Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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TerryB
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Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by TerryB »

I remember a thread awhile back w/ book recommendations about the 'war' in Afghanistan. I'd like to read more if someone can recommend something good. I'm interested in detailed accounts of troop movements, conflicts, etc.

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by Bobby »

Worth a read.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Marcus' book is good so is his new foundation.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by Holland Oates »

To piggyback on Proto's thread.

Does anyone have any book suggestions on historical books on Afghanistan and the previous wars in that area?
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by The Ginger Beard Man »

Ed Zachary wrote:To piggyback on Proto's thread.

Does anyone have any book suggestions on historical books on Afghanistan and the previous wars in that area?
Recent history (pre-9/11): Taliban by Ahmed Rashid. Or maybe its Rashid Ahmed. It's been awhile since I read it. He's a Pakistani journalist.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Not a good day to die. Sean Naylor.

Hard to read.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by Bobby »

This is a good one,unfortunately only in swedish and one of the baltic languages.
It is about a soviet paratrooper inAfghanistan 1979-80.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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powerlifter54 wrote:Not a good day to die. Sean Naylor.

Hard to read.
That's one that I posted. We treat our supermen like shit.

WWII was about being ruthless and playing to win. We owe them that. It's basic.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by Fat Cat »

The Afghan Wars 1839-42 and 1878-80 by Archibald Forbes (available for free online here: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8428) is a fine place to understand some of the history of Afghanistan over the long haul.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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powerlifter54 wrote:Not a good day to die. Sean Naylor.

Hard to read.
I just read this. We came very close to a Black Hawk Down, or maybe a Custer's Last Stand, in Afghanistan. Only a combination of luck and leadership (by a Delta commander, Pete Blaber*), prevented a total disaster.

Unbelievable moral cowardice & dunderheadedness from the planners and mission commanders, awe-inspiring courage from the troops.
This GoatFuck is proof of a bone-deep defect in the way the Army, Navy, and Air Force select their leaders. And the way the politicians micromanage war.




*Blaber also has a worthy book, The Mission, The Men, and Me.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Gonna have to go pick that book up.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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This GoatFuck is proof of a bone-deep defect in the way the Army, Navy, and Air Force select their leaders. And the way the politicians micromanage war.
Legislatures should have zero say in what troops do once they are off the chain.

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Sadly, I'm talking about the executive branch up to the Secretary of Defense level - Rumsfeld.

But, worse than that, there was abject moral cowardice on the part of the officer corps, including among so-called elite types.
It confirms my old career decision to leave the Army; I had been considering Officer Candidate School.
Last edited by johno on Wed Feb 22, 2012 6:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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johno wrote:
powerlifter54 wrote:Not a good day to die. Sean Naylor.

Hard to read.
I just read this. We came very close to a Black Hawk Down, or maybe a Custer's Last Stand, in Afghanistan. Only a combination of luck and leadership (by a Delta commander, Pete Blaber*), prevented a total disaster.

Unbelievable moral cowardice & dunderheadedness from the planners and mission commanders, awe-inspiring courage from the troops.
This GoatFuck is proof of a bone-deep defect in the way the Army, Navy, and Air Force select their leaders. And the way the politicians micromanage war.




*Blaber also has a worthy book, The Mission, The Men, and Me.
Things have improved a bit from there since at the tactical level. Still, we put stars on people as much for their DC staff expertise(aka "acquisition") as their warfighting skills and leadership ability. When in command and deployed, you have to be as aware of the political position and ignorance of your superiors well as the abilities and physical position of your foes.
"Start slowly, then ease off". Tortuga Golden Striders Running Club, Pensacola 1984.

"But even snake wrestling beats life in the cube, for me at least. In measured doses."-Lex

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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powerlifter54 wrote: Things have improved a bit from there since at the tactical level.
I hope so. The book was a checklist of Tactical Don'ts.
Blaber (and his men) saved the operation. And he never got his Star. Or even Full Bird, AFAIK. To the Army's shame.
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Are full of passionate intensity.

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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johno wrote:
powerlifter54 wrote:Not a good day to die. Sean Naylor.

Hard to read.
I just read this. We came very close to a Black Hawk Down, or maybe a Custer's Last Stand, in Afghanistan. Only a combination of luck and leadership (by a Delta commander, Pete Blaber*), prevented a total disaster.

Unbelievable moral cowardice & dunderheadedness from the planners and mission commanders, awe-inspiring courage from the troops.
This GoatFuck is proof of a bone-deep defect in the way the Army, Navy, and Air Force select their leaders. And the way the politicians micromanage war.

*Blaber also has a worthy book, The Mission, The Men, and Me.

Johno, I chose not to read this book since I didn't think it was going to present anything more that "Kill Bin Laden" already did...if that sentence makes any sense. You've read them both right? What the difference?

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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Kill Bin Laden told the Delta/Specops story of Tora Bora. But that was just a small piece of the puzzle. Not a Good Day to Die covers the bigger picture of Operation Anaconda (after Tora Bora), and doesn't sugarcoat it.
Naylor also takes a big shit on some of the SEALs, you don't want to miss that.

ALSO - Not a Good Day portrays the awesomeness of US Army Rangers.
Last edited by johno on Wed Feb 22, 2012 7:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

Post by powerlifter54 »

johno wrote:
powerlifter54 wrote: Things have improved a bit from there since at the tactical level.
I hope so. The book was a checklist of Tactical Don'ts.
Blaber (and his men) saved the operation. And he never got his Star. Or even Full Bird, AFAIK. To the Army's shame.

When you promote for well roundedness not pointy edgedness you get AF C-130 pilots commanding ground operations...
"Start slowly, then ease off". Tortuga Golden Striders Running Club, Pensacola 1984.

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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johno wrote:Kill Bin Laden told the Delta/Specops story of Tora Bora. But that was just a small piece of the puzzle. Not a Good Day to Die covers the bigger picture of Operation Anaconda (after Tora Bora), and doesn't sugarcoat it.
Naylor also takes a big shit on some of the SEALs, you don't want to miss that.

ALSO - Not a Good Day portrays the awesomeness of US Army Rangers.
Damn negro that's all you needed to say! That shit is gettin' bought to-fucking-day.

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Re: Book recommendation on Afghanistan

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hotbooksale.com has it for $5. Free shipping.
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