I used to be a big fan of Stirling who, like Wingate, was a complete maverick. Both had ideas about behind the lines disruptions that had as much or more psychological affect as actual destructive affect.
However, I then found out about his postwar activities and have since had a rethink. The guy was a proto-fascist, who was willing to organise and lead a coup d'état in Britain in the 1970s. If you want to know more google GB75:
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Another, the former SAS leader David Stirling, set up an organisation called Greater Britain 1975 (GB75), whose members included a Jersey-based arms dealer. Stirling, who was described by his biographer as "well to the right of the Conservative Party", considered the left wing of the Labour Party as "a cancer". His fear, summed up in one of his papers for GB75, was expressed thus: "Why are so many of us blind to an already far advanced conspiracy by the broad Left to topple our democracy? It is now the broad Left which harbours the 'baddies' and which is devoted to creating a privileged class of rulers hell bent on demolishing our individual rights and on creating a totally socialistic and therefore totalitarian state. The near take-over of the Labour Party by its parliamentary left-wing activists in alliance with the trade union extremists poses the most menacing crisis our country has ever faced – more dangerous by far than the worst period of the last World War. This crisis cannot possibly be resolved within parliament alone."
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The Airey Neave Files - Independent Online Edition > Profiles