Roughneck Nine-One: The Extraordinary Story of a Special Forces A-Team at War

By: Frank Antenori and Hans Halberstadt





THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE IS FEATURED IN LAST SEPTEMBER'S ISSUE OF THE ARMY TIMES!

Written by two combat-tested soldiers with unique access to special operations troops and records, "Roughneck Nine-One: The Extraordinary Story of a Special Forces A-Team at War" is a valuable addition to the growing list of Iraq war stories.

The book, which focuses on one of the most savage and least known battles of the Iraq war, is based on the recollections of retired Sgt. 1st Class Frank Antenori. His co-author, Hans Halberstadt, is a former Army helicopter door gunner in Vietnam who has penned more than 50 military books.

Antenori, who served in Iraq as a team sergeant with 3rd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group (Airborne), and is now retired, lives in Arizona and is campaigning as a Republican for a seat in the House of Representatives.

"Roughneck Nine-One" recounts Antenori's experience as he led a team of Special Forces soldiers and a handful of support troops with about 80 Kurdish allies in a fierce five-hour battle against a larger Iraqi force at a remote crossroads near the village of Debecka on April 6, 2003. The crossroads between the northern Iraqi cities of Mosul and Kirkuk was a key coalition objective.

The 26 Green Berets, along with three Air Force bomb targeters and two additional support troops, encountered a reinforced Iraqi motorized rifle company that included more than 150 soldiers, four T-55 battle tanks, eight armored personnel carriers and heavy artillery support on call.

"Armed only with carbines, a few heavy machine guns and a few Mk-19 grenade launchers, my Special Forces A-Team and I were very vulnerable. Sure, we had a dozen new Army Javelin antitank guided missiles, but none of us knew how to fire one!"

It didn't matter. Although they were outnumbered 5-to-1 by some of Saddam's most resourceful troops, Antenori's soldiers stopped the enemy advance cold and proceded to methodically kill them one by one until a handful of Iraqi survivors fled the battlefield.

"We refused to run, believing in our team's motto from the beginning -- 'Nine-One Don't Run.' -- The mental discipline to say nothing of just plain guts, of our soldiers in the U. S. military and Special Forces is legendary. But none more so than in that engagement."

The fight is vividly described, packed with such life and immediacy that even the civilian reader can understand the team's challenge and ultimate triumph.

Within hours, more than 50 Iraqi soldiers were dead, two of their tanks were destroyed and all eight personnel carriers were burning.

In addition to being a thoroughly detailed and carefully documented retelling of the Debecka Pass Victory, "Roughneck Nine-One" offers a rare look inside a Special Forces A-Team as it recruits, organizes and trains for combat. -- Don DeNevi


On April 6, 2003, twenty-six Green Berets including those of Sergeant 1st Class Frank Antenor's Special Forces A-team (call sign Roughneck Nine-One), led a violent battle against a vastly superior force at the remote crossroads near the village of Debecka, Iraq. In an already legendary conflict that will influence US Army doctrine for years to come, the Green Berets stopped an enemy unit that included battle tanks and more than 150 well-trained well-equiped, and well-commanded soldiers. Any normal American light infantry unit finding itself outnumbered over five to one and outgunned on the ground by such a heavily armored force would have turned and run for cover. But Green Berets don't like to run and "Nine-One Don't Run" was Antenori's team's motto from the very beginning. In a spectacular fight, they battled Iraqi tanks and personnel until only a handful of Iraqi survivors finally fled the battlefield.

In the process, Nine-One encountered hordes of news media, and as the peak of the fight, a US Navy F-14 dropped a 500-pound bomb in the middle of a group of supporting Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, killing and wounding dozens. This is the never-before-told, unsanitized, unedited story of the fight for the crossroads at Debecka, Iraq, and a unique inside look at a Special Forces A-team as it recruits and organizes, trains for combat, and eventually fights a battle against a huge opposing force in Iraq.

Roughneck Nine-One is a powerful and revealing story of the role of Special Forces in the ongoing war in Iraq.


LIST PRICE: $14.95

AAFES SELL PRICE: $12.45

UPC#: 759968034984



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