When people think of the Special Air Service, names like David Stirling or Paddy Mayne often dominate the conversation. Yet behind those celebrated figures was another man, often overlooked, whose intellect, vision, and daring helped shape the very foundations of Britain’s most famous special forces unit: John Steel "Jock" Lewes. To understand the SAS’s origins fully, one must place Lewes at the centre of the story, for his mind, inventions, and training philosophy were as critical as Stirling’s organisational flair or Mayne’s fighting spirit.
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