Operation EnterpriseThe Battle of Salisbury

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Weight 0.300 kg
Dimensions 21.0 × 14.8 × 0.7 cm
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ISBN9781990927881 Barcode9781990927881
Overview
Operation ENTERPRISE was the most successful internal operation of the Rhodesian war, and arguably the most important, being fiercely fought just 20 km’s north of Salisbury.

Operation ENTERPRISE was the most successful internal operation of the Rhodesian war, and arguably the most important, being fiercely fought just 20 km’s north of Salisbury. It foiled ZANLA’s plan to infiltrate the Capital and disrupt the elections in April 1979 which brought about the transitional Government of Zimbabwe Rhodesia. Deployment tactics for as many as three contacts in a day were pioneered by 1 Commando RLI along with the introduction of a “Jumbo Fire Force” which was perfected and executed with precision and recorded success. Due to the timing of my voluntary enlistment I found myself deployed to the front line as an untrained medic in an operational Mobile Surgical Unit set up at Enterprise Fire Force base.

 

Shortly after my arrival I was introduced to Special Branch Officer Mike Norton whose records, along with accounts from others involved, are detailed in this book which tells the story of the Top Secret intelligence leading up to the establishment of Enterprise and just how close the war was to the country’s Capital, with its residents oblivious to the threat at their doorstep.

Nicholas (Nick) Skipworth-Michell

Nicholas (Nick) Skipworth-Michell was born in Salisbury (now Harare) on 25th August 1961, and was brought up by his recently divorced mother with his two brothers in a very middle class Rhodesian society. He had the usual upbringing insofar as attending Junior School where he achieved Prefect status, followed by one year in a Rhodesian High School before his mother decided that UK was a better bet for the future and he was shipped off to England to attend boarding School in the South West of England. His brother who was 5 years older attended the same School but as a senior had little to no contact and he fended for himself in this alien environment, all the while homesick for his Country of birth.

He left School after completing his O levels and worked as a Hall Porter in a local hotel while deciding his future. As if lead by the hand of fate, he decided one day to return to Rhodesia and join the Armed Forces as he had had a fixation on all news pertaining to the unfolding political situation and intensifying war in Rhodesia.

With his earnings he bought a ticket to Salisbury and packed up his meagre belongings into one “blue” suitcase arriving in Salisbury on 5th February 1979 aged 17 to enlist in the Rhodesian Army. Medicine had always been of interest so the Medical Corps seemed an obvious choice with his parent unit being assigned as the Rhodesian Light Infantry – an elite fighting battalion at the forefront of the conflict which had converted in recent years from a conventional Infantry Unit to a Commando Unit.

A short five months into his service a suspicious lump behind his knee was diagnosed as malignant, so 2 months before his 18th Birthday he had his left leg amputated above the knee.

Fully expecting to be medically discharged, he was surprisingly retained as an operational medic and served out the remaining two and a half years of his contract, serving at forward operational hospitals, rehabilitation centres and treating scores of enemy who came in over amnesty for the Zimbabwe elections.

The ultimate demise of Rhodesia to Zimbabwe is well recorded and the demobilisation of the Army with no counselling or debrief happened with scores of Rhodesians leaving for the greener pastures of South Africa to take up positions in Corporate Companies. Nick arrived in South Africa with the same blue suitcase plus a car in March 1984.

Having lost his leg at a relatively young age it became his identity, and be it within military or Civilian Street he has always tried to live his life as an able bodied person without using his disability as a reason for preference or favour.

Civilian/Corporate life gave him the best as well as the worst in his life, going from being a successful businessman, to losing it all, going insolvent and starting again with nothing.

In the last few years of his time in Johannesburg he was the victim crime that beleaguers the city three times, by being held up in his restaurant, being shot and finally enduring a home invasion by three armed intruders.

Nick now lives in Durban and has written two books.

Additional information

Weight 0.300 kg
Dimensions 21.0 × 14.8 × 0.7 cm
Pages

Size

Weight

PublisherSelf-published Publication Date24/02/2020

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