Tag Archives: Mike Hoare

Vale, Mad Mike

Colonel Thomas Michael “Mad Mike” Hoare

Colonel Thomas Michael “Mad Mike” Hoare, who fought in the British Army in WWII before going on to lead the famous (infamous?) mercenary unit known as 4 Commando under the Katangan flag then 5 Commando in the CNA, among other “Wild Geese” on the Continent during the Cold War.

Via Bushwar Militaria & Books, Durban:

“It is with a heavy but accepting heart that I announce that my father, Mike Hoare, died in his sleep and with dignity at a care facility in Durban today, 2 February 2020, aged 100 years.

He was an adventurer, soldier, explorer, yachtsman, motorcyclist, safari leader, author, hiker, raconteur, last of breed, and legend. Charming, enigmatic, fearless, proper, and a brilliant leader, ‘Mad Mike’ was an officer and a gentleman – with a bit of brigand thrown in.

But Mike described himself as ‘a genuine adventurer’. He identified with Sir Francis Drake, and liked the idea of going out sailing, and bringing Spanish booty back for the queen who would make you a knight. ‘You were respectable – even though you were a thief,’ he said.

Mike Hoare became world-famous when his ‘Wild Geese’ saved southern Africa from the Reds when they crushed the Simbas in the Congo in 1965. And world infamous when his attempt to overthrow the socialist government of Seychelles failed.

Rest in eternal peace, Colonel. We salute you”

-Chris Hoare-

Mad Mike is still kicking

“Mad” Mike Hoare (center) somewhere in the Congo.

For those who are fans of Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner and grew up reading about the exploits of the various traveling warriors during the “Golden age of mercenaries” that was Africa in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, it may surprise you to find that the most resilient of the breed, Col. Thomas Michael “Mad Mike” Hoare, is still very much alive. A veteran of the London Irish Rifles in WWII’s Burma campaign, commander of 5 Commando in the Congo (there were no #1, #2, #3, or #4 Commando brigades), and the later Seychelles affair, he has lived a charmed life.

In fact, the Irishman is set to turn 100 next St. Patrick’s Day.

More here, in an interview with his son, at SOF (where else?).