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The Marine Corps University symposium, "Counterinsurgency
Leadership in Iraq, Afghanistan, and beyond" held on September 23,
2009 at the National Press Club, Washington, DC explored ways to
improve counterinsurgency leadership, with particular attention to
the leaders of American, Afghan, and Iraqi forces.
The Symposium was sponsored by Marine Corps University and the
Marine Corps University Foundation.
This anthology presents a collection of 21 articles describing the
full range of U.S. Marine Corps operations in Iraq from 2004 to
2008. During this period, the Marines conducted a wide variety of
kinetic and non-kinetic operations as they fought to defeat the
Iraq insurgency, build stability, and lay the groundwork for
democratic governance. The selections in this collection include
journalistic accounts, scholarly essays, and Marine Corps summaries
of action. Our intent is to provide a general overview to educate
Marines and the general public about this critical period in the
history of the U.S. Marine Corps, the United States, and Iraq. Many
of the conclusions are provisional and are being updated and
revised as new information and archival resources become available.
The accompanying annotated bibliography provides a detailed
overview of where current scholarship on this period currently
stands. The editor of this anthology, Nicholas J. Schlosser, earned
his doctorate in history from the University of Maryland in 2008
and has worked as a historian with the Marine Corps History
Division since 2009. His research examines U.S. Marine Corps
operations during Operation Iraqi Freedom, focusing on irregular
warfare, counterinsurgency operations, and the al-Anbar Awakening
Founded as a counterweight to the Communist broadcasters in East
Germany, Radio in the American Sector (RIAS) became one of the most
successful public information operations conducted against the
Soviet Bloc. Cold War on the Airwaves examines the Berlin-based
organization's history and influence on the political worldview of
the people--and government--on the other side of the Iron Curtain.
Nicholas J. Schlosser draws on broadcast transcripts, internal
memoranda, listener letters, and surveys by the U.S. Information
Agency to profile RIAS. Its mission: to undermine the German
Democratic Republic with propaganda that, ironically, gained in
potency by obeying the rules of objective journalism. Throughout,
Schlosser examines the friction inherent in such a contradictory
project and propaganda's role in shaping political culture. He also
portrays how RIAS's primarily German staff influenced its outlook
and how the organization both competed against its rivals in the
GDR and pushed communist officials to alter their methods in order
to keep listeners. From the occupation of Berlin through the
airlift to the construction of the Berlin Wall, Cold War on the
Airwaves offers an absorbing view of how public diplomacy played
out at a flashpoint of East-West tension.
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