16-06-2013, 03:14 PM
I saw the movie Killer Eilte, with De Niro and Statham, last night. It claims to be based on the "true story" depicted in Ranulph Fiennes' book The Feather Men.
So, is it fact or fiction?
The SAS is adamant that it's fiction.
However, the correction (which I've highlighted in bold italicised text) at the bottom of the Daily Mail piece below, suggests that there may be a factual basis for at least some of the book's claims.
The scenes in the film where the major dies on the SAS "Long March" endurance test are amongst the least convincing part of the film.
Far more interesting, in a deep political sense, is the claim that there was a secret committee of (former?) SAS officers known as the Feather Men whose actions would include murder. In the film's title, a Killer Elite.
So, is it fact or fiction?
The SAS is adamant that it's fiction.
However, the correction (which I've highlighted in bold italicised text) at the bottom of the Daily Mail piece below, suggests that there may be a factual basis for at least some of the book's claims.
Quote:How Ranulph Fiennes cashed in on the 'murder' of SAS heroes
By Tony Rennell Daily Mail
Created 8:55 PM on 16th July 2010
A gripping 'true' book by the great explorer tells how a sheik sent assassins to kill four SAS soldiers. As it's made into a film, there's just one question: is it all bunkum?
The barren Brecon Beacons in Wales were at their winter worst.
Hurricane-force winds whipped up the snow and freezing rain to a deadly chill factor of minus 50c. Visibility was down to a few yards.
But these were not conditions to halt the SAS.
Valour: Under fire in the desert, the sort of terrain in which Major Mike Kealy forged his heroic reputation
A notoriously tough endurance test known as the Long March was under way for would-be recruits to the elite regiment - a 41-mile mountain slog in full kit and laden pack, to be completed in less than 17 hours.
Fighting their way through the blizzard, one team - a corporal and captain - could just make out ahead of them what they mistook for a rock protruding from the blanket of snow.
As they got closer, they saw it was the hunched figure of a soldier who had set out before them. He was unconscious, barely alive, his pulse flickering and faint.
They manoeuvred him into a survival bag, and, while the captain went for help, the corporal climbed in beside the frozen man, using his body heat in a bid to revive him.
It was to no avail. When Major Mike Kealy DSO was finally brought off the mountain 19 hours later, he was dead.
His death in 1979 stunned the hardened men of the regiment.
Dangerous terrain: The Brecon Beacons National Park, which hosts regular military training, can be a harsh environment in the wrong weather
Kealy was a legend after his courage six years earlier in a clandestine war against communist insurgents in the desert kingdom of Oman.
At the battle of Mirbat, he and eight other SAS men fought off an attack by several hundred guerillas, killing up to 80 of them.
Years later, as newly appointed commander of his own SAS squadron, to prove to his men - and himself - that he was as fit as the best of them, he had opted to go on the endurance march.
But alone on the mountain, exhaustion and exposure had got the better of the 33-year-old.
In a white-out worse than anyone could remember, he had ploughed on when others sought shelter. Hypothermia fuddled his brain and judgment.
His young widow, Maggi, was devastated, all the more so because she was the mother of five-week-old twins and a toddler of three. She had no stomach for the inquest, at which his death was ruled an accident.
The author: Sir Ranulph Fiennes, pictured here in 1991 around the release of his controversial novel The Feather Men
Nor did she have any idea how, a dozen years later, her husband's death would be dramatically - and, in her view, unfairly - reinterpreted by a man many saw as one of Britain's modern-day heroes, Sir Ranulph Fiennes.
In 1991, Fiennes - Old Etonian, ex-military, adventurer, polar trekker and author - published his ninth book.
The Feather Men caused a sensation because it laid out in compelling detail an extraordinary, but faintly plausible conspiracy theory surrounding men of the SAS murdered by hitmen working for an Arab.
Now, that book is being made into a Hollywood blockbuster starring Robert de Niro and Clive Owen.
Fiennes was a SAS legend, too, but for the wrong reasons.
He had passed the selection - though only, by his own admission, by cheating on the Long March. He had arranged a lift with a local farmer.
He got away with that, but was kicked out of the regiment soon after when police arrested him for detonating plastic explosives in a private protest about the use of a Wiltshire trout stream in the Rex Harrison Dr Dolittle film.
A few years later, though, he was allowed to join the SAS reserves in a minor capacity while he planned his first expeditions.
In The Feather Men, Fiennes spun a supposedly true tale of four Britons who had served in Oman being tracked down by contract killers on behalf of a sheik seeking revenge for the deaths of his sons.
The Feather Men of the title were an underground vigilante group of SAS veterans trying to thwart the assassins.
It read with all the verve and dramatic flair of a novel, but was stuffed full of facts and real events. And one of those real events was the death of Mike Kealy - but with a crucial difference.
The major, Fiennes claimed, was murdered.
Star treatment: Actor Clive Owen is to appear in a film based on The Feather Men
A hired killer infiltrated the SAS exercise, slipped a drug into Kealy's tea that befuddled him when he was out on the mountain, then ambushed him in the snowstorm, injected him with an overdose of insulin and left him to die of exposure.
The apparently innocent deaths of three other real-life Oman veterans over 17 years - one in a helicopter crash, another in a car crash, a third from a heart attack - were also 'revealed' to be cleverly disguised revenge murders.
And how did Fiennes know all this? Because, in a twist to the tale, he claims he had been the intended fifth victim.
He had served in Oman, too, though in the Sultan's army, which was also fighting the rebel sheik, rather than in the SAS.
He claims the killers had come for him, pouncing on him one dark October night in 1990 in a lane near his remote farmhouse on Exmoor, but the mystery Feather Men appeared out of nowhere to save him.
Then, passing him their dossiers on the four 'murders', the Feather Men asked him to write 'the true story' of what had taken place.
A subheading in small print on the title page posed the question that Fiennes thereafter ducked: 'Fact or Fiction?'
And that, Fiennes claimed, was precisely what he had done.
In an author's note, he claimed to describe 'these events with complete attention to accuracy,' adding that 'some of the dialogue and the emotions, the inner thoughts and the assumptions are, of course, mine'.
In the acknowledgements, relatives of the four men were thanked for their co-operation, among them, Maggi Kealy.
Bloomsbury, the book's publisher - who described it as a 'true adventure' - had no doubt it was factual and stood by its accuracy, according to reports at the time.
Confusingly, however, a subheading in small print on the title page posed the question that Fiennes thereafter ducked: 'Fact or Fiction?'
The SAS was sure of the answer and made its views known.
Outraged former officers briefed reporters that they had never heard of the Feather Men and did not believe the murder stories.
The regiment took the unprecedented step of going on record with a statement from the adjutant, Lt-Col Ian Smith, that 'we disown Ranulph Fiennes and his book'.
Who dares wins? Sir Ranuph Fiennes and his book were disowned by the SAS
Who dares wins? Sir Ranuph Fiennes and his book were disowned by the SAS
A former officer, and Mike Kealy's closest friend since their days together at Sandhurst, ridicules the idea that an outsider could infiltrate himself into an SAS exercise.
'I was flabbergasted by the book,' he told the Mail last week.
'It was utter b****, the figment of a fertile imagination. What was really upsetting was that it was making a story out of a tragedy.'
Some soldiers maintained that Fiennes, a hereditary baronet, had been 'ungentlemanly' in inserting real people into his story and then changing the nature of their deaths for dramatic impact in order to sell his book.
Others used more forthright language.
But Fiennes appeared unfazed by those who damned him. Nor would he clear up the mystery. When asked if it was fact or fiction, he would answer with an ambiguous: 'Yes.'
The families of the four men said nothing publicly, dismissing the book as fantasy and not wanting to get into a wrangle with Fiennes that would give it yet more publicity.
Maggi Kealy had remarried and refused to get involved. Two decades on, she regrets this decision.
She is furious that a film is being made. The title has changed to The Killer elite, but the acknowledged source is Fiennes's book.
Maggi Denaro, as she now is, believes that Fiennes should do the decent thing and make it clear, once and for all, that her late husband was not murdered and that The Feather Men is fiction, not fact.
'It's time he grew up. He's made his money out of the book. He should come clean,' she says.
At the very least, she wants him to acknowledge the hurt his claims caused.
'When the book came out saying Mike had been murdered, we knew it wasn't true.
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Pictured: The British troops befriending Afghan villagers days before they were gunned down by renegade soldier
'But that didn't stop our children from being upset when other people believed it.'
Her daughter, Alice, who was 16 when the book was published, could accept the notion that, as she put it, 'it was plain, old cold that killed Dad' on those frozen mountains.
But the idea of him being murdered was understandably disturbing. She says it cast a shadow over her teenage years.
Now she and her mother fear the film and the fanfare that will go with it will rake up all that unhealthy speculation once again.
It is hard not to sympathise with Kealy's family in their distress.
Fiennes, 66, is a fine British hero with unrivalled achievements, from his polar circumnavigation of the world as a young man to being the oldest Briton to climb Everest.
At many levels, his life of danger and daring is an inspiration. This is a man with the guts to hack-saw off his own frost-bitten fingers.
Yet, with The Feather men, he stands accused of riding roughshod over the feelings of those who lost loved ones in tragic circumstances.
Given the chance this week to explain himself , Fiennes issued a statement to the Mail through his present publisher, Hodder & Stoughton.
'The Feather Men is an amalgam of fact and fiction,' he said.
'Before it was published in 1991, I sent copies of the manuscript to people named in the book then alive and to the next of kin of the deceased, including Major Mike Kealy's wife and mother.
'I also sent it to the SAS. All concerned approved the final manuscript. The film being made of the book under the title of The Killer Elite is pure fiction.'
It is far from the frank admission to which Maggi Denaro believes she is entitled.
What she is waiting for is an unequivocal acknowledgment from Fiennes that his account of her husband's death was made up.
He should also, she says, reflect on 'the anger, anxiety and sorrow he has caused the families of the men "used" in his book'.
As for the forthcoming film, she wants to be reassured that the publicity will not link it to the book 'without confirming constantly that the way the characters are portrayed as dying is fiction'.
If all this comes about, she may finally be able to be free of The Feather Men and the mysterious story that has weighed on her family for 20 years.
Additional reporting: Alastair McQueen
Valour: Under fire in the desert. Inset: Ranulph Fiennes
Sir Ranulph Fiennes
An earlier version of this article of 16 July 2010 reported that the widow of Major Mike Kealy was not consulted in detail before the book was published. In fact she had read and approved every page which referred to her husband. Sir Ranulph has asked us to make clear that SAS Head Quarters were also consulted over the text of the book. We are happy to do so.
The scenes in the film where the major dies on the SAS "Long March" endurance test are amongst the least convincing part of the film.
Far more interesting, in a deep political sense, is the claim that there was a secret committee of (former?) SAS officers known as the Feather Men whose actions would include murder. In the film's title, a Killer Elite.
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."
Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon
"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."
Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon
"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war