The Rigger (Hardback)
Operating with the SAS
Imprint: Pen & Sword Military
Pages: 224
Illustrations: 8 pages of plates
ISBN: 9780850528176
Published: 15th March 2001
Last Released: 1st August 2007
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A graphic personal account, The Rigger exposes the extreme risks undertaken by specialist operators in order to provide and maintain first-class communications in Northern Ireland. The author, who served alongside the SAS and other covert military organisations, spares no detail in describing the dangers, tensions, dramas and humour of life at the sharp end. Climbing 400-foot masts is not for the faint-hearted at the best of times but to do so in the bandit country of South Armagh or above staunchly IRA enclaves of Belfast and Londonderry is a whole new ball-game and, for some not as lucky as Jack Williams, a fatal one.
The Security Forces’ campaign against Republican and Loyalist terrorism in Northern Ireland since 1969 has taken many forms. At the heart of all operations has been the need for first class communications. A graphic personal account, the Rigger exposed the extreme risks undertaken by specialist signal operators in order to provide and maintain the essential element. The author, who served alongside the SAS and other covert units, spares no details in describing the dangers, tensions dramas and humour of life at the sharp end. Climbing 400 foot masts is not for the faint hearted at the best of times, but in the middle of bandit country and being sniped at, and in some cases being hit, by IRA gunmen takes a special sort of bravery.
Army Rumour Service
First of all this book is not about the SAS or any other Special Forces it’s about ordinary bleeps who are undertaking their day to day task in extraordinary conditions. It’s a story of mateship, the type that can only be found in the services, it’s about getting on with life in a life threatening environment where even a spoken word overhead can get you killed. Also it’s about a cold courage that enables men to do their jobs day in and day out under serious threat, not for them the hot rage of a contact and return fire.
Jack seemed to be an unlikely candidate for the Army let alone a rigger, he seems have most of his childhood in A and E having various bones reset following falls from trees, bikes and often just falls! He was an old sweat by the time he arrived in NI and describes being taken around by a team mate and being shown the ropes, quite literally. The signals team decided it would be better to abseil from the top of towers when under fire rather than monkey climb down. The first attempts caused scrapes and bruises as they discovered that unlike cliffs, towers are not solid and each time they jumped out the got smashed by the inside of the towers.
I have to say this was a painfully good read