Tough as NAILS, although you would never know it if you met one in civilian life for real.
I have known two-and-a-half of them, the half being a fellow I worked with at the Vancouver Museum, former Curator Jack Carsley. He got sick of Coast Watch and was able to talk to The Right People, made a few cross-Channel raids with these characters. He said it was dangerous as hell, but a lot of fun if you made it home alive.
I really think that was an understatement. Me? I would have been scared spitless!
Another was the commander of our local Cadet Corps, Dunc Elliot, who was my Dad's best friend for many years. Dunc's initials were DCM and I think the DCM was about the only medal he DIDN'T have. On Remembrance Day, Dunc and old Jan Pic, who was with the Polish Army paratroopers in 1938, made enough noise for a pawnshop, just walking, from ALL those medals. I don't think we will see another display like that in our time, outside of a museum. Dunc was a very interesting person, half Scot and half Cree although he didn't look it; his mother had been a Medicine Woman and Dunc knew a lot of natural cures for things, including a salve which regenerates flesh and muscle and nerves, leaving no scars, no matter how horrid the injury. Dunc ran an outfit that operated alongside Lovat's boys and had 47 snipers under his command. I saw the rifle he used, which he had borrowed from the Army at the conclusion of nastiness. It was a Winchester Model 70 in .270 calibre; he said that his outfit was allowed to use them, despite there being no proper ammunition for them. "It didn't matter, anyway," he told me, "Jerry didn't take snipers prisoner." The flat-shooting .270 round enabled the men to work 100 yards farther out than with the .303. Evidently, there were a couple of dozen of these in use; I am trying to track down the purchase.
The third one I met was a completely-upbeat fellow named Eddie Steiman. Eddie was raised in Winnipeg, where he went to school with Emmanuel "Mannie" Silverman. They both joined up as soon as the War started, feeling that any Jew should be interested in defeating Hitler. Mannie Silverman was discovered to be a watchmaker by trade (his family has one of the finest jewellery shops in the province) and so was handed over to the RCAF. During the war, he was Head of the Instrument Section at Number 2 Bombing and Gunnery School in Dafoe, Sask., where my Dad (who had suffered a similar fate, once it was discovered that he also had watchmaker training) worked under his direction. At Dafoe there was a whole fleet of aircraft of different types to keep in the air and half of he Instrument department was Jewish. Dad came out of that with his own Russian-Jewish name and understanding a fair bit of Yiddish. At Dafoe, you couldn't just pick up an instrument and FIX the thing; it had to be SOLD to you first. "If you're going to have a war," Dad said, "you might as well have one working with people you LIKE."
But that didn't help Eddie Steiman, who figured that a war should also be FUN. Eddie was dumped in the Infantry at first. THEN came a call for volunteers for "special combat duties" and Eddie signed up and found himself in an outfit like in the photo above. "That was fun," he told me, "but I wanted something more." Later, a call came for "single men only, with photographic experience" and Eddie plumped for that one, too. He was and enthusiastic amateur photographer and expert with many kinds of equipment already, so he was transferred to the Air Force, where he found himself hanging onto and operating a Sackman K-18 modified mapping camera which took rollfilm nearly a foot wide, taking pictures of the previous night's bomb damage in Germany through the Perspex nose of a low-level Lancaster at full throttle! "THAT was enough fun," he said. He also carried one of his own cameras on these missions, a 1938 Graflex 4x5 which he let me have for a price which was stiff enough that he knew that it would be looked after. (He was actually looking for a "home" for it, being that he was 84 at the time.) It has vibration damage to the leather case from rattling around in the Lanc. I think of Eddie..... and all the others..... every time I use it.
But the odd thing about all these men was that getting anything out of them regarding the War was like pulling teeth. The only way I knew there was something special about Eddie Steiman was that I knew the Pattern 37 web gear fairly well, and what was in the photo on his den wall was NOT standard-issue for Infantry. Only way you would know there was something unusual about Dunc (if you didn't know him) was by that incredible display of medals, one day a year. All three were quiet, modest and highly intelligent. They were as far from "thugs" as anyone possibly could imagine.
Add a healthy dose of pure GUTS to that, and you have the makings of a Commando.