Martial artist claims in Kung Fu Magazine to have been an assassin of child traffickers for Interpol:
http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=499
http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=499
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Sounds like BS to me. Too much 'bang bang bang, super-agent' talk to be plausable.Jonathan Randall said:Martial artist claims in Kung Fu Magazine to have been an assassin of child traffickers for Interpol:
http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=499
sgtmac_46 said:Sounds like BS to me. Too much 'bang bang bang, super-agent' talk to be plausable.
Usually, men claiming they were assassins for <insert super-secret agency here> usually have either mental issues or simply a problem with the truth. If I had a penny for every 'Ex-Navy Seal or Special Forces super-commando' i'd be a rich man. What's more, if there were as many ex-Special Operations guys as claim that they are ex-Special Operations, it would be the largest branch of the military, with millions of ready operatives.
I call BS.
Jonathan Randall said:I was hoping you'd weigh in on this. My first thought was to call BS as well. I know that child trafficking is a major industry and, in my heart of hearts, I wish there WERE people doing this. One thing I do know; in the real thing (memoirs written by individuals with VERIFIABLE histories), operators tend to DISCOUNT the role of martial arts in Special Operations - less talk of mano a mano H2H and more talk of long distance snipers.
This is his book. It has a five star review:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0882822314/104-1871610-1121501?v=glance&n=283155
"His arm techniques reflected lots of hours with the wooden dummy and he had that low, stable balance point that's so common to Hung Gar stylists. Impossibly fast, this guy, and he didn't telegraph at all. If my partner hadn't done a lot of damage first, I'd be dead."
sgtmac_46 said:You are correct. In the stories of real operators, there seem to be two things absent that are present in those of fakes. One is over-moralizing. Real operator's don't have to turn everything in to a moral plea. The real operator's i've met tend to be very matter of fact, concrete people. They don't explain things about 'sleepless nights'. In fact, most of them sleep rather well. They also don't talk about 'mano a mano' hand to hand fights either. If they do, they don't describe them as 'martial arts matches'. I believe at one point he says the most absurd thing, like
How lame. In addition, it sounds a little too much like an over-stylized version of a confrontation involving Richard Marcinko in one of his fictional Red Cell books where Marcinko's fictional self gets in a confrontation with an Okinawan security guard at an airfield (described as an old man) who whips Marcinko pretty good, before Marcinko's 'partner' grabs the old man from behind.
I suspect his efforts to bring attention to child trafficking is shielding him from too much criticism as to the veracity of his claims. It wouldn't be the first time someone has had a good message built on lies and got a free pass for a long time because of it.
Possibly. Here's a little primer to compare with...Jonathan Randall said:Perhaps, then, this belongs in Horror Stories?
His mission had been a dangerous one, acting as a CIA operative working underground in Laos during the Vietnam war in the late 60s. And he had been awarded a Purple Heart after being wounded in the groin by stray shrapnel during combat. All of which, along with his distinguished legal career and outstanding academic qualifications, made Patrick Couwenberg ideal material for the position for which he had applied: judge in the Los Angeles County
superior court. There was only one problem: it was all a lie.
http://www.abc.net.au/foreign/stories/s415886.htm"Going up to the Wall and seeing the name of an old friend...really bothered me." Wayne Higley. Phoney Vietnam veteran.
Choking with emotion Wayne Higley recounts his traumatic visit to the Vietnam memorial in Washington DC. He claimed he had been a US Navy Seal and had been wounded three times in his tour of duty. The problem is that he never went to Vietnam, his service history is a complete fabrication.
Don Roley said:This guy has been talked about on every forum devoted to martial arts frauds that exists.
Typical pattern; a past that no one seems able to confirm, denials from those that should know, explinations of secrecy to cover up that fact by guys who are all over the internet and media making their claims, multiple claims that all stroke the ego and (again) can't be confirmed,...etc.
Oh, I can't say that I have been on every interpol misssion and know everything that goes on in it. But based on the lack of facts, silliness of the claims, the obvious ego stroking and everything else, I am convinced this guy is just another idiotic fraud.
sgtmac_46 said:Sounds like BS to me. Too much 'bang bang bang, super-agent' talk to be plausable.
Usually, men claiming they were assassins for <insert super-secret agency here> usually have either mental issues or simply a problem with the truth. If I had a penny for every 'Ex-Navy Seal or Special Forces super-commando' i'd be a rich man. What's more, if there were as many ex-Special Operations guys as claim that they are ex-Special Operations, it would be the largest branch of the military, with millions of ready operatives.
I call BS.
Dan G said:Interpol is an international police organisation coordinating the international police work of member states. If the gentleman in question was busy assassinating anyone Interpol would be looking for them, not hiring them.
John Bishop said:This is correct. In fact contrary to what you see in spy movies, there are no interpol field agents.
They are basically a international clearing house for criminal records and warrants. They do no enforcement themselves, only technical support to member countries.
The closest thing they have to field agents is their crisis response teams. And these teams are made up of technicians and records clerks who set up command posts, with communication equipment, and technical and records research expertise.
In addition, it sounds a little too much like an over-stylized version of a confrontation involving Richard Marcinko in one of his fictional Red Cell books