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    Barrel of a Gun: A War Correspondent’s Misspent Moments in Combat

    Posted By: arundhati
    Barrel of a Gun: A War Correspondent’s Misspent Moments in Combat

    Al J Venter, "Barrel of a Gun: A War Correspondent’s Misspent Moments in Combat"
    English | ISBN: 1935149253 | 2010 | 480 pages | EPUB | 10 MB

    “Anybody who says that the pen is mightier than the sword hasn’t spent time in Somalia, or in Beirut during its bloody heyday.” So begins this fascinating memoir of a journalist, filmmaker, and just plain raconteur who has made a career of examining warfare—on the ground and as the bullets are flying. While the average citizen is aware of violent conflicts broiling all around the globe, Al J. Venter—from some strange compulsion unexplainable even by him—has felt the need to see them all in person, preferably at the center of the action.

    Born in South Africa, Venter has found no shortage of horrific battles on his own continent, from Rhodesia to Biafra, and Angola to Somalia. He has ridden with the legendary merc group Executive Outcomes, jumped into combat with South Africa’s crack Parachute Regiment (the Parabats), and traipsed the jungles with both guerrillas and national troops under whichever strongman in the country then held power. During Sierra Leone’s civil war he flew in the government’s lone Mi-24 Hind gunship as it blasted apart rebel villages and convoys, his complaint being that the Soviet-made craft leaked when it rained.

    In the Mideast he went into southern Lebanon with the invading Israeli army as it encountered resistance from multiple Muslim groups, including the newly formed Hezbollah. Curious about the other side of the hill, he joined up with General Aoun’s Christian militias while that conflict was at its height. Touching down in Croatia during the Balkan wars, and in Congo during their perpetual one, as well as the Uganda of Idi Amin, Venter never lost his lust for action, even as he sometimes had to put down his camera or notebook to pick up an AK-47.

    In his journeys, Venter associated with an array of similarly daring soldiers and journalists, from “Mad Mike” Hoare to Danny Pearl, as well as elite soldiers from around the world, many of whom, he sadly relates, never emerged from the war zones they entered. The creator of countless documentaries and books, from warfare to shark diving to nuclear proliferation, Al Venter has here offered the reader his own personal combat experiences, in all their multi-faceted fascination.
    http://www.talkradioeurope.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2043:al-venter&catid=160

    Table of Contents

    Prologue: The Dubious Life of a War Correspondent

    1 Getting to a Lebanon at War
    2 Death of a Young Man
    3 Levantine Woes
    4 Lagos and an Army Mutiny
    5 Biafra: The Build-Up
    6 Survival in a West African Conflict
    7 A Dirty Distant War: El Salvador
    8 Patrol in No Man’s Land
    9 A Central American Conflagration
    10 Somalia: Wars of No Consequence
    11 Air Operations in the Horn of Africa
    12 Somali Aftermath
    13 Search and Destroy in the Eastern Mediterranean
    14 Israel’s Border Wars
    15 Marj’Ayoun and the South Lebanese Army
    16 Uganda: Africa’s Killing Fields
    17 Bounty Hunt in Rhodesia
    18 On the Ground in Rhodesia’s Bush War
    19 Zaire: Road to an African War
    20 Into the Congo’s Cauldron
    21 Jailed for Espionage in Lubumbashi
    22 Isolated in a Congolese Prison
    23 ‘Kill all Infidels – Allahu Aqbar!’
    24 Tete Convoy in Mozambique
    25 Serengeti Must Not Die
    26 The Balkan Beast: Landmines in Croatia
    27 Balkan War Joint-STARS Offensive
    28 Helicopter Drug Raids in Zululand

    Postscript
    Endnotes
    Acknowledgements