After 47 adventure-filled years of publishing Soldier of Fortune Magazine, I decided it was time to move on to other long awaited projects, including writing books of the SOF adventures. After having given it considerable thought, I am passing the torch to reporter Susan Katz Keating, who has contributed to SOF and has been a friend to the magazine since the early 1980s.
Susan first connected with SOF years ago, when she took out an ad in the magazine, looking for mercenaries. She can tell the story about how that went. Later, SKK facilitated PEOPLE Magazine to support retired Col. Jack Bailey USAF (Ret.) on a waterborne rescue mission. His was a twofold effort to help the boat people escape from Vietnam, where they were being persecuted, as well as to find out more information about Americans MIA from the Vietnam War. Bailey used a refurbished smuggling ship, the Akuna III. Other SOFers and I went on one of his rescue missions.
Since then, SKK accompanied our team at the Washington, D.C. waterfront involving encounters with foreign rebel leaders, and at gatherings with some of the most fascinating military figures of our day. She can tell those stories herself, about Nick Rowe, Charlie Beckwith, and others. She also can tell stories of intrigue in pre-war Dubrovnik and Sarajevo, and of action in Belfast and South Armagh during the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
Over the years, Susan has written for Soldier of Fortune Magazine, as well as for other military and mainstream publications. In our pages, she wrote about war and warriors. Her article on the Battle of OP Nevada in Afghanistan was one of the last cover stories for the print magazine, and remains one of the most popular stories in the online magazine. Over the years, SKK wrote for SOF about American POWs in Korea, and the rise of China’s Peoples Liberation Army. She also wrote “How to Stage a Soviet Coup,” which was published shortly before Mikhail Gorbachev was pushed out of power in the USSR.
Here is a little more about the person I am passing the torch to.
Susan Katz Keating is an award winning writer and investigative journalist specializing in war, terrorism, and international security. She is Chief National Security Correspondent and assistant managing editor for Just the News, and previously was Senior Editor for national security and foreign affairs at the Washington Examiner. As a longtime military correspondent for PEOPLE magazine, she has broken stories there and in TIME on the U.S. military and domestic terrorism.
A former Washington Times security reporter, she is the author of Prisoners of Hope: Exploiting the POW/MIA Myth in America (Random House), and books about Saudi Arabia, Native American warfare, and other topics for young readers. Her work has appeared in Readers Digest, the New York Times, Air & Space, American Legion, VFW, RealClear Investigations, and other publications. She has been cited in the New Yorker, the Wall Street Journal, Salon, and other publications. She was a founding trustee for the National Museum of Americans in Wartime, and is secretary of the board of Military Reporters & Editors. She briefly was in the U.S. Army, where she earned her Expert rating on the M-16 rifle. She was editor of the Dixon Tribune newspaper in California. She was a director of the Travis AFB Museum, and served as restoration crew chief on a B-52.
I am convinced that Susan has the passion and is well prepared to carry on the legacy of the last 47 years of SOF Magazine, now online.
She is a strong supporter of the military and a patriotic American. She now is the publisher/owner of Soldier of Fortune Magazine.
By Robert K. Brown
Founder, Soldier of Fortune Magazine
Editor’s Note: I grew up reading Soldier of Fortune magazine and truth be told probably wouldn’t be running SSD had it not been for Robert K Brown’s pathing the way. This is republished from the Special Forces Association Chapter LXXVIII website and was first published on 4 June 2022.
Along with Mad and Penthouse SOF was a cornerstone of my youth, shaping my worldview. An antidote to all sorts of lazy thinking.
What a combination. I was an intermittent consumer of MAD, preferring the various Warren imprints instead.
Also great stuff. I tended to stick with Penthouses sister mag, Omni. Mad, SOF and obviously Penthouse were viewed dimly at my school but Omni was fine. It may or may not be true that some kids found the Omni cover was easy to remove and fitted perfectly over the other ones.
Omni was great!
Here to tell ya – not only a legendary magazine – Editor Robert K. Brown answered all of my fan-letters. Kept buying SOF just for that reason alone.
A retirement well-earned… Thank you, Mr. Brown.
Plus 1 as another guy that SOF made an indelible impact on my life career choices . Thanks for posting and the work you put out .
Is it staying online only, or will they be coming back into print?
Looks like online only. RKB had a new project he’s working on. Hoping to see some print come out of that.
Anyone old enough to remember the African guy with half his head shot off which was one of the pictures that established SOF in one of its earliest issues? I’ll never forget that pic. 🙂
Who can forget how easily RKB pissed of the liberal press
I do! Was a photo of a terrorist shot with a 50 cal. Stuck with me since. Fucker got what he deserved…
Still remember the look I got from the cashier at Iandoli’s grocery store in Worcester, Massachusetts when I put that first issue on the belt. Still have it. And the uber cool SoF M43 pattern cap in tan that was all the rage along with a DPM windproof smock and a Para-model FN.
Like Iggy says, “MAD, Penthouse & SOF”. I was a hardcore reader of SOF and couldn’t wait month-to-month for that next issue (almost as much as Penthouse).
I was blessed when I went into Kuwait International Airport and the SEALs rode up with their dune buggies. They were instantly swarmed by the press. I was out adjusting an antenna when RKB walked by and I instantly recognized him. He was kind enough to take a picture with me and in my final years as an instructor, that picture hung outside my office with my bio.