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A unique and much-needed perspective on the transitions veterans go
through after returning home from war service. It is a difficult
time to be a veteran of a small war in the United States. After
twenty years of combat and counter-insurgency, a generation of
Afghan, Iraq, and Global War on Terror veterans struggle to
integrate back into civilian society and lead productive lives. As
the wars these men and women have participated in continue-while
they simultaneously recede to the past-many feel a sense of
estrangement from their country, friends, and prior lives. They
often long to return to war but hope to never go again and are
stuck in a nether world of war without end and peace that does not
exist. In Front toward Enemy: War, Veterans, and the (Home)front,
Daniel R. Green uses his own experiences with war from having
served five military and civilian tours in Afghanistan and Iraq and
provides a different perspective on the transition home. Using
sociological, philosophical, literary, cultural, historical, and
political perspectives he provides a venue for the countless
conversations he has had with his fellow veterans about their own
experiences as a way to assist others with their transition from
war and the military to peace and civilian life. Green provides not
just a war veteran's views but the amplifying perspective of a
political scientist-as well as a reserve officer-in order to rescue
the issue of the "returning veteran" from the field of psychology
and to broaden the understanding of the experience of war for
veterans. This book bridges the gap between war veterans and their
fellow citizens, sheds light on the quiet conversations that take
place among veterans about their experiences, and enriches the
collective understanding of how wars affect people.
Informed by senior policymakers with extensive expertise in
defense, this book provides a comprehensive regional and functional
perspective on U.S. policy toward the People's Republic of China.
Confronting China addresses the central security questions of our
generation: How best can the United States deter Chinese aggression
and win the peace? China's pursuit of global hegemony reflects a
patient yet determined effort to reshape the international order in
its favor. Deterring Chinese aggression and winning the peace
necessitates an integrated approach that draws upon all instruments
of U.S. national power. Drawing on the insightful analysis of more
than a dozen senior national security practitioners, chapters
discuss the China challenge from multiple perspectives.
Contributors examine the different dimensions of China's growing
power and assess how well they advance the Chinese Communist
Party's political ambitions and what must be done to counter them.
Drawing upon each writer's particular areas of expertise, chapter
authors provide concrete, strategy-based, and resource-informed
policy recommendations. In the concluding chapter, the editors
review common threads and key insights from the preceding chapters,
placing them in a larger strategic context. Provides a broad
strategic perspective on the challenge the People's Republic of
China (PRC) is mounting against U.S. policies, interests, and
values Analyzes China's regional and functional policies Offers a
comprehensive overview of U.S. policies to compete with and deter
the PRC Features contributors who served at the U.S. Department of
Defense in senior policy-making roles and are regional and
functional experts in their areas of concentration
In this gripping, firsthand account, Daniel Green tells the story
of U.S. efforts to oust the Taliban insurgency from the desolate
southern Afghan province of Uruzgan. Nestled between the Hindu Kush
mountains and the sprawling wasteland of the Margow and Khash
Deserts, Uruzgan is a microcosm of U.S. efforts to prevent
Afghanistan from falling to the Taliban insurgency and Islamic
radicalism. Green, who served in Uruzgan from 2005 to 2006 as a
U.S. Department of State political adviser to a Provincial
Reconstruction Team (PRT), reveals how unrealistic expectations, a
superficial understanding of the Afghans, and a lack of resources
contributed to the Taliban's resurgence in the area. He discusses
the PRT's good-governance efforts, its reconstruction and
development projects, the violence of the insurgency, and the PRT's
attempts to manage its complex relationship with the local warlord
cum governor of the province. Upon returning to Afghanistan in 2009
with the U.S. military and while working at the U.S. Embassy in
Kabul until 2010, Green discovered that although many improvements
had been made since he had last served in the country, the problems
he had experienced in Uruzgan continued despite the transition from
the Bush administration to the Obama administration.
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