Designed by a motorcycle racer turned small-arms engineer, George
Patchett, the submachine gun that eventually became known as the
Sterling was developed during World War II. Some suggest it first saw
action during Operation Infatuate with No. 4 Commando, before becoming
fully adopted by the British Army in 1953 as the Sterling Machine
Carbine (L2A1).
It was center stage for many of Britain's post-colonial conflicts from
Malaya to Kenya and from Yemen to Northern Ireland. The silenced L34A1
Sterling-Patchett entered service in 1966 and first saw action deep in
the jungles of Vietnam in the hands of the elite special forces of
Australia, New Zealand, and the United States during prisoner snatches
and reconnaissance patrols.
Employing first-hand accounts and painstaking technical analysis, this
engaging account features carefully selected archive photography and
specially commissioned color artwork of the submachine gun that armed
British and other forces for nearly 60 years.