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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900
Originally issued in 1981 by the U.S. Office of Air Force History.
Profusely illustrated with maps, charts and photographs throughout.
An innovative adaptation of existing aircraft, the gunship was used
to interdict enemy reinforcements and protect friendly villages,
bases, and forces, especially at night. Ballard's book describes
how the fixed-wing gunship evolved from a modified cargo aircraft
to a sophisticated weapons system with considerable firepower. The
author highlights the tactics, key decisions, and the constant need
for adaptation.
When Lieutenant Commander Heidi Kraft's twin son and daughter were
fifteen months old, she was deployed to Iraq. A clinical
psychologist in the US Navy, Kraft's job was to uncover the wounds
of war that a surgeon would never see. She put away thoughts of her
children back home, acclimated to the sound of incoming rockets,
and learned how to listen to the most traumatic stories a war zone
has to offer.
One of the toughest lessons of her deployment was perfectly
articulated by the TV show M*A*S*H: "There are two rules of war.
Rule number one is that young men die. Rule number two is that
doctors can't change rule number one." Some Marines, Kraft
realized, and even some of their doctors, would be damaged by war
in ways she could not repair. And sometimes, people were repaired
in ways she never expected. RULE NUMBER TWO is a powerful firsthand
account of providing comfort admidst the chaos of war, and of what
it takes to endure.
The true story of the fierce band of women who battled Washington -
and Hanoi - to bring their husbands home from the jungles of
Vietnam. On 12 February, 1973, one hundred and sixteen men who,
just six years earlier, had been high flying Navy and Air Force
pilots, shuffled, limped, or were carried off a huge military
transport plane at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. These
American servicemen had endured years of brutal torture, kept
shackled and starving in solitary confinement, in rat-infested,
mosquito-laden prisons, the worst of which was The Hanoi Hilton.
Months later, the first Vietnam POWs to return home would learn
that their rescuers were their wives, a group of women that
included Jane Denton, Sybil Stockdale, Louise Mulligan, Andrea
Rander, Phyllis Galanti, and Helene Knapp. These women, who formed
The National League of Families, would never have called themselves
'feminists', but they had become the POW and MIAs most fervent
advocates, going to extraordinary lengths to facilitate their
husbands' freedom - and to account for missing military men - by
relentlessly lobbying government leaders, conducting a savvy media
campaign, conducting covert meetings with antiwar activists, and
most astonishingly, helping to code secret letters to their
imprisoned husbands. In a page-turning work of narrative
non-fiction, Heath Hardage Lee tells the story of these remarkable
women for the first time. The League of Wives is certain to be on
everyone's must-read list.
It was an unbelievable mission - to rebuild Iraq while the U.S.
military was fighting a raging insurgency. In 2004, the soldiers
and civilians of the Gulf Region Division (GRD) answered the call
to duty and began the largest and most complex reconstruction
project ever undertaken by our nation. They made great personal
sacrifices that few of their fellow Americans would dare endure.
This book tells the rest of the inspiring story - much of which was
ignored by the mainstream media as "not newsworthy" or reduced to
mere sound bytes. In the face of imminent danger, the GRD team
braved daily car bombs, rocket attacks, improvised explosive
devices (IEDs) and kidnappings to rebuild thousands of projects
throughout a chaotic war zone. These projects spread throughout a
hostile country included schools, hospitals, police stations, oil
production, electrical power and water treatment plants. Despite
the odds, GRD was able to complete its critical strategic mission,
and its members were awarded the Meritorious Unit Commendation. A
few of the amazing stories include: - A massive car bomb on
author's first day in Baghdad that leveled a nearby hotel. - High
speed "Mad Max" drives through the streets of Baghdad in unarmored
SUVs. - The dependence on security contractors who performed with
great valor while protecting American civilians. - The perilous war
waged on the reconstruction mission that was largely invisible to
U.S. combat forces and the American public. - The accidental rescue
of an American hostage. - Living and working in Saddam's great
palaces. - How a Yahoo email message was used to send an urgent
plea for help. - A daring rescue mission in the Tigris River that
ended in tragic loss. - The parade of Congressional Delegations
that diverted precious combat resources from the war effort. - The
unbelievable (but true) story of how a Yahoo email account is used
to send an urgent message to the author to "PLEASE SAVE US." About
the Author: Kerry Kachejian is one of the nation s most qualified
soldiers and engineers, having served in and supported
reconstruction operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan as well as
relief operations during Hurricane Katrina. A 1982 graduate of the
US Military Academy (West Point), Kachejian also holds a Master s
Degree in Systems Engineering from Virginia Polytechnic Institute.
He is a Distinguished Graduate of the Industrial College of the
Armed Forces earning a second Master s Degree in National Resource
Strategy. Kachejian has numerous military decorations, awards, and
qualifications, including the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star
Medal and the Combat Action Badge. He was presented the Bronze de
Fleury Medal by the Army Engineer Association and the Reserve Award
for Leadership Excellence a national award presented annually by
the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA). He is Airborne
and Ranger qualified. Kachejian recently retired from the Army
Reserve, holding the rank of Colonel. He currently supports the
U.S. defense industry. He has spoken at a number of major
conferences and private events on topics, including the
Reconstruction of Iraq and Afghanistan, the Psychology of
Terrorism, Contractors on the Battlefield, and Critical
Infrastructure Protection. Kerry, a native of West Chester,
Pennsylvania, lives with his wife Alice and three children near
Springfield, Virginia.
In Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War, accomplished foreign
relations historian David F. Shmitz provides students of US history
and the Vietnam era with an up-to-date analysis of Nixon's Vietnam
policy in a brief and accessible book that addresses the main
controversies of the Nixon years. President Richard Nixon's first
presidential term oversaw the definitive crucible of the Vietnam
War. Nixon came into office seeking the kind of decisive victory
that had eluded President Johnson, and went about expanding the
war, overtly and covertly, in order to uphold a policy of
"containment," protect America's credibility, and defy the left's
antiwar movement at home. Tactically, politically, Nixon's moves
made sense. However, by 1971 the president was forced to
significantly de-escalate the American presence and seek a
negotiated end to the war, which is now accepted as an American
defeat, and a resounding failure of American foreign relations.
Schmitz addresses the main controversies of Nixon's Vietnam
strategy, and in so doing manages to trace back the ways in which
this most calculating and perceptive politician wound up resigning
from office a fraud and failure. Finally, the book seeks to place
the impact of Nixon's policies and decisions in the larger context
of post-World War II American society, and analyzes the full costs
of the Vietnam War that the nation feels to this day.
"
A Companion to the Vietnam War "contains twenty-four definitive
essays on America's longest and most divisive foreign conflict. It
represents the best current scholarship on this controversial and
influential episode in modern American history.
Highlights issues of nationalism, culture, gender, and race.
Covers the breadth of Vietnam War history, including American war
policies, the Vietnamese perspective, the antiwar movement, and the
American home front.
Surveys and evaluates the best scholarship on every important era
and topic.
Includes a select bibliography to guide further research.
This book presents oral histories from the last surviving UK
veterans of the Korean War. With the help of the UK National Army
Museum and the British Korean Society, this book collects nearly
twenty testimonials of UK veterans of the Korean War. Many only
teenagers when mobilized, these veterans attempt to put words to
the violence and trauma they experienced. They recall the landscape
and people of Korea, the political backdrop, and touching moments
in unlikely situations. Like other oral histories of war, their
stories recount friendship, hardship, the loss of innocence, and
the perseverance of humanity in the face of cruelty. The
testimonies were taken by academics and students from the
University of Roehampton, and supported by the National Army Museum
and the British Korean Society. Through their memories we learn a
great deal about the conflict in macro and micro scales.
"This is the story of Abu Ghraib that you haven't heard, told by
the soldier sent by the Army to restore order and ensure that the
abuses that took place there never happen again." In April 2004,
the world was shocked by the brutal pictures of beatings, dog
attacks, sex acts, and the torture of prisoners held at Abu Ghraib
in Iraq. As the story broke, and the world began to learn about the
extent of the horrors that occurred there, the U.S. Army dispatched
Colonel Larry James to Abu Ghraib with an overwhelming assignment:
to dissect this catastrophe, fix it, and prevent it from being
repeated.
A veteran of deployments to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and a nationally
well-known and respected Army psychologist, Colonel James's
expertise made him the one individual capable of taking on this
enormous task. Through Colonel James's own experience on the
ground, readers will see the tightrope military personnel must walk
while fighting in the still new battlefield of the war on terror,
the challenge of serving as both a doctor/healer and combatant
soldier, and what can-and must-be done to ensure that
interrogations are safe, moral, and effective.
At the same time, Colonel James also debunks many of the false
stories and media myths surrounding the actions of American
soldiers at both Abu Ghraib and GuantanamoBay, and he reveals
shining examples of our men and women in uniform striving to serve
with honor and integrity in the face of extreme hardship and
danger.
An intense and insightful personal narrative, Fixing Hell shows us
an essential perspective on Abu Ghraib that we've never seen
before.
He was Born in New Jersey in 1933 and only dreamed of being a
military man. Marrying shortly after high school, he joined the
army in 1956 and was dispatched to Vietnam in 1963 when America
still seemed innocent. Jim Thompson would have led a perfectly
ordinary, undistinguished life had he not been captured four months
later, becoming the first American prisoner in Vietnam and,
ultimately, the longest-held prisoner of war in American history.
Forgotten Soldier is Thompson's epic story, a remarkable
reconstruction of one man's life and a searing account that
questions who is a real American hero. Examining the lives of
Thompson's family on the home front, as well as his brutal
treatment and five escape attempts in Vietnam, military journalist
Tom Philpott weaves an extraordinary tale, showing how the American
government intentionally suppressed Thompson's story.
Horace 'Jim' Greasley was twenty years of age in the spring of 1939 when Adolf Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia and latterly Poland. There had been whispers and murmurs of discontent from certain quarters and the British government began to prepare for the inevitable war. After seven weeks training with the 2nd/5th Battalion Leicester, he found himself facing the might of the German army in a muddy field south of Cherbourg, in Northern France, with just thirty rounds of ammunition in his weapon pouch. Horace's war didn't last long. He was taken prisoner on 25th May 1940 and forced to endure a ten week march across France and Belgium en-route to Holland.
Horace survived...barely...food was scarce; he took nourishment from dandelion leaves, small insects and occasionally a secret food package from a sympathetic villager, and drank rain water from ditches. Many of his fellow comrades were not so fortunate. Falling by the side of the road through sheer exhaustion and malnourishment meant a bullet through the back of the head and the corpse left to rot. After a three day train journey without food and water, Horace found himself incarcerated in a prison camp in Poland. It was there he embarked on an incredible love affair with a German girl interpreting for his captors.
He experienced the sweet taste of freedom each time he escaped to see her, yet incredibly he made his way back into the camp each time, sometimes two, three times every week. Horace broke out of the camp then crept back in again under the cover of darkness after his natural urges were fulfilled. He brought food back to his fellow prisoners to supplement their meagre rations. He broke out of the camp over two hundred times and towards the end of the war even managed to bring radio parts back in. The BBC news would be delivered daily to over 3,000 prisoners. This is an incredible tale of one man's adversity and defiance of the German nation.
Pat Tillman was well-known to American sports fans: a chisel-jawed
and talented young professional football star, he was on the brink
of signing a million dollar contract when, in 2001, al-Qaeda
launched terrorist attacks against his country. Driven by deeply
felt moral patriotism, he walked away from fame and money to enlist
in the United States Special Operations Forces. A year later he was
killed - apparently in the line of fire - on a desolate hillside
near the Pakistan border in Afghanistan. News of Tillman's death
shocked America. But even as the public mourned his loss, the US
Army aggressively maneuvered to conceal the truth: that it was a
ranger in Tillman's own platoon who had fired the fatal shots. In
Where Men Win Glory, Jon Krakauer reveals how an entire country was
deliberately deceived by those at the very highest levels of the US
army and government. Infused with the power and authenticity
readers have come to expect from Krakauer's storytelling, Where Men
Win Glory exposes shattering truths about men and war.
In ""The War for Korea, 1945-1950: A House Burning"", one of our
most distinguished military historians argued that the conflict on
the Korean peninsula in the middle of the twentieth century was
first and foremost a war between Koreans that began in 1948. In the
second volume of a monumental trilogy, Allan R. Millett now shifts
his focus to the twelve-month period from North Korea's invasion of
South Korea on June 25, 1950, through the end of June 1951 - the
most active phase of the internationalized 'Korean War'. Moving
deftly between the battlefield and the halls of power, Millett
weaves together military operations and tactics without losing
sight of Cold War geopolitics, strategy, and civil-military
relations. Filled with new insights on the conflict, his book is
the first to give combined arms its due, looking at the
contributions and challenges of integrating naval and air power
with the ground forces of United Nations Command and showing the
importance of Korean support services. He also provides the most
complete, and sympathetic, account of the role of South Korea's
armed forces, drawing heavily on ROK and Korea Military Advisory
Group sources. Millett integrates non-American perspectives into
the narrative - especially those of Mao Zedong, Chinese military
commander Peng Dehuai, Josef Stalin, Kim Il-sung, and Syngman Rhee.
And he portrays Walton Walker and Matthew Ridgway as the heroes of
Korea, both of whom had a more profound understanding of the
situation than Douglas MacArthur, whose greatest flaw was not his
politics but his strategic and operational incompetence. Researched
in South Korean, Chinese, and Soviet as well as American and UN
sources, Millett has exploited previously ignored or neglected oral
history collections - including interviews with American and South
Korean officers - and has made extensive use of reports based on
interrogations of North Korean and Chinese POWs. The end result is
masterful work that provides both a gripping narrative and a
greater understanding of this key conflict in international and
American history.
*NOW UPDATED WITH EXTRA MATERIAL* The boy who fled Afghanistan and
endured a terrifying journey in the hands of people smugglers is
now a young man intent on changing the world. His story is a deeply
harrowing and incredibly inspiring tale of our times. Gulwali
Passarlay was sent away from Afghanistan at the age of twelve,
after his father was killed in a gun battle with the US Army. He
made a twelve-month odyssey across Europe, spending time in
prisons, suffering hunger, making a terrifying journey across the
Mediterranean in a tiny boat, and enduring a desolate month in the
camp at Calais. Somehow he survived, and made it to Britain, where
he was fostered, sent to school, and won a place at a top
university. He was chosen to carry the Olympic torch in 2012. One
boy's experience is the central story of our times. This powerful
memoir celebrates the triumph of courage over adversity.
Featured in Stylist's guide to 2019's best non-fiction books The
true story of the fierce band of women who battled Washington - and
Hanoi - to bring their husbands home from the jungles of Vietnam.
On 12 February, 1973, one hundred and sixteen men who, just six
years earlier, had been high flying Navy and Air Force pilots,
shuffled, limped, or were carried off a huge military transport
plane at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. These American
servicemen had endured years of brutal torture, kept shackled and
starving in solitary confinement, in rat-infested, mosquito-laden
prisons, the worst of which was The Hanoi Hilton. Months later, the
first Vietnam POWs to return home would learn that their rescuers
were their wives, a group of women that included Jane Denton, Sybil
Stockdale, Louise Mulligan, Andrea Rander, Phyllis Galanti, and
Helene Knapp. These women, who formed The National League of
Families, would never have called themselves 'feminists', but they
had become the POW and MIAs most fervent advocates, going to
extraordinary lengths to facilitate their husbands' freedom - and
to account for missing military men - by relentlessly lobbying
government leaders, conducting a savvy media campaign, conducting
covert meetings with antiwar activists, and most astonishingly,
helping to code secret letters to their imprisoned husbands. In a
page-turning work of narrative non-fiction, Heath Hardage Lee tells
the story of these remarkable women for the first time. The League
of Wives is certain to be on everyone's must-read list.
Code-named the Studies and Observations Group, SOG was the most
secret elite U.S. military unit to serve in the Vietnam War-its
very existence denied by the government. Composed entirely of
volunteers from such ace fighting units as the Army Green Berets,
Air Force Air Commandos, and Navy SEALs, SOG took on the most
dangerous covert assignments, in the deadliest and most forbidding
theaters of operation.
John L. Plaster, a three-tour SOG veteran, shares the gripping
account of SOG's stunning operations behind enemy lines-penetrating
heavily- defended North Vietnamese military facilities, holding off
mass enemy attacks, and launching daring missions to rescue downed
U.S. pilots. From sabotage to espionage to hand-to-hand combat,
these are some of the most extraordinary true stories of honor and
heroism in the history of the U.S. military.
In 1960 millions of Japanese citizens took to the streets for
months of protest against the U.S. -- Japan Security Treaty (Anpo)
and its forcible ratification by the Kishi government. In the
decades that followed, the Anpo era citizens' movements exerted a
major influence on the organization and political philosophies of
the anti - Vietnam War effort, local residents' environmental
movements, alternative lifestyle groups, and consumer movements.
Organizing the Spontaneous departs from previous scholarship by
focusing on the significance of the Anpo protests on the citizens'
drive to transform Japanese society rather than on international
diplomacy. It shows that the movement against Anpo comprised
diverse, at times conflicting, groups of politically conscious
actors attempting to reshape the body politic.
Fusing perspectives from politics, media studies and cultural
studies, and focusing on Iraq, this title offers detailed insights
into the impact of different media forms. Fusing perspectives from
politics, media studies and cultural studies, "Sousveillance, Media
and Strategic Political Communication" offers insights into impacts
on strategic political communication of the emergence of web-based
participatory media ('Web 2.0') across the first decade of the 21st
century. Countering the control engendered in strategic political
communication, Steve Mann's concepts of hierarchical sousveillance
(politically motivated watching of the institutional watchers) and
personal sousveillance (apolitical, human-centred life-sharing) is
applied to web 2.0. Focusing on interplays of user-generated and
mainstream media about, and from, Iraq, detailed case studies
explore different levels of control over strategic political
communication during key moments, including the start of the 2003
Iraq war, the 2004 Abu Ghraib scandal, and Saddam Hussein's
execution in 2006. These are contextualized by overviews of
political and media environments from 2001-09. Dr Bakir outlines
broader implications of sousveillant web-based participatory media
for strategic political communication, exploring issues of
agenda-building, control, and the cycle of emergence, resistance
and reincorporation of web 2.0. Sousveillance cultures are
explored, delineating issues of anonymity, semi-permanence,
instanteneity resistance and social change.
In this fully illustrated introduction, leading Vietnam War
historian Dr Andrew Wiest provides a concise overview of America's
most divisive war. America entered the Vietnam War certain of its
Cold War doctrines and convinced of its moral mission to save the
world from the advance of communism. However, the war was not at
all what the United States expected. Dr Andrew Wiest examines how,
outnumbered and outgunned, the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
forces resorted to a guerrilla war based on the theories of Mao
Zedong of China, while the US responded with firepower and
overwhelming force. Drawing on the latest research for this new
edition, Wiest examines the brutal and prolonged resultant
conflict, and how its consequences would change America forever,
leaving the country battered and unsure as it sought to face the
challenges of the final acts of the Cold War. As for Vietnam, the
conflict would continue long after the US had exited its military
adventure in Southeast Asia. Updated and revised, with full-colour
maps and new images throughout, this is an accessible introduction
to the most important event of the "American Century."
Ideal for general readers as well as professionals conducting
extensive research, this informative book offers a collection of
documents on the origins and conduct of the Iraq War. The Iraq War:
A Documentary and Reference Guide gives readers the opportunity to
investigate this costly and controversial conflict as professional
researchers do-by looking closely at key samples of historical
evidence. As readers will see, that evidence proves to be
extraordinarily revealing about the drive to war, the course of the
initial invasion, the counterinsurgency, the "surge," and the
continuing difficulties in unifying and stabilizing the country.
From relevant exchanges in the 2000 Bush/Gore debates to interviews
with Saddam Hussein to the latest reorganization of the Coalition
Provisional Authority, The Iraq War gives readers an insider's view
of the conflict's key decisions and events. Each chapter brings
together primary and secondary sources on an important phase of the
war, with the author providing context, analysis, and insight from
a historian's perspective. The book also provides a solid framework
for working with the documentary record-a particularly difficult
task in this case, as so many vital sources will remain classified
and inaccessible for years to come. More than 100 excerpts of
government documents, military briefings, Congressional reports,
media articles, and more, all related to specific phases of the
Iraq War An introductory chapter on the processes and challenges of
researching the historic record Commentary in each chapter showing
what can be interpreted from the collected sources Sidebars
offering biographical notes on key figures; explanations of key
terms and concepts; accounts of international treaties, laws, and
agreements, and background notes on historical events
Initially stationed at the U.S. Army's counterintelligence
headquarters in Saigon, David Noble was sent north to launch the
army's first covert intelligence-gathering operation in Vietnam's
Central Highlands. Living in the region of the
Montagnards-Vietnam's indigenous tribal people, deemed critical to
winning the war-Noble documented strategic hamlets and Green Beret
training camps, where Special Forces teams taught the Montagnards
to use rifles rather than crossbows and spears. In this book, he
relates the formidable challenges he confronted in the course of
his work. Weaving together memoir, excerpts from letters written
home, and photographs, Noble's compelling narrative throws light on
a little-known corner of the Vietnam War in its early years-before
the Tonkin Gulf Resolution and the deployment of combat units-and
traces his transformation from a novice intelligence agent and
believer in the war to a political dissenter and active protester.
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