Table of Contents

The Rat Pack (Marvel Comics)

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The Rat Pack first appeared, albeit in a brief flashback, in Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #77 (January 1970), written by Gary Friedrich and penciled by Dick Ayers. This initial appearance was little more than a passing mention of a dangerous past mission Fury undertook. For decades, the team remained a minor footnote in Fury's extensive history. It wasn't until 2006 that the team was given a definitive origin and purpose in the six-issue miniseries Fury: Peacemaker, published under Marvel's mature-readers MAX imprint. This series was crafted by the acclaimed creative team of writer Garth Ennis and artist Darick Robertson, known for their work on The Punisher and the creator-owned series The Boys. Their involvement signaled the story's tone: a brutally realistic, violent, and psychologically complex war story, free from the typical superheroics of the mainstream Marvel Universe. Ennis used the “Rat Pack” concept to delve into the formation of Nick Fury's character, positing that his signature cynicism was forged in the crucible of this single, bloody mission. The name itself is a cynical play on the glamorous celebrity group of the 1950s, juxtaposing a cool moniker with the grim reality of black-ops warfare.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Rat Pack is a tale of desperation, pragmatism, and the brutal calculus of war. Unlike long-standing teams, they were an ad-hoc unit assembled for a single, seemingly impossible objective.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In 1944, as the Allied forces prepared for the D-Day invasion, high command faced a critical threat. The brilliant and ruthless Nazi General Ernst Schlessinger, operating in coordination with Baron Wolfgang von Strucker, was formulating a strategy so effective it threatened to turn the Normandy landings into a catastrophic failure. Conventional military options were deemed too slow or too risky. Colonel Joseph “Happy Sam” Sawyer of the U.S. Army, Fury's commanding officer, was authorized to sanction a mission that officially couldn't exist: the assassination of both Schlessinger and Strucker. For this task, he turned to his most capable and ruthless soldier, Sergeant Nick Fury. Fury was instructed to hand-pick a small team, a “Rat Pack,” to infiltrate Nazi-occupied France, eliminate the targets, and disappear. The mission was completely off the books, with no support and total deniability if they were caught or killed. Fury's recruitment process was pragmatic and focused on specific, lethal skills:

With his team assembled, Fury briefed them on the mission. Their objective was simple to state but nearly impossible to execute: kill two of the Third Reich's most heavily guarded officers and escape with their lives. This was the birth of the Rat Pack, a disposable scalpel forged for a single, precise cut in the heart of the Nazi war machine.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The Rat Pack does not exist within the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). The group and their specific storyline from Fury: Peacemaker have not been adapted into any film or television series to date. However, the MCU features a thematic equivalent in the form of the howling_commandos, as seen in Captain America: The First Avenger. Like the Rat Pack, the Howling Commandos were an elite special forces unit operating during World War II, comprised of soldiers from various Allied nations. They were hand-picked by Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes to strike at hydra bases behind enemy lines. The key differences are profound and highlight the varying tones of the source material and the cinematic universe:

While the MCU's Nick Fury has a long and mysterious history, his WWII-era activities have not been detailed. The cinematic universe chose to place the focus of its WWII narrative on Captain America and his team, making them the definitive special operations unit of that era in the MCU.

Part 3: Mandate, Structure & Key Members

The Rat Pack was not a standing unit but a purpose-built tool for a single operation. Its mandate was clear, its structure was flat, and its members were chosen for lethality over camaraderie.

Mandate, Methodology & Mission

The sole mandate of the Rat Pack was the assassination of General Ernst Schlessinger and Baron Wolfgang von Strucker. The mission, codenamed “Peacemaker,” was designed to be a surgical strike to decapitate a key part of the German command structure on the Western Front. Their methodology was based on stealth, infiltration, and ruthless efficiency. The plan involved:

1. **Infiltration:** Using the captured German plane flown by Hannes to bypass enemy air defenses and land undetected in occupied France.
2. **Reconnaissance:** Locating the chateau where Schlessinger and Strucker were meeting.
3. **Execution:** Infiltrating the heavily guarded chateau and eliminating both targets at close range.
4. **Exfiltration:** Escaping to a pre-arranged extraction point.

The entire operation was predicated on speed and surprise. There was no room for error, and Fury's leadership style was brutally pragmatic, emphasizing the objective above all else, including the lives of his own men.

Structure & Hierarchy

The team's structure was informal and mission-specific.

Key Members

Sergeant Nick Fury

As the team's leader, a young Nick Fury demonstrated the nascent traits that would define his later career. He was already a seasoned combat veteran, but this mission forced him into a role beyond frontline soldier. He was a planner, a recruiter, and a leader tasked with a mission that tested his moral limits. He was willing to do whatever it took to win, a philosophy that put him in direct conflict with Fortune. The events of the “Peacemaker” mission would leave an indelible scar on his soul, teaching him that victory often comes at an unacceptable price and that trust is a liability he can rarely afford.

Dominic Fortune (Duvid "David" Fortunov)

Fortune was the wild card of the group. A world-weary adventurer and soldier of fortune, he joined the war effort out of a sense of duty, but he played by his own rules. An expert marksman and acrobat, he possessed a flair and theatricality that contrasted sharply with the grim reality of the mission. Fortune served as the team's conscience and Fury's primary foil. He constantly questioned Fury's methods and the morality of their assassination assignment, arguing that there was a right way and a wrong way to fight a war. His presence introduced a critical element of ideological conflict within the team, forcing Fury to confront the human cost of his orders.

Hannes, The Pilot

A former Luftwaffe pilot, Hannes was the team's key to infiltration. His family had been murdered by the Gestapo, leaving him with a deep-seated hatred for the Nazi regime and a burning desire for revenge. While his flying skills were essential, his emotional state made him a potential liability. He was a man driven by pure vengeance, a motivation Fury understood and exploited. Hannes represented the deeply personal stakes of the war, a man who had lost everything and had nothing left to lose.

Amasa, The Killer

Amasa was the team's quiet professional and, ultimately, its fatal flaw. Recommended to Fury as a ruthless but effective operative, he was the mole. In truth, his name was Rottger, an SS agent working for General Schlessinger. He was planted on the team to feed them misinformation and lead them into a trap. His betrayal was the lynchpin of the enemy's counter-plan and the direct cause of the mission's disastrous turn. His character serves as a harsh lesson to Fury about the dangers of trusting anyone, a lesson he would carry for the rest of his life.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

The Rat Pack's entire history is contained within a single, self-contained story arc that is foundational to the modern understanding of Nick Fury's character.

Fury: Peacemaker

The 2006 six-issue miniseries is the definitive and sole chronicle of the Rat Pack.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

Due to their creation in a specific, mature-readers storyline, the Rat Pack has not been widely used or adapted in other Marvel continuities.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
The name “Rat Pack” is a direct reference to the 1950s and 1960s celebrity supergroup featuring Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop. The comic's use of the name is deeply ironic, contrasting the glamorous image of the real-life group with the bloody, grim work of Fury's team.
2)
Fury: Peacemaker was published under the Marvel MAX imprint, which was designed for stories with explicit content, including graphic violence, profanity, and mature themes, allowing creators to tell stories outside the constraints of the mainstream Marvel continuity.
3)
The creative team of Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson are well-known for their cynical and often ultraviolent deconstructions of the superhero and action genres. Their work on Fury: Peacemaker carries the same thematic DNA as their celebrated runs on The Punisher and their creator-owned series, The Boys.
4)
Dominic Fortune's inclusion in the series served to re-integrate the classic 1930s-style pulp hero into a more modern, gritty context, bridging the gap between Marvel's Golden Age characters and its more realistic war stories.
5)
Primary source material for this team is exclusively the Fury: Peacemaker Vol 1, Issues #1-6 (2006). Their original appearance in Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #77 is a single-panel flashback with no substantive detail.
6)
The betrayal by an internal member is a common trope in espionage fiction and is used here to give a specific, personal reason for Nick Fury's legendary paranoia and trust issues that define his character for decades to come.