Peter McAleese
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Peter McAleese (7 September 1942 – 18 March 2024) was a Scottish soldier and mercenary.
McAleese served in the British Army's Parachute Regiment and Special Air Service (SAS), the Rhodesian Special Air Service and British South Africa Police, and South Africa's 44 Parachute Brigade. As a mercenary or contractor, he worked in countries including South Africa, Angola, Colombia, Russia, Algeria and Iraq.
McAleese was the author of the book No Mean Soldier.
Early lifeEdit
McAleese was born into a Roman Catholic family of Irish descent in Glasgow, Scotland, within sight of Barlinnie Prison, and spent his childhood years in the city's Riddrie district.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Growing up he was often beaten by his father, who had served in the military and had a reputation for being an aggressive fighting man.<ref>Template:Cite episode </ref>
Military careerEdit
McAleese enlisted with the British Army's Parachute Regiment in Aberdeen in 1960 at the age of 17. After basic training at the Parachute Regiment's Aldershot depot, he was assigned to the 1st Battalion, Parachute Regiment's mortar platoon. In 1962 McAleese transferred to 'D' Squadron, 22 SAS, where he served with the squadron's Mobility troop in Aden. After a few months he was returned to unit from the SAS for disciplinary reasons, re-joining 1 Para, where he was posted to Bahrain and Cyprus in 1962–64. In 1964 he re-joined the SAS and served with 'D' Squadron's 16 (Air) Troop in Borneo and in the Aden Emergency.Template:Citation needed In 1968 he was again returned to the Parachute Regiment by the SAS for disciplinary offences related to violent disorder, rejoining 1 Para, which he served with from 1968 to 1969 as a sergeant-instructor. In 1969 McAleese resigned from the British Army.<ref name="iwm">Interview audio tape (No.15433) with Pater McAleese, Sound Archive, Imperial War Museum, 1995.</ref>
McAleese served three prison sentences in the early 1970s following convictions for violence and was incarcerated at HMP Gloucester. On release from prison for the third time he left the United Kingdom for Africa, where he was a mercenary soldier in the Angolan Civil War for several months in 1976, fighting for the National Liberation Front of Angola, assuming command of the formation after the capture of Costas Georgiou.<ref>Associated Press filmed interview with McAleese, 'McAleese on mercenaries' killings', recorded 18 February 1976. Published on YouTube 23 July 2015. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-lWbwYMIks</ref><ref name="iwm"/>
In early 1977, McAleese moved to Rhodesia and enlisted with the Rhodesian Special Air Service, being assigned to its 'A' Squadron, fighting in the Rhodesian Bush War with the rank of a non-commissioned officer. In 1979, he joined the British South Africa Police's Special Branch operating in South Rhodesia. After the fall of Rhodesia in 1980, he enlisted with the South African Defence Force's 44 Parachute Brigade, where he served as a Warrant Officer Class 2 to 1984. He assisted with the creation of a new pathfinder reconnaissance unit, and took part in the South African Border War.<ref>Interview with McAleese, 'Pathfinder Company, S.A.D.F.', published on Youtube 9 March 2011. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Gxumw_iSAg&t=381s</ref><ref name="iwm"/>
Security contracting careerEdit
In the mid-1980s McAleese set up a family home in Pretoria, and became an employee of the COIN Security Group, a military/police private contractor based in South Africa. After a near-death parachuting display accident, he moved back to live in the United Kingdom. At the end of the 1980s, he spent two years as a security contractor working for the government forces during the "Colombian conflict". In the mid-1990s he worked in Moscow as a bodyguard training instructor, and undertook security work in Algeria and Iraq for several years.<ref name="iwm"/>
McAleese was contracted in 1989 by the Colombian Cali Cartel to assassinate their rival, Pablo Escobar. He and his team of mercenaries failed in their attempt due to their helicoloter crashing and killing their pilot, which was the subject of the 2021 UK documentary film Killing Escobar. Filmed interviews with him and some of his colleagues form the core of the narrative.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> After the crash, Mcaleese suffered broken ribs and had to lay on the mountain they crashed on for 3 days before getting rescued.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Retirement and deathEdit
In his latter years, McAleese was a pub landlord in England. In 1993, he published his memoir, entitled No Mean Soldier, which has been reprinted several times.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
McAleese died on 18 March 2024, at the age of 81.Template:Where<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
PublicationsEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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