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Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
From the defeat of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam at Ap Bac to
the battles of the Ia Drang Valley, Khe Sanh, and more, Storms over
the Mekong offers a reassessment of key turning points in the
Vietnam War. Award-winning historian William P. Head not only
reexamines these pivotal battles but also provides a new
interpretation on the course of the war in Southeast Asia. In
considering Operation Rolling Thunder, for example-which Head dubs
as "too much rolling and not enough thunder"-readers will grasp the
full scope of the campaign, from specifically targeted bridges in
North Vietnam to the challenges of measuring success or failure,
the domestic political situation, and how over time, Head argues,
"slowly, but surely, Rolling Thunder dug itself into a hole."
Likewise, Head shows how the battles for Saigon and Hue during the
Tet Offensive of 1968 were tactical defeats for the Communist
forces with as many as 40,000 killed and no real gains. At the same
time, however, Tet made it clear to many in Washington that victory
in Vietnam would require a still greater commitment of men and
resources, far more than the American people were willing to
invest. Storms over the Mekong is a blow-by-blow account of the key
military events, to be sure. But beyond that, it is also a measured
reconsideration of the battles and moments that Americans thought
they already knew, adding up to a new history of the Vietnam War.
In July 2009, Geraint (Gez) Jones was sitting in Camp Bastion, Afghanistan with the rest of The Firm – Danny, Jay, Toby and Jake, his four closest friends, all junior NCOs and combat-hardened infantrymen. Thanks to the mangled remains of a Jackal vehicle left tactlessly outside their tent, IEDs were never far from their mind. Within days they’d be on the ground in Musa Qala with the rest of 3 Platoon – a mixed bunch of men Gez would die for.
As they fight furiously, are pushed to their limits, hemmed in by IEDs and hampered by the chain of command, Gez starts to wonder what is the point of it all. The bombs they uncover on patrol, on their stomachs brushing the sand away, are replaced the next day. Firefights are a momentary victory in a war they can see is unwinnable. Gez is a warrior – he wants more than this. But then death and injury start to take their toll on The Firm, leaving Gez with PTSD and a new battle just beginning.
Counter Jihad is a sweeping account of America's military campaigns
in the Islamic world. Revising our understanding of what was once
known as the War on Terror, it provides a retrospective on the
extraordinary series of conflicts that saw the United States deploy
more than two and a half million men and women to fight in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. Brian Glyn Williams traces these
unfolding wars from their origins in the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan through U.S. Central Command's ongoing campaign to
"degrade and destroy" the hybrid terrorist group known as ISIS.
Williams takes readers on a journey beginning with the 2001 U.S.
overthrow of the Taliban, to the toppling of Saddam Hussein, to the
unexpected emergence of the notorious ISIS "Caliphate" in the Iraqi
lands that the United States once occupied. Counter Jihad is the
first history of America's military operations against radical
Islamists, from the Taliban-controlled Hindu Kush Mountains of
Afghanistan, to the Sunni Triangle of Iraq, to ISIS's headquarters
in the deserts of central Syria, giving both generalists and
specialists an overview of events that were followed by millions
but understood by few. Williams provides the missing historical
context for the rise of the terror group ISIS out of the ashes of
Saddam Hussein's secular Baathist Iraq, arguing that it is only by
carefully exploring the recent past can we understand how this
jihadist group came to conquer an area larger than Britain and
spread havoc from Syria to Paris to San Bernardino.
As the Vietnam War was beginning to turn towards its bitter end, Le
Quan fought under beloved general Tran Ba Di in the army of South
Vietnam. An unlikely encounter thrust the two men together, and
they developed a mutual respect in their home country during
wartime. Forty years later, the two men reconnected in a wholly
unlikely setting: a family road trip to Key West. Soldier On is
written by Le Quan's daughter, who artfully crafts the road trip as
a frame through which the stories of both men come to life. Le Quan
and Tran Ba Di provide two different views of life in the South
Vietnamese army, and they embody two different realities of the
aftermath of defeat. Le Quan was able to smuggle his family out of
Saigon among the so-called boat people, eventually receiving asylum
in America and resettling in Texas. General Tran Ba Di, on the
other hand, experienced political consequences: he spent seventeen
years in a re-education camp before he was released to family in
Florida. A proud daughter's perspective brings this
intergenerational and intercontinental story to life, as Tran
herself plumbs her remembrances to expand the legacy of the many
Vietnamese who weathered conflict to forge new futures in America.
Join Air Force veteran Dr. W. Lee Warren as he chronicles his
fascinating, heartbreaking, and enlightening experience as a
neurosurgeon in an Iraq War combat hospital. Warren's life as a
neurosurgeon in a trauma center began to unravel long before he
shipped off to serve the U.S. Air Force in Iraq in 2004. When he
traded a comfortable, if demanding, practice in San Antonio, Texas,
for a ride on a C-130 into the combat zone, he was already reeling
from months of personal struggle. At the 332nd Air Force Theater
Hospital at Joint Base Balad, Iraq, Warren realized his experience
with trauma was just beginning. In his 120 days in a tent hospital,
he was trained in a different specialty--surviving over a hundred
mortar attacks and trying desperately to repair the damages of a
war that raged around every detail of every day. No place was safe,
and the constant barrage wore down every possible defense, physical
or psychological. One day, clad only in a T-shirt, gym shorts, and
running shoes, Warren was caught in the open while round after
round of mortars shook the earth and shattered the air with their
explosions, stripping him of everything he had been trying so
desperately to hold on to. In No Place to Hide, Warren tells his
story in a brand-new light, sharing how you can: Discover who you
are under pressure Lean on faith in your darkest days Find the
strength to carry on, no matter what you're facing Whether you are
in the midst of your own struggles with faith, relationships,
finances, or illness, No Place to Hide will teach you that how you
respond in moments of crisis can determine your chances of
survival. Praise for No Place to Hide: "No Place to Hide captures
simply, eloquently, and passionately what it means to be a
physician in time of war. Over ten years of war, we safely air
evacuated more than ninety thousand injured and ill from Iraq and
Afghanistan--five thousand were the sickest of the sick. This very
personal story captures the essence of what it takes to be a
military physician and the challenge for our nation to reintegrate
all who deploy to war." --Lt. Gen. (ret.) C. Bruce Green, MD, 20th
AF Surgeon General "Through Warren's eyes we observe not only the
delicate mechanics of brain surgery but also its lifelong effects
on real people and their families, both when the surgery succeeds
and when it fails. Thank you, Lee Warren, for letting us see the
world through your own unique vantage point. Thank you for the
lives you saved, for the compassion you showed, for the faith you
rediscovered, for reminding us of the precious gift of life."
--Philip Yancey, bestselling author of The Jesus I Never Knew
In November 1965, the air mobile 1st Cavalry Division, led by Lt.
Col. Moore and accompanied by reporter Galloway, landed in a remote
valley in the central highlands of South Vietnam--and were met by
3,000 seasoned North Vietnamese Regulars. Today, the Ia Drang
battle is taught at the U.S. Military Academy, U.S. Air Force
Academy, and the Army, Navy, and Air Force war colleges. *A moving
account of one of Vietnam's most savage battles *A tale of
endurance, self-sacrifice and friendship *Based on hundreds of
interviews of men who fought there, including North Vietnamese
commanders `A gut-wrenching account of what war is really about,
which should be a"must" read' - General Norman Schwarzkopf `Between
experiencing combat and reading about it lies a vast chasm. But
this book makes you almost smell it' - Wall Street Journal `There
are stories here that freeze the blood . . . The men who fought at
Ia Drang could have no finer memorial' - New York Times Book Review
In November 1965, some 450 men of the 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry,
under Lt. Col. Hal Moore's command, were dropped by helicopter into
a small clearing in the Ia Drang Valley. They were immediately
surrounded by 2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers. Three days later,
only two and a half miles away, a sister battalion was chopped to
pieces. Together, these actions at the landing zones X-Ray and
Albany constituted one of the Vietnam War's most significant
battles. How these men persevered makes a vivid portrait of war at
its most inspiring and devastating. General Moore and Joseph
Galloway, the only journalist on the ground throughout the
fighting, have interviewed hundreds of men who fought there,
including the North Vietnamese commanders. This dramatic account
presents a picture of men facing the ultimate challenge and dealing
with it in ways they would have found unimaginable only a few hours
earlier. It reveals to us, as rarely before, man's most heroic and
horrendous endeavor. HAROLD G. MOORE is a West Point graduate, a
master parachutist, and an Army aviator. He commanded two infantry
companies in the Korean War and was a battalion and brigade
commander in Vietnam. JOSEPH L. GALLOWAY spent fifteen years as a
foreign and war correspondent based in the Far East and the Soviet
Union. Now a senior writer with US News& World Report, he
covered the Gulf War and co-authored Triumph without Victory.
Winner of the Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize A New York Times Notable Book of the Year Winner of the Whiting Writers' Award A Seattle Post-Intelligencer Best Book of the Year
Catfish and Mandala is the story of an American odyssey—a solo bicycle voyage around the Pacific Rim to Vietnam—made by a young Vietnamese-American man in pursuit of both his adopted homeland and his forsaken fatherland.
Andrew X. Pham was born in Vietnam and raised in California. His father had been a POW of the Vietcong; his family came to America as "boat people." Following the suicide of his sister, Pham quit his job, sold all of his possessions, and embarked on a year-long bicycle journey that took him through the Mexican desert, around a thousand-mile loop from Narita to Kyoto in Japan; and, after five months and 2,357 miles, to Saigon, where he finds "nothing familiar in the bombed-out darkness." In Vietnam, he's taken for Japanese or Korean by his countrymen, except, of course, by his relatives, who doubt that as a Vietnamese he has the stamina to complete his journey ("Only Westerners can do it"); and in the United States he's considered anything but American. A vibrant, picaresque memoir written with narrative flair and an eye-opening sense of adventure, Catfish and Mandala is an unforgettable search for cultural identity.
In 1969, several young men met on a rainy night in Kabul to form an
Islamist student group. Their aim was laid out in a simple
typewritten statement: to halt the spread of Soviet and American
influence in Afghanistan. They went on to change the world. 'Night
Letters' tells the extraordinary story of the group's most
notorious member, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, and the guerrilla
organisation he came to lead, Hizb-e Islami. By the late 1980s,
tens of thousands were drawn to Hekmatyar's vision of a radical
Islamic state that would sow unrest from Kashmir to Jerusalem. His
doctrine of violent global jihad culminated in 9/11 and the birth
of ISIS, yet he never achieved his dream of ruling Afghanistan. The
peace deal he signed with Kabul in 2016 was yet another
controversial twist in an astonishing life. Sands and Qazizai delve
into the secret history of Hekmatyar and Hizb-e Islami: their wars
against Russian and American troops, and their bloody and bitter
feuds with domestic enemies. Based on hundreds of exclusive
interviews carried out across the region and beyond, this is the
definitive account of the most important, yet poorly understood,
international Islamist movement of the last fifty years.
'Gripping ... A terrific action narrative' Max Hastings 'Reads like
a Tom Clancy thriller, yet every word is true ... This is modern
warfare close-up and raw' Andrew Roberts Bestselling and Orwell
Prize-winning author Toby Harnden tells the gripping and incredible
story of the six-day battle that began the War in Afghanistan and
how it set the scene for twenty years of conflict. The West is in
shock. Al-Qaeda has struck the US on 9/11 and thousands are dead.
Within weeks, UK Special Forces enter the fray in Afghanistan
alongside the CIA's Team Alpha and US troops. Victory is swift, but
fragile. Hundreds of jihadists surrender and two operatives from
Team Alpha enter Qala-i Jangi - the 'Fort of War' - to interrogate
them. The prisoners revolt, one CIA man falls, and the other is
trapped inside the fort. Seven members of the SBS - elite British
Special Forces - volunteer for the rescue force and race into
danger and the unknown. The six-day battle that follows proves to
be one of the bloodiest of the Afghanistan war as the SBS and their
American comrades face an enemy determined to die in the mud
citadel. Superbly researched, First Casualty is based on
unprecedented access to the CIA, SBS, and US Special Forces. Orwell
Prize-winning author Toby Harnden recounts the gripping story of
that first battle in Afghanistan and how the haunting foretelling
it contained - unreliable allies, ethnic rivalries, suicide
attacks, and errant bombs - was ignored, fueling the twenty-year
conflict to come.
Charged with monitoring the huge civilian press corps that
descended on Hue during the Vietnam War's Tet offensive, US Army
Captain George W. Smith witnessed firsthand a vicious twenty-five
day battle. Smith recounts in harrowing detail the separate, poorly
coordinated wars that were fought in the retaking of the Hue.
Notably, he documents the little-known contributions of the South
Vietnamese forces, who prevented the Citadel portion of the city
from being overrun, and who then assisted the US Marine Corps in
evicting the North Vietnamese Army. He also tells of the social and
political upheaval in the city, reporting the execution of nearly
3,000 civilians by the NVA and the Vietcong. The tenacity of the
NVA forces in Hue earned the respect of the troops on the field and
triggered a sequence of attitudinal changes in the United States.
It was those changes, Smith suggests, that eventually led to the US
abandonment of the war.
The shocking, true story of a soldier gone rogue, and the court
martial case that divided America. This is the full story of Eddie
Gallagher, a US recruit who was inspired to serve his nation, who
became addicted to combat, and whose need to prove himself among
his fellow soldiers pushed him to extremes. His actions during a
combat deployment to Mosul would divide his platoon, then the
SEALs, the Navy, the armed forces, the government, and even the
American public, when the President intervened in his trial. Alpha
is an examination of how culture within the military has evolved
since 9/11. In an endless war without major victories, the media
has instead celebrated achievements of SEAL missions - such as the
killing of Osama Bin Laden, the rescuing of Captain Phillips, and
the survival of Marcus Luttrell. But the SEALs' popularity blinded
the public to what was also happening within the armed forces. When
Gallagher was accused of killing an unarmed enemy combatant, it
created a scandal that reached the White House and millions around
the world.
Now in paperback, Pale Horse is the remarkable never-before-told
true story of an army aviation task force during combat in the
Afghan War, told by the commanding officer who was there. Set in
the very valleys where the attacks of 9/11 were conceived, and
where ten Medals of Honor have been earned since that fateful day
the war began, the narrative races from ferocious firefights and
bravery in battle to the quiet moments where the courageous men and
women of Task Force Pale Horse catch their breath before they take
to the skies again. Jimmy F. Blackmon writes with a power and
hard-hitting honesty that leaps off the page. He has the respect of
the men and women of his brigade, and a command of the narrative to
tell their story. From pilots of lethal Apache attack helicopters
who strike fear in their enemies to the medevac soldiers who risk
their lives daily, these are warriors from a variety of backgrounds
who learned selflessness and found the closest brotherhood they
ever knew through the crucible of war. Pale Horse both honors and
commemorates the service of this elite task force from the unique
vantage point of the commander who led them in battle.
From the award-winning co-author of I Am Malala, this book asks
just how the might of NATO, with 48 countries and 140,000 troops on
the ground, failed to defeat a group of religious students and
farmers? How did the West's war in Afghanistan and across the
Middle East go so wrong? Farewell Kabul tells how the West turned
success into defeat in the longest war fought by the United States
in its history and by Britain since the Hundred Years War. It is
the story of well-intentioned men and women going into a place they
did not understand at all. And how, what had once been the right
thing to do had become a conflict that everyone wanted to exit. It
has been a fiasco which has left Afghanistan still one of the
poorest and most dangerous nations on earth. The leading journalist
on the region with unparalleled access to all key decision makers,
Christina Lamb is the best-selling author of 'The Africa House' and
I Am Malala, co-authored with Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala
Yousafzai. This revelatory and personal account is her final
analysis of the realities of Afghanistan, told unlike anyone
before.
Since the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003, the
challenges of sectarianism and militarism have weighed heavily on
the women of Iraq. In this book, Zahra Ali foregrounds a wide-range
of interviews with a variety of women involved in women's rights
activism, showing how everyday life and intellectual life has
developed since the US-led invasion. In addition to this, Ali
offers detailed historical research of social, economic and
political contexts since the formation of the Iraqi state in the
1920s. Through a transnational and postcolonial feminist approach,
this book also considers the ways in which gender norms and
practices, Iraqi feminist discourses, and activisms are shaped and
developed through state politics, competing nationalisms,
religious, tribal and sectarian dynamics, wars, and economic
sanctions. The result is a vivid account of the everyday life in
today's Iraq and an exceptional analysis of the future of Iraqi
feminisms.
Since the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003, the
challenges of sectarianism and militarism have weighed heavily on
the women of Iraq. In this book, Zahra Ali foregrounds a wide-range
of interviews with a variety of women involved in women's rights
activism, showing how everyday life and intellectual life has
developed since the US-led invasion. In addition to this, Ali
offers detailed historical research of social, economic and
political contexts since the formation of the Iraqi state in the
1920s. Through a transnational and postcolonial feminist approach,
this book also considers the ways in which gender norms and
practices, Iraqi feminist discourses, and activisms are shaped and
developed through state politics, competing nationalisms,
religious, tribal and sectarian dynamics, wars, and economic
sanctions. The result is a vivid account of the everyday life in
today's Iraq and an exceptional analysis of the future of Iraqi
feminisms.
Wall Street Journal Bestseller USA Today Bestseller Publishers
Weekly Bestseller As Seen on Tucker Carlson Combat-decorated Marine
officer Stuart Scheller speaks out against the debacle of the
Afghan pullout as the culmination of a decades-long and
still-ongoing betrayal of military members by top leadership, from
generals to the commander in chief, comes to light. Lieutenant
Colonel Stuart Scheller was the perfect Marine. Battle tested. A
leader. Decorated for valor. Yet when the United States acted like
the Keystone Cops in a panicked haphazard exit from Afghanistan for
political reasons, Scheller spoke out, and the generals lashed out.
In fact, they jailed him to keep him quiet, claiming he lost the
"trust and confidence" bestowed upon him by the Marines. When the
faith and trust is exactly what our generals and even our
commander-in-chief betrayed by exercising such reckless and
derelict policies. Now Scheller is free from the shackles of the
Marine Corps and can speak his mind. And in Crisis of Command, that
he does. He holds our generals' feet to the fire. The same generals
who play frivolously with the lives of our service men and women
for political gain. The same general who lied to political leaders
to further their own agendas and careers. Stuart Scheller is here
to say that the buck stops here. Accountability starts now. It's
time to demand accountability and stand up for our military. In
this book, Stuart Scheller shows us how.
The British Army's considerable contribution to The Korean War 1950
- 1953 was largely composed of 'conscripts' or national servicemen.
Plucked from civilian life on a 'lottery' basis and given a short
basic training, some like Jim Jacobs volunteered for overseas duty
and suddenly found themselves in the thick of a war as intensive
and dangerous as anything the Second World War had had to offer. As
a member of 170 Independent Mortar Battery RA from March 1951 to
June 1952 Jim was in the frontline at the famous Battle of the
Imjin River. By great luck he evaded capture - and death - unlike
so many. He returned to the UK only to volunteer again for a second
tour with 120 Light Battery from March 1953 to March 1954. During
this period he was in the thick of the action at the Third Battle
of the Hook during May 1953. In this gripping memoir Jim calmly and
geographically recounts his experiences and emotions from joining
the Army through training, the journeys by troopship and, most
importantly, on active service in the atrocious and terrifying war
fighting that went on in a very foreign place.
A poignantly written and heartfelt memoir that recounts the
author's hair raising-and occasionally hilarious-experience as a
young Marine artilleryman in Vietnam. Gritty, unvarnished and often
disturbing at times, the book provides a unique window into the
lasting physical and emotional wounds of war. Realistic and highly
readable, the story is not the typical gung-ho narrative of a
combat Marine eager to die for God and country. A somewhat
different and interesting perspective and a must read for veterans,
Marine Corps buffs, students of the 1960's culture as well as those
seeking a better understanding of the influence and relevancy of
America's long and indecisive misadventure in Vietnam.
Fifty years since the signing of the Paris Peace Accords signaled
the final withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam, the war's mark on
the Pacific world remains. The essays gathered here offer an
essential, postcolonial interpretation of a struggle rooted not
only in Indochinese history but also in the wider Asia Pacific
region. Extending the Vietnam War's historiography away from a
singular focus on American policies and experiences and toward
fundamental regional dynamics, the book reveals a truly global
struggle that made the Pacific world what it is today. Contributors
include: David L. Anderson, Mattias Fibiger, Zach Fredman, Marc
Jason Gilbert, Alice S. Kim, Mark Atwood Lawrence, Jason Lim, Jana
K. Lipman, Greg Lockhart, S. R. Joey Long, Christopher Lovins, Mia
Martin Hobbs, Boi Huyen Ngo, Wen-Qing Ngoei, Nathalie Huynh Chau
Nguyen, Noriko Shiratori, Lisa Tran, A. Gabrielle Westcott
In early 2002 Sam Faddis was named to head a CIA team that would
enter Iraq, prepare the battlefield and facilitate the entry of
follow-on conventional military forces numbering in excess of
40,000 American soldiers. This force, built around the 4th Infantry
Division would, in partnership with Kurdish forces and with the
assistance of Turkey, engage Saddam's army in the north as part of
a coming invasion. Faddis expected to be on the ground inside Iraq
within weeks and that the entire campaign would likely be over by
summer. Over the next year virtually every aspect of that plan for
the conduct of the war in Northern Iraq fell apart. The 4th
Infantry Division never arrived nor did any other conventional
forces in substantial number. The Turks not only did not provide
support, they worked overtime to prevent the U.S. from achieving
success. An Arab army that was to assist U.S. forces fell apart
before it ever made it to the field. Alone, hopelessly outnumbered,
short on supplies and threatened by Iraqi assassination teams and
Islamic extremists Faddis' team, working with Kurdish peshmerga,
nonetheless paved the way for a brilliant and largely bloodless
victory in the north and the fall of Saddam's Iraq. That victory,
handed over to Washington and the Department of Defense on a silver
platter, was then squandered. The surrender of Iraqi forces in the
north was spurned. All existing governmental institutions were, in
the name of de-Baathification, dismantled. All input from Faddis'
team, which had been in country for almost a full year, was
ignored. The consequences of these actions were and continue to be
catastrophic. This is the story of an incredibly brave and
effective team of men and women who overcame massive odds and
helped end the nightmare of Saddam's rule in Iraq. It is also the
story of how incompetence, bureaucracy and ignorance threw that
success away and condemned Iraq and the surrounding region to
chaos.
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