THE BRAVO PATROLS
In January 1991 two SAS patrols embarked on covert missions deep behind enemy lines in Iraq during Gulf War I. They were Bravo Two Zero and Bravo Three Zero. Their objective: Search
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In January 1991 two SAS patrols embarked on covert missions deep behind enemy lines in Iraq during Gulf War I. They were Bravo Two Zero and Bravo Three Zero. Their objective: Search
After staging out a forward base in Saudi Arabia, the eight man team known as Bravo Two Zero was inserted into Iraq by a Chinook helicopter on the night of January 22, 1991.
The team''s mission was to penetrate the area along the main supply route from the capital Baghdad to north-west Iraq, where they would set up an observation post, monitor enemy
Thirty years ago during the Gulf War, former Special Forces soldier Chris Ryan was part of the ill-fated eight-man Bravo Two Zero SAS patrol in Iraq. Deployed deep behind enemy lines, along the main
In 1991 during the Gulf War, an SAS unit of eight men led by Andy McNab was dropped into Iraq on a dangerous covert mission. Within days the men were compromised and pursued
Bravo Two Zero was the callsign of an eight-man patrol from B Squadron of the British Army''s 22nd Special Air Service (SAS) Regiment, inserted by helicopter deep behind Iraqi lines on the night of
Eight men from the SAS detachment, code-named Bravo Two Zero, were to insert into Iraq and set up an observation post to monitor Iraq''s main supply route into Kuwait.
The patrol''s call sign was Bravo Two Zero. Their task formed part of a wider effort to counter Iraq''s mobile Scud missile threat, which was politically and militarily significant because Scud
Eight men from the SAS detachment, code-named Bravo Two Zero, were to insert into Iraq and set up an observation post to monitor Iraq''s main
Bravo Two Zero was the call sign of an eight-man British Army Special Air Service (SAS) patrol, deployed into Iraq during the First Gulf War in January 1991.