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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900
NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE The heartbreaking and inspiring story of
one of the deadliest battles of the Afghanistan war, acclaimed by
critics as a classic. 'A mind-boggling, all-too-true story of
heroism, hubris, failed strategy, and heartbreaking sacrifice' Jon
Krakauer, author of Into the Wild At 5:58 AM on October 3rd, 2009,
Combat Outpost Keating, located in frighteningly vulnerable terrain
in Afghanistan just 14 miles from the Pakistani border, was
viciously attacked. Though the 53 soldiers stationed there
prevailed against nearly 400 Taliban fighters, their casualties
made it the deadliest fight of the war that year. Four months after
the battle, a review revealed that there was no reason for the
troops at Keating to have been there in the first place. In The
Outpost, Jake Tapper gives us the powerful saga of COP Keating,
from its establishment to eventual destruction, introducing us to
an unforgettable cast of soldiers and their families. This modern
classic of military history is an indictment of the management of
the war in Afghanistan, and a thrilling tale of true courage in the
face of impossible odds.
The conflict in Vietnam has been rewritten and reframed into many
corners of American life and has long shadowed contemporary
political science and foreign policy. The war and its aftermath
have engendered award-winning films and books. It has held up a
mirror to the twentieth century and to the wars of the
twenty-first. Set in wartime Vietnam and contemporary Vietnam, in
wartime America and in America today, the stories that comprise
Memorial Days were written from 1973 to the present. As our
continuing reappraisals of the war's shadow have unspooled over the
last half-decade, so too has Wayne Karlin returned to the subject
in his fiction, collected and published together here for the first
time. A girl in Maryland runs away from Civil War reenactors she
imagines to be American soldiers in Vietnam, while a woman in
Vietnam hides in the jungle from an American helicopter and another
tries to bury the relics of the war. A man mourns a friend lost in
Iraq while a helicopter crewman in Quang Tri loads the broken and
dead into his aircraft. Extras playing soldiers in a war film in
present-day Vietnam model themselves after other war films while a
Marine in a war sees himself as a movie character. A snake coiled
around the collective control of a helicopter in Vietnam uncoils in
a soldier come home from Iraq. The chronology is the chronology of
dreams or nightmares or triggered flashbacks: images and incidents
triggering other images and incidents in a sequence that seems to
make no sense-which is exactly the sense it makes. Some stories
burn with the fresh experiences of a Marine witnessing war
firsthand. Some stories radiate a long-abiding grief. All the
stories reflect and reconfigure the Vietnam War as it echoes into
the present century, under the light of retrospection.
The Western-led efforts to establish a new post-Taliban order in
Afghanistan are in serious trouble, and in this book Suhrke sets
out to explain why. She begins with the dynamic of the intervention
and its related peace-building mission. What were the forces
shaping this grand international project? What explains the
apparent systemic bias towards a deeper and broader international
involvement? Many reasons have been cited for its limited
achievements and ever-growing difficulties, the most common
explanation being that the national, regional, and international
contexts were unfavourable. But many policies were misguided while
the multinational operation itself was extraordinarily and
unnecessarily complex. Astri Suhrke's main thesis is that the
international project itself contains serious tensions and
contradictions that significantly contributed to the lack of
progress. As a result, the deepening involvement proved
dysfunctional: massive international support has created an extreme
version of a rentier state that is predictably weak, corrupt and
unaccountable; US-led military operations undercut the
peacebuilding agenda, and more international aid and monitoring to
correct the problems generate Afghan resentment and evasion.
Continuing these policies will only reinforce the dynamic. The
alternative is a less intrusive international presence, a longer
time-frame for reconstruction and change, and negotiations with the
militants that can end the war and permit a more Afghan-directed
order to emerge.
When the tyrannical Saddam Hussein was captured in 2003, the war in
Iraq was in a precarious position. A provisional government had
been assembled, but the Iraqi government was not yet recognized as
sovereign. They were now expected to put their most infamous
citizen on trial for war crimes. Called into duty at this moment
was Rear Admiral Greg Slavonic, who was tasked with facilitating
U.S. media presence at the arraignment which would establish the
judicial framework for future tribunals. Admiral Slavonic was party
to the historic US-Iraqi Transfer of Sovereignty and then as the
senior military officer in the Iraqi courtroom where he was one of
fifteen individuals to witness the historic event. As the senior
military officer in the room with fifteen other observers, he
managed a challenging pool of media jockeying for access for this
once in a career story and plus served as advisor to the Iraqi
judge on various media issues. Slavonic's first-hand narrative of a
unique moment in military history features never-before-seen
transcripts of Saddam Hussein's trial. For the first time, readers
can read how Saddam responded to his charges, along with eleven of
Hussein's closest advisors and cabinet members who were arraigned
that day, and several charged with war "crimes against humanity".
This would be the last time all twelve men would be together again
who were responsible for the deaths of over several million fellow
Iraqi citizens. This book expands our examination of difficult wars
and chronicles the legal reckoning and downfall of a tyrant.
By the end of the American War in Vietnam, the coastal province of
PhU YEn was one of the least-secure provinces in the Republic of
Vietnam. It was also a prominent target of the American strategy of
pacification-an effort, purportedly separate and distinct from
conventional warfare, to win the "hearts and minds" of the
Vietnamese. In Robert J. Thompson III's analysis, the consistent,
and consistently unsuccessful, struggle to place PhU YEn under
Saigon's banner makes the province particularly fertile ground for
studying how the Americans advanced pacification and why this
effort ultimately failed. In March 1970 a disastrous military
engagement began in PhU YEn, revealing the enemy's continued
presence after more than three years of pacification. Clear, Hold,
and Destroy provides a fresh perspective on the war across multiple
levels, from those making and implementing policy to those affected
by it. Most pointedly, Thompson contends that pacification, far
from existing apart from conventional warfare, actually depended on
conventional military forces for its application. His study reaches
back into PhU YEn's storied history with pacification before and
during the French colonial period, then focuses on the province
from the onset of the American war in 1965 to its conclusion in
1975. A sharply focused, fine-grained analysis of one critical
province during the Vietnam War, Thompson's work demonstrates how
pacification is better understood as the foundation of U.S.
fighting in Vietnam.
"An important work." -John Prados, author of President's Secret
Wars "This definitive account of the Phoenix program, the US
attempt to destroy the Viet Cong through torture and summary
execution, remains sobering reading for all those trying to
understand the Vietnam War and the moral ambiguities of America's
Cold War victory. Though carefully documented, the book is written
in an accessible style that makes it ideal for readers at all
levels, from undergraduates to professional historians." -Alfred W.
McCoy, author of The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the
Global Drug Trade
The Mysteries of Haditha is a war story unlike any other. This
riveting and hilarious memoir of M. C. Armstrong's journey into the
Iraq War as an embedded journalist pulls no punches and lifts the
veil on the lies we tell each other-and the ones we tell ourselves.
This is a story about both the strong women in Armstrong's life and
his road to true manhood. Armstrong's family was nearly ripped at
the seams as he struggled to secure his embed with Navy SEALs in
the Al Anbar Province in 2008. Armstrong's searingly honest
narrative about his relationship with his father, his fiance, and
his friend in the SEAL team takes the reader on a nosedive ride
from a historically black college in the American South straight
into Baghdad, the burn pits, and the desert beyond the mysterious
Haditha dam. Honest and vulnerable, tender but fearless, The
Mysteries of Haditha is an incredible coming-of-age story and a
unique glimpse into the world of the war on terror.
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