PMC's he encountered were people completely unsuited to the job.
The one thing I think this book lacks is a little scholarship. We don't really get any figures - how much of a problem this is. Bob's experiences are well worth reading, but you come away oddly unsatisified, wanting to know more. I am glad he was encouraged to put his experiences on paper, but we could do with a bit more background. Bob doesn't feel comfortable discussing his years in the SAS, and you have to respect that. So perhaps some expansion on the PMC industry would make it more interesting, and accomodate this research in the book. Facts and figures would be made so much more interesting by these great accounts Bob gives us.
A True account of a misperceived industry. June 6, 2008 A first class and honest account of what is going on in the overseas security world today, in which the author highlights all the wrong doings and mistakes which is happening on the Circuit,to date and in the past. Interesting paragraph also on Bravo Two Zero and the author who obviously has a wealth of experience of operating,mixing and living with the people of the Middle East writes nothing but of great respect for its people and its culture. No blood guts and glory tales, just an honest story with some very good highlighted points on profit margins, deaths and contracts undertaken which should never be taken or accepted by private security companies. A thoroughly enjoyable read.
Worthy but Dull May 24, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
I wouldn't recommend this book if you want excitement or depth of writing. It's a mix of opinion (footnotes?!) and autobiography essentially describing a job that pays well, and where success is defined by nothing unplanned and nasty happening. Given that the author is seemingly very good at his job, this makes for a dull read, its not a page turner. It sort of works as an up-to-date travelogue of dangerous places around the Middle East, but even then is not over-burdened with description of place, culture or peoples. Though at one point a character called Will Scully appears, and I would most definately recommend his book about his time in Sierra Leone called "Once a Pilgrim" - 5 stars and for me everything that this book isn't.
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