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Rogue Warrior (Reissue) Cassette
 
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Rogue Warrior (Reissue) Cassette (Audio Cassette)


4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (117 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From AudioFile

Richard Marcinko describes his life as a combat soldier with the fearless tone of a commanding officer. His boldness helps reveal that he will stop at nothing to achieve his objectives. However, much of the excitement of his daring operations in the Navy's first anti-terrorist unit is lost since there's no emotion in his voice when recounting the stories. There's a noticeable starched quality to the narration as if Marcinko were standing at attention while delivering the text. His failure to step out of his role as military commander and take on the role of storyteller contributes to the lack of firepower in this program. M.P.T. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine


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The much-decorated and controversial U.S. Navy SEAL whose ongoing mission to test Naval security caused an uproar in the military establishment tells his story, from missions in Vietnam to his most recent troubles with the Pentagon. Book available.

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Customer Reviews

117 Reviews
5 star:
 (90)
4 star:
 (14)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (117 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars For his country, Mar 4 2007
By T. Gunn (minnesota) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It seems like most of the reviewers are talking not about the book, but instead teeing off on Richard Marcinko. Even if he was an alcoholic, did he get the missions completed? Yes. If he had become Admiral would he have done the things necessary to complete his missions? No. He has done more for this country than anybody I know of or anybody that reads this. Just feel lucky that we have people like this on our side. Nobody wants to say it but we need men like him to get things done. How are sanctions going with Iran and North Korea? Not too good. They are both progressing with their nuclear facilities. One is trying to make a long range missile to carry the nuclear payload. Do you think another piece of paper signed by a bunch of world leaders will stop these regimes? No. We need men like him now more than ever. I think the real reason so many reviewers are against this guy is that his books hit home with them. You are the same type of people that think everything will be ok if we just ignore these regimes. Wake up and realize that many people in this world hate the U.S. I for one am glad to see that some of the money I spent on his books has gone to kill evil men. For all the rest of you, if the only thing that you can do now is complain about him and his books I say this: thanks for donating some of the book royalties to someone who doesn't just talk tough.
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1.0 out of 5 stars This Navy vet think's he's at least 50% full of it, May 7 2004
By Carl R. Menger "hm2menger" (Michigan) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Ok, I believe the author was in the Navy. I believe he went to UDT school, he MAY have been a SEAL. What I don't believe is that anybody this uncouth and uneducated was EVER an officer. I wasn't a SEAL, but I did have some contact with them, and it just doesn't ring true to me.

When Marcinko goes on about dealings with purchasing equipment, I KNOW he's full of it. He claims the higher ups told him to buy an American car for undercover ops in Europe and he disobeyed, claiming the US nameplate was a dead giveaway so he bought a Mercedes instead. Yes a US car may have been a bad idea, and yes brass may have ordered one without thinking. I do know however that the procurement system does NOT intail giving a Comander a check for several thousand dollars and telling him "go buy a car".

I don't think the navy has ever acknowledged this yahoot and it wouldn't surprise me to find out he was a E3 Yeoman that got thrown out for drunken brawling.

Apparently he never expected anyone that was station at roosevelt Roads naval station to read this book. In the opening scene he describes an action where his team was sent to recover a stolen nuke, they were not told it was an exercise, didn't check their loads to dicover blanks, and were apparently dumb enough to believe terrorists would hide their pilfered nuke on the Naval gunnery range on the island of Vieques. Which for 2 years I could see from my bedroom window. 3/4 of this island was owned by the military! What kind of moron would hide something you stole in the house of the person you stole it from? OK Jon Benet Ramsey's parents, but other than that?

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5.0 out of 5 stars Blunt talk from a guy who was SOF before it was hip, Dec 15 2003
By Eric Rucker (North Carolina) - See all my reviews
I read this book not long after Marckinko's interview with 60 Minutes. At the time, I was very impressed with Marcinko's testosterone filled prose. However, as time went by I began to see Marcinko more as sort of a loud mouth alcoholic than as a guy to be taken seriously. Marcinko definitely went "rogue" after his SEAL Team Six command was up and he created Red cell.

Personally, I believe Marcinko would have gone much further in the Navy chain of command had he stopped drinking. Had the guy had the sense to cut the boozing out, he probably would have made Admiral. I seriously doubt he would have ended up in prison had he cut out the booze. Its obvious the guy lives for booze and is a hardcore alcoholic. Because of his boozing, I dont see Marcinko as someone to look up to, like say I would look up to Colonel Charlie Beckwith or Dick Meadows.

As for the book itself, its basically a more flamboyant, testosterone filled version of Charlie Beckwith's "Delta Force." Marckinko describes basically the same exact problems in establishing SEAL Team Six that Beckwith encountered in establishing Delta Force. Principle among these problems were intense disagreements over the SEAL Team Six chain of command. Marcinko describes how he was oftentimes more at war with the conventional Navy bureaucracy and the established SEAL community of the early eighties era than with international terrorists.

Marckinko describes how conventional SEAL officers of the early eighties era fought vigorously to keep SEAL Team Six in the east coast SEAL chain of command. Basically keeping it regular Navy and having total Navy control. Whereas Marcinko wanted Team Six in the brand new, "high speed" JSOC chain of command that Delta Force was part of. Marcinko wanted Team Six as part of the JSOC, whereas the east coast SEAL Headquarters and conventional Navy resisted this severely. It was only thru repeated bypassing of the normal chain of command that Marcinko got his way. And he obviously made a ton of enemies within the regular Navy and even the conventional SEAL community doing this.

Marcinko was an independent officer who did his own thing, rather than bowing down to the conventional Navy and the conventional SEAL officers of the late seventies and early eighties. Again, many of his problems are exactly what Charlie Beckwith describes in his own book "Delta Force," written in the early eighties.

In addition, some of the things Marcinko mentions in his book are pure bull. Such as his claim that his men had to be able to bench press 500 lbs to climb special ladders to clandestinely board ships underway. Being able to bench press 500 lbs has little to nothing to do with being able to climb ladders or ropes. In fact, the muscle groups used in these activities are totally different. Again, much of this book is testosterone filled bull, from someone who is obviously a megalomaniac.

Despite this, its still a good read and Id recommend it to anyone interested in SEALs or SOF. One thing I admired about Marcinko was his total lack of respect for bureaucracy and conventional thinking.

Its my personal opinion that had he stopped drinking in the late seventies or early eighties, Marcinko probably would have made Admiral and might have ended up commanding the SEAL community when USSOCOM was formed. Or he might have been able to have become the second or third in command officer at JSOC. Instead, he ended up going to federal prison.

After reading this book and Marcinko's other books the basic message Ive gotten is threefold and simple. First, you cant have a real SOF unit without a clean, direct, bureaucracy free SAS type chain of command. Secondly, in the real world the SEALs take a backseat to Delta. And thirdly, booze destroys good men.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Rogue Welfare Warrior?
Richard Marcinko details his interesting career as a SEAL, which is mostly unknown to the civilian and military populace, explaining the tactics, missions, personalities, and the... Read more
Published on Nov 27 2003 by K. Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Interresting, Indeed...
I have never served my country in combat. I have never walked he streets of a war torn city. I have never had to face some of the political games that seem like are part of the... Read more
Published on Oct 2 2003 by Timothy A. Platt

2.0 out of 5 stars Okay book
This was an okay book but the author's hopped up ego really got old after awhile. The parts about Vietnam and the Red Cell operations were interesting. Read more
Published on Sep 14 2003 by Lorin Reese

3.0 out of 5 stars an interesting first hand account
Cdr. Marcinko's account of his Naval career with "the Teams" certainly qualifies him as a genuine American hero. Read more
Published on Jul 27 2003 by doc peterson

5.0 out of 5 stars Extremely Interesting
Having read a copy of one of R. Marcinko's fiction books, I began searching for his autobiography. I wanted to see if all the bravado and fearlessness was just an act, or if the... Read more
Published on Jun 12 2003 by Fates Puppet

5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT BUT LACKING SOMETHING
This is an extremely good book for both the military mind and the novice. Commander Marcinko tells some interesting stories but it is the MAN and his life that make this book so... Read more
Published on Feb 11 2003 by PrinceVultan

5.0 out of 5 stars WOW!
For sheer adventure and excitement, this is hard to beat. The autobographical account of one of the original creators of the deadly Seal Team covert operations squads. Read more
Published on Feb 1 2003 by microjoe

4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining, but beware...
Richard Marcinko's book "Rogue Warrior" was an inspiration to me when I was younger and wanted to become a Navy SEAL. Read more
Published on Dec 18 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting and Real
He seems like the real deal. Mr. Marcinko takes you on a wild ride known as his life from his humble upbringing to commanding one of the top counter-terrorist organizations in... Read more
Published on Dec 17 2002 by Kevin Lynds

5.0 out of 5 stars Greatest book ever
This was the best book i ever read. it was exciting and gave me alot of great info on seals
Published on Nov 16 2002 by Eric Talbott

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