

Venter served in the South African Navy from 1956–60, achieving the rank of Acting Leading Seaman. That experience formed the basis of the book on mercenaries published recently and titled War Dog: Fighting Other People's Wars.


More recently, Venter was active in Sierra Leone with South African mercenary pilot Neall Ellis flying combat in a Russian helicopter gunship. He also spent time in Somalia with the US Army helicopter air wing in the early 1990s, three military assignments with the mercenary group Executive Outcomes ( Angola and Sierra Leone) and a Joint-STAR mission with the United States Air Force over Kosovo. In 1985 Venter made a one-hour documentary that commemorated the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. From there he covered hostilities in Rhodesia, the Sudan, Angola, the South African Border War, the Congo as well as Portuguese Guinea, which resulted in a book on that colonial struggle published by the Munger Africana Library of the California Institute of Technology. He was with the Israeli invasion force when they entered Beirut in 1982. In-between, Venter cumulatively spent several years reporting on events in the Middle East, fluctuating between Israel and a beleaguered Lebanon torn by factional Islamic/Christian violence. The most notable consequence of this assignment was an hour-long documentary titled Africa's Killing Fields, ultimately broadcast nationwide in the United States by PBS. In the 1970s, Venter also reported in Uganda while under the reign of Idi Amin. He has published two books on nuclear proliferation, in particular from South Africa to Iran. Venter has reported on a number of wars in Africa, starting with the Nigerian Civil War in 1967 where he spent time covering the conflict with colleague Frederick Forsyth, who was working in Biafra for the BBC at the time.

Venter (born Albertus Johannes Venter, 25 November 1938) is a South African war journalist, documentary filmmaker, and author of more than forty books who also served as an Africa and Middle East correspondent for Jane's International Defence Review.
