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That jeep was never British. Let's get that out of the way right now, because it matters. The desert raider that L Detachment SAS turned into one of the most lethal special forces weapons of the Second World War was a Willys MB, manufactured by Willys-Overland Motors in Toledo, Ohio, shipped across twelve thousand nautical miles of ocean through the Lend-Lease program, uncrated in an Egyptian depot, and handed to a unit that did things with it that nobody in Toledo could've imagined. The American platform. The British weapon. Two different achievements. Two different countries. And they deserve to be credited separately.So let's start where the vehicle actually started. Not in the Libyan desert. In Ohio.In 1940, the United States Army invited 135 manufacturers to submit designs for a light reconnaissance car — quarter-ton, four-wheel drive, simple enough to fix with a wrench in a ditch. A hundred and thirty-two companies didn't bother responding. Only three did: American Bantam, Willys-Overland, and Ford. After testing at Camp Holabird, Maryland, the Army picked the Willys design for one reason above all others — its engine. The Go Devil. An inline four-cylinder, 2,199 cc, producing 60 horsepower at 4,000 rpm. Not fast. Not flashy. Built for torque and reliability, for starting in the cold and running in the heat, for being torn apart and reassembled by a nineteen-year-old with a field manual.