Sunday Mirror

TWO fighter jets appeared on the horizon and, with gut-wrenching certainty, commando Tony Hoare thought his war was over.

- GEORGE HARRISON Scoops@sundaymirr­or.co.uk ■■Born For War is published by Welbeck and is available now

The enemy aircraft swung into attack formation after a plume of smoke from Stinger anti-aircraft missiles exposed the Brits’ position.

The Stingers – like those now being used in Ukraine – missed. And Tony and his SAS buddies were sitting ducks.

“My heart was in my mouth,” Tony says. “They knew where we were and there was no outrunning them.

“Thoughts flashed through my mind – what were they armed with? Rockets? Cannons? Napalm?”

But lady luck was on Tony’s side. As the jets flashed overhead he could see their empty missile pods – they were out of ammo, having dumped everything on Goose Green, a major battlegrou­nd in the Falklands War of 1982.

Tony lived to fight another day.

And he tells his incredible story

– on the 40th anniversar­y of the war – in his new memoir

Born For War.

Tony, 66, tells of fierce hillside battles and despair at witnessing the deaths of 22 comrades when a helicopter ditched into the sea.

FIRED

In a second hair-raising mission, as he advanced on an oil refinery, he lay facedown in the Falklands peat as Argentinia­n snipers wearing nightvisio­n goggles fired anti-aircraft rounds at his position.

Artillery shells and bullets flashed by in a thick hail of fire. When the shooting stopped he made his dash to safety. It was all in a day’s – or night’s – work.

While the Argentinia­n air force was formidable, its army consisted largely of under-trained conscripts – no match for elite SAS soldiers.

As Our Boys gained momentum, Tony joined the push towards the capital, Port Stanley. The war took him to the slopes of nearby Mount Kent where, after one victory, he claimed a grisly trophy – a blood-soaked parka which he wore for the rest of the campaign.

For a week, Tony remained holed up on the mountain as the SAS repelled a string of attacks.

Some 50 enemy soldiers came at the British position and 32 were killed or wounded.

“Attacking high ground is a dangerous propositio­n at the best of times,” Tony writes in his memoir.

“Attacking the SAS on high ground is tantamount to suicide.”

He recalls another

life-threatenin­g episode as British forces closed in on the capital.

From the slopes of Mount Kent, his squadron conducted a daytime assault on Argentinia­n defenders. The SAS men were outnumbere­d two-to-one.

Tony writes: “While keeping my eyes ahead for the enemy, I moved from one piece of cover to the next.

“Perhaps I moved too quickly, because the next time I looked around I was on my own.” Argentinia­n conscripts, startled by the

ferocity

We held our ground as 50 soldiers came at SAS. It was tantamount to suicide...

ON DEADLY MISSIONS IN FALKLAND HILLS

of the advancing SAS, had abandoned their trenches and fled. But Tony had run into a minefield.

“Looking back down the slope, I saw that the rest of my troop had stopped. Thankfully, I found a goat track and followed this back down.”

By then the war was almost over. But liberating the Falklands – British territory in the South Atlantic – had come at a price.

And Tony tells of the haunting day he lost some of his closest friends.

On May 19 – over six weeks after the war began on April 2 – he was on the deck of HMS Intrepid, the British vessel where he was stationed.

A Sea King helicopter was on its way carrying more SAS men.

It was dark and Tony recalls the chopper’s lights winking closer and closer... then disappeari­ng.

The helicopter had crashed into the sea and despite a frantic rescue effort, 22 men died, 18 from the SAS.

It was the regiment’s worst day since the Second World War. An army chaplain asked Tony to take a dead crewman’s hand as he delivered the Last Rites.

“It was undoubtedl­y the lowest point of the war for me,” Tony says today.

“It was devastatin­g. Even now I don’t think I’ve got over it.”

The 74-day conflict cost the lives of 255 British servicemen, 649 on the Argentine side, and three civilians.

The 40th anniversar­y brings back vivid memories for millions who were glued to compelling nightly TV updates on the fate of our troops.

Tony, who is now a security consultant, had been in the Army for nine years when the conflict began – and the Forces were in his blood.

His father was a flight engineer on a WWII bomber and his grandfathe­r and uncles served as Royal Marines.

Tony – who went on to train SAS recruits including Bravo Two Zero author Andy McNab – enlisted on his 17th birthday and says he was always playing soldiers as a child.

He was often sent home from school in Hayes, West London, for turning up for class in his Army Cadet uniform.

“While I do think that it’s possible to turn people into soldiers, I believe a certain few of us are born to be warriors,” he writes.

“I didn’t ever have a choice about being a soldier – it was my fate, a fate I welcomed with open arms.”

He served two tours in Northern Ireland with the Royal Green Jackets – in 1974 and 1977 – before being “badged” into the SAS.

When Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher declared Britain was at war with Argentina, a flotilla sailed from

Portsmouth to reclaim the Falklands, 8,000 miles away.

Tony said goodbye to his wife Jenny and admits: “I was desperate to get my teeth into it.”

He received the Queen’s Gallantry Medal for his accumulate­d service in Northern Ireland. After 18 years in the SAS, he retired from the army at 40.

The Falklands left a lasting mark. He writes: “Today it is common for people to think of those who served in the SAS as heroes, but the only heroes in the regiment are the dead.

“The rest of us are just ordinary men who were asked to do extraordin­ary things in extraordin­ary times.”

 ?? REVELATION­S Former SAS commando Tony Hoare ??
REVELATION­S Former SAS commando Tony Hoare
 ?? Argentine troops surrendere­d ??
Argentine troops surrendere­d
 ?? ?? AT WAR Para James
AT WAR Para James
 ?? ?? FREEDOM MARCH Men of 40 Commando head for Port Stanley
MIGHTY FORCE Tony, second left, and pals on Mount Kent
LIBERATORS Brit troops yomped miles across Falklands
FREEDOM MARCH Men of 40 Commando head for Port Stanley MIGHTY FORCE Tony, second left, and pals on Mount Kent LIBERATORS Brit troops yomped miles across Falklands

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