Rob van Duis served two consecutive tours in Vietnam, on grueling
and dangerous LRRPs - Long-Range Reconnaissance Patrols. The ‘shadow warriors’
deadly warfare games of silent covert scouting operations against the enemy
deep in the bush could last a few weeks at a time. Although their task was to
locate, spying out enemy positions and call in strikes, they invariably took
part in ambushes and small scale raids. With numerous firefight missions under
his belt, van Duis had become a skilled combat field operator. Once back
stateside, he continued to hone his warfare field craft under the training of a
highly-decorated former Army Green Beret officer, Dave Randall, who
successfully served three Nam combat tours. With high-profile military
connections, Randall is able to secure a government assignment to fight
Communist Sandinista insurgents in Nicaragua along with other teams. It was
into this hot cauldron of socio-political chaos, in late 1977 that recruited
experienced fighting soldiers began to be inserted within Nicaraguan borders
clandestinely to fight the Sandinista rebels to avert a communist takeover so
close to the U.S. border.
Having recruited and trained a team of twelve experienced combat operators, van
Duis being one of them, they are off once again taking the field as in Vietnam
years in rough and unforgiving terrain striking fear and death to armed rebels
with a vengeance.
The story begins with Bravo Team’s covert arrival into Nicaragua. Van Duis and
his teammates hit the ground running as they battle Sandinista rebels deep in
enemy territory. His team’s first-full scale battle is to purge a peaceful
countryside villa of the armed combatants that have besieged it. After a
vicious door-to-door fight to clear the villa’s dwellings of rebels, it takes
all the firepower available to finally defeat the horde of insurgents, who have
taken innocent villagers hostage in a dense woodland area.
On another mission as a solo strike team, Bravo is inserted into a
rebel-infested area to neutralize a weapons supply depot, but as happenstance
would have it they are faced by an enemy force triple the size they
anticipated. The hazardous assignment takes yet another unforeseen turn; as van
Duis and team flee to the exfiltration point, they are faced with taking an
injured young peasant girl to safety with armed Sandinistas on their heels.
Van Duis provides an insider’s look at the trauma of warfare’s brutality. Each
mission is depicted with the intensity that only a real participant can
portray. Even as a trained and experienced warrior, in the face of hideous
combat he is affected by what he witnesses; the catastrophic aftermath to the
civilians caught in the chaos of war.
The story takes the reader deep inside the cataclysmic combat action seen
through the eyes of Rob van Duis, a member Strike Team Bravo. His and the
team’s direct actions are rendered in the thick of the hellacious and
death-defying perilous missions. This real-life journal of agonizing anguish
that takes a toll on the human body and spirit is based on actual events. Their
warfare missions provide a realistic look at the traumatic bane of armed
conflict and its terrorizing face and subsequent results as Bravo goes after
Communist rebel camps and supply depots with one solitary mission agenda; to
take down the enemy with as much deadly force required wiping them off the face
of the map. Nothing short of complete sterilization of their target is
acceptable.
Bravo manages to overcome the odds with chilling and bristling fighting
sequences that puts the reader’s mind in the very midst of terrifying clashes;
close enough at times to see the whites of the enemy’s eyes before death
overtakes the fallen. Nothing is as dramatic as actual in-your-face combat
action up close and personal.