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CNO Reading List
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The
21 Indispensable Qualities of a Leader - Written to complement The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, this book will help
you identify and develop the personal qualities you need to become a more
effective leader. Maxwell does an excellent job of getting to the heart of each quality in a few short pages. He starts with two relevant quotations to start you thinking. He then gives you a short real-life example of that particular quality in action. He breaks each principle down into specific applications, gives you a brief period where you can assess your own effectiveness, offers you concrete ways to improve yourself, and wraps each chapter up with a profound thought that will stay with you long after you have closed the cover. What you get out of this book depends on how you read it. This is a very simple read, and you may be tempted to race through it and miss some key points. Maxwell rightly suggests that you walk through each quality methodically, giving it the attention that it warrants based on your current level of competence. While the material warrants five stars, some spelling mistakes and the author's use of his own quotes dropped it down a notch for me. Otherwise, an excellent handbook for improving your personal leadership qualities. Larry Hehn, Author of Get the Prize: Nine Keys for a Life of Victory |
CNO Reading List
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7
Habits of Highly Effective People
Knowledge is the quickest and safest path to success in any area of life. Stephen Covey has encapsulated the strategies used by all those who are highly effective. Success can be learned and this book is an excellent way to learn how to do that. I also highly recommend Turner, Turner, Turner: The King of Network Marketing to learn strategies from another highly spirited man who has learned how to achieve maximum effectiveness and keep balance in all aspects of life. --thereesa shigohout |
CSAF Reading List |
1776 David McCullough is known as a sterling storyteller of American history
with two Pulitzer Prizes for Biography ("John Adams" 2001 and "Truman"
1992) and a National Book Award ("Mornings on Horseback" 1981). What many
readers may not realize is that he is a researcher par excellence as
evidence by the ten years he spent reading original documents, interviewing
and traveling to relevant sites for "Truman." Now he utilizes some of his
previous background research for "John Adams" to tell the tale of the
crucial year of the American Revolution. "1776." |
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Against
All Enemies
Not a bad book, not really a good book either. But, it does a Great Job defining a new enemy and tactics. Woulfe does an incredible job of describing asymmetric warfare, tactics, and possible outcomes. These plausible tactics could be effectively employed against the US Military or any other strong military force. Very scary if you think about it. |
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Old CSAF Reading List |
The
Age of Sacred Terror - I was looking for a book that would help to explain what led up to this present
crisis, and this book provided a lot of insight. According to the authors, their
intention was to "provide a descriptive warning about the new terrorism and an
analysis of its causes, including the resurgence of forms of religious belief
that drive adherents to commit violence, and the circumstances that give rise to
such creeds." I think they did that. The authors do have a political viewpoint, but that did not detract from the book for me. There is a suggestion that Egypt and Saudia Arabia may be susceptible targets for Islamic fundamentalists because of their treatment of their citizens, and that the US cannot put pressure on them to change because the US is dependent upon their support in case Iraq acts out. That would at least be one possible explanation for the present administration's preoccupation with Iraq. If Iraq can be "brought around," then the US can pressure Egypt and Saudia Arabia authorities to be better people and thus perhaps stave off a fundamentalist takeover. The book also includes the ever-present lament about the state of the US media/press. With corporate ownership of the media and the greed motive in control of news reporting, we have a problem. A free nation needs a free press, and we don't have much of that anymore. This is such a great book that it's hard to write a short review. It's worth reading every single word. |
CSAF Reading List |
Air Force Roles And Missions |
CSAF Reading List |
Airpower Against Terror: America’s Conduct of Operation Enduring Freedom Distinguished author Ben Lambeth details the initial U.S. military response to the terrorist attacks of 9/11, namely, the destruction of al Qaeda's terrorist infrastructure and the removal of the ruling Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Lambeth emphasizes several distinctive achievements in this war, including the use of precision air-delivered weapons, the first combat use of Predator unmanned aerial vehicles armed with Hellfire missiles, and the integrated employment of high-altitude drones and other air- and space-based sensors. |
CSAF Reading List
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Air Power: The Men, Machines, and Ideas that Revolutionized War, From Kitty Hawk to Gulf War II I'm always a little wary of long history books written by journalists, who
sometimes present history as a tedious interview of various "sources." Stephen Budiansky, a correspondent for the Atlantic Monthly, is a happy exception to the
rule. His prose is clear and crisp, and he tells an engaging story in a way that
kept drawing me back to his rather hefty "Air Power." |
CSA Reading List |
America's
First Battles, 1776-1965
Charles E. Heller and William A. Stofft assembled a distinguished team of
American military history experts to examine the first major battles fought in
each of the nations wars through the Vietnam conflict. This is militay history
at its best, dramatic, insightful and informative, not only for an audience in
uniform but also for any American interested in how the military functions in
our society. The descriptions of battles ranges from well known actions such as
Bull Run in the Civil War to the savage jungle fighting at Buna, New Guinea in
World War II. I frequently refer to America's First Battles as I prepare my
lectures on American military history. We can only hope that the editors will
consider a new edition in the future to take the story through the triumph of
Desert Storm, and the confusion of the Clinton administration. A military
history classic. |
Old CSAF Reading List
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American
Generalship
This author wastes energy on knocking down a straw man: we already know that leadership and command are "art," not "science". Directing men in situations of fear and chaos requires odd combinations of qualities and that instinct usually proves more valuable than learned behaviours. Even so, this book traces what has been uniquely American about our leaders' actions, efforts and behaviour. The case studies are well chosen, as is the level of analysis. We can all learn more about our human relations from this book, which provides great value for money. |
Old CSAF Reading List
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An
Army at Dawn
This book provides a superb historical assessment of the invasion and ensuing war in North Africa in 1942-1943. This book combines in-depth insight into Allied campaign planning, strategy, and tactics directed at ejecting the German Army from North Africa. The leadership traits and wartime relationships of Eisenhower, Patton, Bradley, Montgomery, and Rommel are thoroughly chronicled, and are instructive to leaders in the 21st Century. -- CSAF Website |
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USMC Reading List |
Band
of Brothers
As grippingly as any novelist, preeminent World War II historian Stephen Ambrose tells the horrifying, hallucinatory saga of Easy Company, whose 147 members he calls the nonpareil combat paratroopers on earth circa 1941-45. Ambrose takes us along on Easy Company's trip from grueling basic training to Utah Beach on D-day, where a dozen of them turned German cannons into dynamited ruins resembling "half-peeled bananas," on to the Battle of the Bulge, the liberation of part of the Dachau concentration camp, and a large party at Hitler's "Eagle's Nest," where they drank the madman's (surprisingly inferior) champagne. Of Ambrose's main sources, three soldiers became rich civilians; at least eight became teachers; one became Albert Speer's jailer; one prosecuted Bobby Kennedy's assassin; another became a mountain recluse; the despised, sadistic C.O. who first trained Easy Company (and to whose strictness many soldiers attributed their survival of the war) wound up a suicidal loner whose own sons skipped his funeral. The Easy Company survivors describe the hell and confusion of any war: the senseless death of the nicest kid in the company when a souvenir Luger goes off in his pocket; the execution of a G.I. by his C.O. for disobeying an order not to get drunk. Despite the gratuitous horrors it relates, Band of Brothers illustrates what one of Ambrose's sources calls "the secret attractions of war ... the delight in comradeship, the delight in destruction ... war as spectacle." --Tim Appelo |
CSAF Reading List
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Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era I read this book after having read two other books on the Battle of Gettysburg. I found that I wanted to know more about the circumstances surrounding that battle, the situation of the two armies, the generals, the politicians, and the state of the economies of the two sides engaged. But I was daunted by the plethora of information on the American Civil War. I had no desire to immerse myself in some three or four volume 2000-page work because, aside from believing myself unable to keep everything in perspective and not to get bogged down in minutiae, I reasoned that plain laziness and attention span problems would keep me from ever finishing anything like that. Plus I had to admit that it was the battles that interested me the most, and I despaired of having to read a separate book or two on each of the dozens of battles that are considered "major" during those four years. Then I found this book: a single volume that encompasses the entire conflict from its military and political antecedents to the economic and sociological ingredients that forced the Union to enter into a war that would change forever the face of democracy. And this book did not give short shrift to the battles. To the contrary, the battles remain central and are accompanied by helpful maps.
I took a chance on this book and now that I have finished it I have to say that it is all that I could have hoped for.
McPherson has a definite Northern bias, but he is always fair about giving the other side its time in court. It is, after all, the North that won, and our country is what it is today because of that. The South's many disadvantages were built into its culture and ideology. Nonetheless, we intend to read Shelby Foote's three volumes to get a Southern perspective. I would not have had the gumption to go further if McPerson had not made the whole terrible period more understandable in the first place. Do not be afraid to take the plunge. |
Old CSAF Reading List
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Beyond
the Wild Blue From the most important leaders and the most courageous victories to the earliest machines of flight and the most advanced Stealth technology, this book presents a fascinating look at 50 turbulent years of Air Force history. |
CSAF Reading List |
Billy Mitchell, Crusader for Air Power Revered by many Americans as a martyr for his cause, Brigadier General William "Billy" Mitchell has been one of the least understood figures of modern military history. His position as the dominant figure in American aviation from 1919 until his court-martial in 1925 has made him the frequent subject of biography, film, and television, but usually these portrayals have overemphasized the sensational elements of his story. For Mitchell, sensationalism was only a means of drawing attention to his farsighted ideas on aviation. In Billy Mitchell, he emerges as a man with a mission and a true pioneer of modern aviation, a man whose ideas about leadership in aerial operations inspire and instruct today’s airmen and women. Anyone interested in aviation will delight in this compelling biography. |
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CITIZEN
SOLDIERS
Stephen Ambrose pays tribute to the heroes of WWII in the best way possible, in their own words. Covering the war in Europe from June 7 1944 to May 7 1945, Ambrose gives you an overall history of key events backed up by personal reflections of both American and German veterans. |
Old CSAF Reading List |
The
CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS AND THE REMAKING OF WORLD ORDER
The thesis of this provocative and potentially important book is the increasing threat of violence arising from renewed conflicts between countries and cultures that base their traditions on religious faith and dogma. This argument moves past the notion of ethnicity to examine the growing influence of a handful of major cultures--Western, Eastern Orthodox, Latin American, Islamic, Japanese, Chinese, Hindu, and African--in current struggles across the globe. Samuel P. Huntington, a political scientist at Harvard University and foreign policy aide to President Clinton, argues that policymakers should be mindful of this development when they interfere in other nations' affairs. |
Old CSAF Reading List
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The
Crisis of Islam
This book does an excellent job of explicating certain key differences between
Islamic thought and the world view of the West, which evolved from an "underdog"
religion --Christianity --taking control of the Roman Empire. The Prophet
founded and ruled an empire in his own lifetime, and that empire continued to
expand for 1000 years. Consequently, the fundamental concept upon which Western
secularism rests -- "render unto Caesar" -- never developed. |
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CSAF Reading List |
Eddie Rickenbacker: An American Hero in the Twentieth Century
W. David Lewis has written a majestic biography of one of America's great personages of the twentieth century. Eddie Rickenbacker was a race car driver, fighter pilot, businessman and airline industry giant. He was also a survivor and a true fighter- often taking unpopular positions- particularly his controversial comments upon the passing of FDR- essentially saying that FDR got what he deserved. Lewis also finds Rickenbacker in the beginning of the early modern conservative movement during the beginnings of Barry Goldwaters rocket to prominence. Rickenbacker was xenophobic and found the welfare state to be a deeply anathema to the human spirit of self improvement and hard work.
This work is so in-depth no brief Amazon review can give it justice. Whether you're interested in riveting war stories, early automobile racing, politics or the growth of the American airline industry this is a book that I highly recommend. The story of how an poor kid from immigrant family can rise to the pinnacle of American society is truly an interesting story. For author Lewis this book isn't mere hero worship it is an attempt to give Rickenbacker his due as events from the early twentieth century fader further and further out of our historical memory. -- Jeffrey Demers |
USMC Reading List |
Ender's Game
Not many books surprise me. I knew the idea behind this book and since it had
4.5 stars and over 2000 review, it was time for me to read it. At first I was
skeptical how a 6 year old could be this great military genius to combat the
invading alien forces. (I still wish he was 10 years old) but Card does a good
job of showing Enders emotional weaknesses. I love how he keeps succeeding
against all odds in the training academy and they keep raising the bar making
each task more and more difficult until the very end when they put him in a no
win situation. I did NOT see the ending coming and was pleasantly surprised.
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Old CSAF Reading List
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Clancy really did a good job with this book. I have also read the first book in this new series he is putting out "Into the Storm - A Study in Command" and I have to say that this book is much better. One would think that as it is the second book, maybe he learned how to put together a non-fiction story in a more readable and interesting way or maybe the co-author was just a better writer. Clancy has teamed up with the General that was in charge of the air war in the Gulf War, and has a done himself a favor getting someone as intelligent and engaging to work with. The book is basically three parts, the first section talks about the Generals career in the Air Force, the Air Force development from Viet Nam to the Gulf War and a touch of the politics involved within the different military branches. The second section of the book deals with the build up to the air war. The final section deals with the air war both the stand-alone part and as a joint effort with the ground war. The author does not give you an action packed, inside the cockpit type of story. What we do get is the process for building up the forces, developing a plan, working with the other countries and military forces and finally the execution of the plan. I found the discussions of target selection and the relationship between the air and ground element to be the most interesting. Overall this is a well-written and constructed book. It has a lot of value if you are interested in the Gulf War or just how current U.S. battles are planned and fought. From watching the nightly news you can see that many of the same processes and tactics discussed in this book were used with the current U.S. military efforts in Afghanistan |
CNO Reading List
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Execution
- “If you want to be a CEO—or if you are a CEO and want to keep
your job—read Execution and put its principles to work.” —Michael Dell, chairman and CEO, Dell Computer Corp. “Good practical insight and advice on managing for results at firms of any size. Execution is key, and this book clearly explains what it means and how it brings together the critical elements of any organization—its people, strategies, and operations.” —L. R. Raymond, chairman and CEO, Exxon Mobil “The best-thought-out plans in the world aren’t worth the paper they’re written on if you can’t pull them off. And that’s what this book is all about. Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done is well written and gives sound, practical advice about how to make things happen. It is well worth the reading.” —Ralph S. Larsen, chairman and CEO, Johnson & Johnson “Larry Bossidy recognizes how execution in a business defines the true greatness of a company. He captures a lifetime of building winning formulas and puts them in a simple and practical context for executives at any level. Read it!” —Ivan Seidenberg, president and co–chief executive officer, Verizon “For those managers who have struggled to make it happen, fix a problem, get it done—or otherwise transform winning strategies into genuine results—here’s the missing medicine from two who know from long experience what works and what doesn’t. Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan offer a compelling leadership prescription, and it comes down to realism, discipline, and above all, great execution.” —Michael Useem, professor of management and director of the Center for Leadership and Change, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania “Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan define the true meaning of leadership from an implementation point of view. Larry is the expert on productivity in the world of business, and this book demonstrates how leadership is the key to achieving ongoing financial success.” —Richard Schroeder, cofounder of Six Sigma Academy |
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CSA Reading List USMC Reading List |
The
Face of Battle
What is it like to be in battle? John Keegan, a senior instructor at Sandhurst, the British Military Academy, speaks for soldiers who were present in the fray. For examples, Keegan selects Agincourt in 1415, Waterloo in 1815, and the Somme in 1916. What is common about them, what is different? Agincourt was hand-to-hand combat, thrust and cut--a fearful and personal encounter. At Waterloo, 400 years later, the battle was still largely personal. As it swayed back and forth, men on opposite sides came to recognize the same individuals they had fought off in previous charges. Keegan closes his book with the Somme. For him it stands as the distillation of wars in the industrial age: long-distance killing of faceless men by others who merely activate the instruments of destruction. |
USMC Reading List |
Although I've had "Fields of Fire" for years, I had never managed to read it until I read "The Nightengale's Song", which chronicled the lives of Webb and four other Naval Academy graduates (also a great book). I only regret that I had not read "Fields of Fire" years ago. It is one of the most honest, realistic, and gut-wrenching war novels I have ever read. I think it ranks with the likes of "The Killer Angels", "The Naked and the Dead", and "All Quiet on the Western Front" as one of the best novels written about ANY war. I did not serve in Viet Nam (I was in the Navy), so I won't pretend to truly understand how the grunt really experienced the war. However, I am certain that "Fields of Fire" probably comes closer to conveying an understanding than any book written on Viet Nam. I have read other, non-fiction accounts of platoon-level fighting in Viet Nam (e.g., "We Were Soldiers Once .. and Young" and "Steel My Soldiers' Hearts"), and the descriptions of everything from the nightly patrols, the constant sense of fear, and just the brutality of so much around them could have been interchanged with Webb's descriptions. Further, Webb, as a highly decorated Marine in Viet Nam, is qualified as few could be to have written this book - he lived it. Much is surely autobiographic. In short, one of the best books I have ever read, period. - Dennis D. Steinauer |
The Fifth Discipline
Most best sellers are based on some concept that they create their argument off
of - Senge's concept is systems thinking. Unlike other best sellers out there,
it is not just a personal journey the author has taken; Senge's book has a
multitude of research and analysis behind his theories that makes the reader
more willing to "buy in" to systems thinking. A little long winded but worth the
read. Make sure to jump around to those chapters that appeal to you more. |
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CSAF Reading List
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The First Heroes: The Extraordinary Story of the Doolittle Raid--America's First World War II Victory Most people used to recall the Doolittle raid of 1942 from Capt. Ted Lawson's book Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo that was made into a movie. Now, more people recall it for the historically inaccurate rendition it was given in the movie Pearl Harbor. For the real story with more to offer than Doolittle's own biography and Lawson's earlier work, we have The First Heroes. This book solidly provides the historical background of two important factors. One, the career of air pioneer Jimmy Doolittle, who commanded the raid, and two, the war's progress to that point and the reason the raid was needed. A thorough (but not dull) description of the challenges facing the unit formed for the raid is provided, as are the issues that developed as training was winding down in preapration for the raid. The relationship that grew between Doolittle and his men is notable, and also touching is the way that the sailors on the carrier Hornet grew from disdain to admiration when the bomber crews came aboard for their mission. A blow by blow account of each of the 16 planes launched is given, as are the struggles each crew faced in getting back to safety. Information is given on how each crew fared, and the end of the book does a great job at providing an epilogue that tells the reader what happened to each Raider in the years that followed the mission. No matter how you look at it, the mission was challenging and mind-boggling then, and 60-plus years later, should still inspire us with respect for the sacrifices made on our behalf so long ago. -- David Traill |
CNO Reading List
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First
Things First
I have to get a couple of things out of the way right now to make you understand why this book has been so important to me (and could be to you as well). First, I am definitely someone who shuns most self-help tomes--I think most of them are crutches for weak people too lazy to get their acts together or too clueless to embrace a little common sense. Second, my prior experiences with the Covey cult were less than satisfying, as I had a boss (now departed) who talked the Covey talk but did not (I now see) truly walk the walk. This book differs from the _7 Habits_ texts in that it really deals with taking the general Covey concepts ("principle-centered living") and giving them a practical sheen--in this case by applying them to time management. Learning to divide my activities between "urgent" and "important," planning my life around certain "roles" that I have to fill, and composing a "mission statement" (a much more realistic and helpful version of year 2000 New Year's resolutions for me)--these were the concepts that have really helped me organize my life as efficiently as possible (and I was already pretty organized). I highly recommend buying the book and then following up by getting a Franklin Covey planner, where you can take the lessons from the book and start building your time and life around them. I have loaned the book to several friends and students (I teach high school) and all of them have benefitted from it in some way or another. Buying _First Things First_ will be one of the best things you can do for yourself. And I can't believe I just wrote a positive review of a self-help book. Trust
me on how helpful this book can be.
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Old CSAF Reading List
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The
Five Pillars of TQM Bill Creech's The Five Pillars of TQM, first published in 1994 and since reprinted a dozen times and in eight languages, lays out an uncommonly clear-headed approach toward results-oriented management. Creech, a former Air Force four-star general and now valued industry consultant, has served on ten corporate boards of directors and worked with five national speaking bureaus. His management philosophy, while mindful that most organizations are not democracies, is essentially a variation on the golden rule embodying basic decency toward others as a core unifying theme. Best summarized as empowerment with accountability, it is rooted in a recognition that loyalty is a two-way street and that an organization can only be as successful as those at the bottom are willing to make it. Among the many insights to be gleaned from this informed and empathetic book are the virtues of managing by walking around rather than by hunkering down in a mahogany-row fortress, unburdening those who want to get things done by lifting the overlay of rules and kibitzers from their backs, and recognizing that what ultimately determines organizational success is what goes on at the front, not on mahogany row. These principles, which Creech first pioneered during his tenure as commander of the Air Force's Tactical Air Command from 1978 to 1984, are now being reapplied by the current Air Force chief, who recently included Five Pillars on his recommended reading list for all Air Force officers. Yet Creech's principles of TQM (for "total quality management"--a term and construct he invented) transcend service applicability and have been amply proven in the corporate world as well. His idea of how a top-flight organization should be run resonates implicitly with how any responsible and motivated worker would like to be treated by his superiors. Such notions as the indispensability of mutual trust and respect; the power of inclusion rather than exclusion; the vast difference in effectiveness between decreeing and persuading; and the central role of pride as a motivator are part and parcel of Creech's enlightened approach to effective leadership. Five Pillars spells out these principles and more in rich detail, offering must-read insights for those at all levels who deal with people as resources |
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General George Washington
This is a wonderful book. The book starts with Washington's involvement in the French and Indian War, continues on through the American Revolution, into his Presidency and even after his "retirement." As the book title states, this book is about Washington's military life, and the book sticks to that subject. For those who have little knowledge of Washington's military life, this
book would be an excellent book to read. Many people know of Yorktown, and
Valley Forge, and the Battle of Trenton (the crossing of the Delaware), but
may have never heard of Washington's exploits before the American Revolution
in the French and Indian War when he fought for the British. This book
covers that portion of his life and well as his military career after the
American Revolution. And for those who have read much on Washington's military career, this is still a good book. It puts in order all the different battles and dramas of Washington's military life to show how each affected the others. Besides, the book is simply an enjoyable book to read--it is well written and entertaining. Along the way, the author offers logical opinions of Washington's strengths and weaknesses, and while I didn't agree with all of these opinions, it didn't affect my enjoyment of the book in any way. While I have read many excellent books on subjects and events covered in
this one, this book was a good read to me just because it put everything in
Washington's career back into chronological order--a thing than can be
disrupted when reading many separate books on various parts of Washington's
life. |
CNO Reading List
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Good to Great is an exceptionally well researched book. The author, Boulder, Colorado-based Jim Collins, and his team of researchers have made this book into a powerhouse documentary of why some businesses excel towards greatness and while others stagnate. The book will be of most interest to business leaders, but it may also be interesting to leaders in other types of organizations such as churches or schools. Among other things, Collins shows that, in general, the great leaders are not the ones who are most brash and controversial but those who combine vision and dedication with humility and selflessness. Through impressive empirical research, Collins shows that the truly great leaders are those to seek fortune and fame for their companies, not for themselves. If you like business books, you will probably love this one. It is basically well written, especially for a business book, and easy to read. That said, this book deals with how to make a company great. It does not deal with personal greatness, so if you are thinking about buying this as a self-help or inspirational guide, consider something by Anthony Robbins or Dale Carnegie. This is strictly a business book. It is more informative than entertaining. A
times it can provide for dry reading. However, if you're looking for a business
book that highlights some of the differences between major "good" and major
"great" corporations, you would be wise to read it. |
USMC Reading List |
Grant
and Lee
This is a small book, but don't judge it by its size. It is a great little book.
Grant & Lee, with such different backgrounds, lead two great armies in the
strangest of times. In the end, with no grudge, the two men get to know and
respect each other. But the story of how these men fought & how they thought
so similarly in the battlefield and how they were both so noble and courageous
help show that two men that could not have been more dissimilar, ended up being
so alike serving their causes. I highly recommend this book. Very entertaining,
and very educational. |
CSA Reading List |
The
Greatest Generation
"Tom Brokaw has delivered a gift to this and future
generations by bringing us these inspiring personal stories of the average Joes,
the GI Joes, the young men and women who served our country and shaped the
foundation of post-war America. Although some became famous, most returned to
their hometowns dedicated to building an even better world. We meet them in this
book, whose pages give voice to the standards they set by their strength of
character, informed by their experience during World War II. Tom has held up a
mirror to reflect what may be their greatest legacy and pose in all of us the
question--Is this generation--our generation--worthy as their
beneficiaries?" |
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CSAF Reading List
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A History of the American People Paul Johnson's "A History of the American People" is very readable history
whose objectivity is manifest. While necessarily abbreviated in many respects,
the book offers a sweeping panorama of the American political, cultural, and
religious landscape. It captures and defines the spirit that made this country
the greatest and the most powerful in the history of mankind. Unlike most
writers of the modern textbooks of history Paul Johnson understands that it is
individual freedom of thought and action and the extension of that freedom to
the economic, political, and religious spheres that enabled this country to
dominate the rest of the world. |
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CSAF Reading List
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If you are being deployed or have been deployed to Iraq this should be mandatory reading. I wish I had had this book prior to my trip to the fertile cresent. This book will give you a real understanding of the insurgent's mindset and will put things into a perspective that will assist you in understanding the current situation and give you tactical understanding of their methodology. If you are going to be serving in a combat capacity, you need this information as much as you need the intel in your AO. Read this book and pass it on to another. -- Lon C. Cogley "MOBILE STRIKE TEAM" | |
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CSA Reading List |
The
Killer Angels
I can't say many positive things about this book that have not already been posted. But from my personal view, "Killer Angels" is one of the best novels I have ever read.
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CNO Reading List |
Leadership
is an Art
Max Depree does a great job of fulfilling the purpose for which he wrote "Leadership is an Art". His how-to, self help book is grounded on a solid foundation of leadership philosophy. Everyone should read this book, for there is not a person alive who will do anything other than benefit from it at work or in their everyday lives. I highly recommend it. Also recommended: A book that is not at all one of the many books in
competition with "Leadership is an Art" that you should go on to read is Norman
Thomas Remick's "West Point: Thomas Jefferson: Character Leadership Education"
for an education on the philosophical foundations of Max Depree's "Leadership is
an Art" that everyone can understand. |
CNO Reading List
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Leading
Change
The leaders of some organizations have no idea how to make successful changes, and are likely to waste a lot of resources on unsuccessful efforts. Professor Kotter has done a solid job of outlining the elements that must be addressed, so now your organization will at last know what they should be working on. On the other hand, if you have not seen this done successfully before, you may need more detailed examples than this book provides or outside facilitators to help you until you have enough experience to go solo. I suspect this book will not be detailed enough by itself to get you where you want to go. Here's a hint: The Harvard Business Review article by Professor Kotter covers the same material in a much shorter form. You can save time and money by checking this out first before buying the book. I personally find that measurements are very helpful to create self-stimulation to change, and this book does not pay enough attention in that direction. If you agree that measurements are a useful way to stimulate change, be sure to read The Balanced Scorecard, as well, which will help you understand how to use appropriate measurements to make more successful changes. If you want to know what changes to make, this book will also not do it for you. I suggest you read Peter Drucker's Management Challenges for the 21st Century and Peter Senge's The Fifth Discipline . Good luck! -- Donald Mitchell |
The Little Red Book of Selling The first knee jerk reaction is why should i buy a marketing book if I am in the military? The answer is simple, the most important item you sell in the military is yourself. As a Chief, they can enlighten you. If you want to find a job that fits you, run a shop that suites you, or just attempt to be successful, marketing and sales is key. Simply put, if your career involves marketing in general, or selling and customer service specifically, you need to put this book on your must read list. |
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CSA Reading List
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I happened across this book purely by accident but was intrigued by the premise and the reviews which it had received. I was not to be disappointed. Rick Atkinson has written a fascinating book which charts the course of West Point's class of 1966 from their entry into the Academy through the Vietnam War and the present. This book reads like an epic novel and soon it became impossible for me to put it down. At times hilarious, at times incredibly moving I was completely fascinated with the story of how the individuals in the class of 1966 dealt with all of the trials and tribulations which life threw at them and finished this book with a much more profound understanding of the suffering which Vietnam veterans have gone through, both in the war zone itself and on their return home. This book is not just military history, it is also social and political history and should be essential reading for anyone interested in reading about the events and ideas which shaped the last few decades of the 20th Century. I have absolutely no hesitation in giving this book five stars. |
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Management Challenges for the 21st Century
is a breakthrough work, even for Peter
Drucker. Through 6 impressive essays, Professor Drucker sets the agenda for the
next several decades, for every organization and individual. He begins by
pointing out that the way most people think about management is all wrong, and
immediately needs to be changed. He outlines the needed changes. He then picks
the key strategy issues that will strongly affect all organizations for the next
50 years. Next, he points out that we live in turbulent times and that one must
lead the changes that one's organization must make so they occur faster than for
the competition. There is no choice for any organization, except to fail to
survive. From there, he points out that we have information TECHNOLOGY, but very
little information worth looking at on the devices the technology brings us. He
goes on to define what must be done to create the right information. In a
remarkable section, he then tells how to create knowledge worker productivity
(something he has said in the past that no one knows how to do). Finally, he
provides a remarkable essay on how to get the most out of yourself, for
yourself. These essays were previewed in leading publications, and substantially
improved from the originals. There is no repetition of his work and thinking
from earlier books. This is like finding a whole new Peter Drucker. I especially
loved the new examples that he included, as well as his historical references
that only Peter Drucker can make. YOU ARE MAKING A BIG MISTAKE IF YOU FAIL TO
BUY, READ, AND APPLY THE IMPORTANT LESSONS OF THIS BOOK. If you read only one
book by Peter Drucker, read this one! I was especially pleased to see that he
addressed the stalls that delay organizational progress such as the old habits
reinforced by tradition, unwillingness to address the new through disbelief,
poor communications at all levels (he states the rules that you must follow to
be a better communicator and be more effective), needless interactions fostering
mindless bureaucracy, the temptation to procrastinate (standing still in front
of a truck about to run you over is a mistake you will not repeat), avoiding the
unattractive key issues of your organiztion (he recommends doing the dirty jobs
yourself for several weeks a year in order to understand how to improve), and
failing to set high standards. As always, the book is filled with powerful
questions that you can answer for yourself in order to accomplish much, much
more and feel great while you do so. Read and apply the lessons of this book and
you will have many more 2,000 percent solutions (achieving 20 times the usual
results with the same resources or getting the same results 20 times
faster). -- Donald Mitchell |
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Not a Good Day to Die
(Operation ANACONDA) This is the best military book I have ever read. Whether you're a civilian or a military reader, you can read this book and draw fundamental lessons about leadership, decision-making, creativity, and yes audacity! Although the trailer for this book talks about the strategic negatives, this book is all about the operational positives! I remember this operation, but never remember hearing about the special operations teams in the Mountains. Isn't it ironic that during this operation we were able to use the same tactics and techniques against Al-Qaeda that they used against us on 9/11--Small teams of highly motivated men infiltrating behind enemy lines for a devastating surprise attack using precision guided mass casualty weapons! This book dives right into the details and describes what makes our special operators the greatest fighting force on the face of the earth--they're completely focused on the mission, and the smartest most resourceful warriors in history. Unfortunately this book also portrays the greatest obstacle to our special ops warriors, the unqualified senior leader, a foe that is as old as American warfare! The sections on the three AFO teams is a superb example of what our forces are capable of when resourced and unleashed by the right leaders! This should serve as an ominous warning to our terrorist enemy's--you have no safe havens--we are coming for you! The insights into the dialogue between the commando's in this book is superb, it's reflective of just how cool these guys are under pressure that they can find ways to inject humor into their radio transmissions even while in position right behind the enemy. This books most lasting value will be the lessons it highlights for future leaders! As many readers of military history will note, these lessons are not all new! -- Nick O. Tolman |
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Old CSAF Reading List
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Of
Paradise and Power
From its opening-line salvo—"It is time to stop pretending that Europeans and Americans share a common view of the world, or even that they occupy the same world"—Of Paradise and Power announces a new phase in the relationship between the United States and Europe. Robert Kagan begins this illuminating essay by laying out the general differences as he sees them: the U.S. is quicker to use military force, less patient with diplomacy, and more willing to coerce (or bribe) other nations in order to get a desired result. Europe, on the other hand, places greater emphasis on diplomacy, takes a much longer view of history and problem solving, and has greater faith in international law and cooperation. Kagan does not view these differences as the result of innate national character, but as a time-honored historical reality--the U.S. is merely behaving like the powerful nation it is, just as the great European nations once did when they ruled the world. Now, Europe must act multilaterally because it has no choice. The "UN Security Council is a substitute for the power they lack," he writes. Kagan also emphasizes the inherent ironies present in the relationship. European nations have enjoyed an "American security guarantee" for nearly 60 years, allowing them to cut back on defense spending while criticizing the U.S. for not doing the same. Yet Europe relies upon the U.S. for protection. This has led America and Europe to view the same threats much differently, as evidenced by the split over how to deal with Iraq and Saddam Hussein. Kagan points out that some European leaders are more afraid of how the U.S. will wield its power in the Middle East than they are of the thought of Hussein or other "rogue state" leaders acquiring weapons of mass destruction. Kagan’s brevity is as impressive as it is appreciated; most writers would have required thrice as many pages to get to their point. At any length, the book is nothing short of brilliant. This is essential reading for those seeking to understand the post-Cold War world. --Shawn Carkonen |
USMC Reading List |
The
Old Man's Trail/a Novel About the Vietcong
Tom Campbell's book is extremely well written. The narrative unfolds quickly, bringing the reader into the mysterious maze of the Viet Cong supply route that belied the powerful bombing capacities of the U.S. military. It is written from the eyes of the teenagers conscripted into military duty, beginning with their grueling boot camp and their seasoned drill instructor. Scenes of the trail are splendidly presented, and readers will find themselved caught up in the suspense of the outcome. The book is an amazingly keen observer of minute details and larger conflictual perspectives. It is not overly sympathetic to either side, but quite human in presenting the nitty-gritty daily decisions soldiers from both sides were forced to make. You will find this book disturbing and stimulating. A high recommendation. |
CSA Reading List |
Once
an Eagle
In a country where Goldie Hawn can share a stage with Zig Zigler and tell their stories of success; here is superior fictional story on how to live ones life. No exaggeration! You see, the two protagonists in "Once an Eagle" are very different. Yes, there is a bit of black and white imagery used by Mr. Mryer, but the story of the choices that Sam Damon and Courtney Massengale make, need to be told and re-told. We were young once and we read Remarque's "All Quiet On The Western Front", the quintessenial war novel. I'm sure not many of us identified with Paul's former teacher or Sergeant. Why? Yes, Paul's journey is more interesting. However, it's the choices of an idealist youth who grows into a man after seeing the horrors of war that calls to all of us. Anton Mryer has updated that story, made it more fuller, more complex and has extended it over two adults lives. And, yes there is a message here to be found here. As a young Boy Scout, I was taught that the choices we make determine the man we become. Well, what better life model than that of Sam Damon. As a father, I can only hope my own children make similiar ethical choices! Enjoy! -- gmulvey |
Out of Context This is a very good book outlining Strategic Management metaphors. Actually, for anyone sitting in or planning on sitting in a management role, this is worth the money and your time. The metaphors range from Sports, Military, Far East Theory, Art and Evolution. -- Dom |
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CSAF Reading List
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The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict Between Iran and America
I don't agree with everything Pollack puts forward in this book. However, I think he has the experience that warrants people giving him a fair shot. I consider myself a moderate and that's how Pollack comes across in this book. I also think that just because he was wrong about one thing (and his company in this group is quite vast), doesn't mean this book is not helpful. I should say first that if you're expecting an Iranian history book, you should probably look elsewhere. There is a fair amount of history here, but the book's primary focus is documenting Iran's relationship with the U.S. Some reviewers below claim that Pollack's history is kind of murky. I haven't read enough about Iran to judge those statements, but Pollack has quite a long track record of dealing with Iran from inside the U.S. government, and as such his description and explanation of events goes a long way if you're tyring to understand Washington's policy towards Iraq. One area where Pollack can be faulted I think is when he goes off on side talks about Iraq and how the U.S. was handling that country during the 90's. Now to be sure, Pollack is not the only author I've read that has done this, but that's no excuse, and also as someone working in the government he knows darn well that the U.S. was violating the spirit of the same UN resolutions at the same time Iraq was. The question this raises for me is "if he's not being fully honest about this, how reliable is he about Iran?" Well, the unfortunate answer is that we don't know how accurate all the information is that we get in books like this. It is our responsibility to read as much as possible and then try to determine the truth. Again, it's sad but true so get over it and read a few books. You'll be better off for it anyway. Overall, I think Pollack has produced a good book. His recommendations for Iran are helpful and I really think he puts all the available options on the table and argues convincingly for what he thinks is best. Should you read other books about Iran? Yes. Is this one a bad place to start? No. -- Marshall Lilly |
Old CSAF Reading List |
PRIZE
Daniel Yergin has done an amazing job with The Prize. It is meticulously
detailed and highly entertaining and enlightening. |
Old CSAF Reading List |
Prodigal
Soldiers (An Ausa Institute of Land Warfare Book)
From the prologue to the epilogue, and everything in between, this book is fantastic reading. Anyone who has ever been associated with the U.S. military will have a much clearer picture of the totality of resurection within all the services after Vietnam. "Duty, Honor, and Country" does not always mean the same thing to different people, to some it means a career that spans over thirty years, to others the words are just something on a recruiting poster. To anyone who reads the book these three words will take on a much clearer meaning. Some chapters will cause tears in even the toughest of old veterans, and even the young generation of future service members will begin to understand some of the major events which have transpired in the military in the decades since Vietnam. James Kitfield tells a story that is not just a chronicle, or a documentary, but a story worthy of telling, and he does it with style. -- bsaffell |
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CSAF Reading List |
A Question of Loyalty: Gen Billy Mitchell and the Court-Martial that Gripped the Nation In another century another age we forget how far American aviation history and the American military has progressed since the World War I era. Waller creates a vivid picture of the Billy Mitchell trial during the period that gripped the nation. The book provides interesting background on the man who challenged the Washington establishment and gives a view of military policy and capability just before and after World War I. Given the amount and length of the trial material Waller does a good job of presenting the both sides evenly. Mitchell was a compelling but flawed man who argued for an aviation future while living values more akin to his time. -- Daniel Kucera |
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USMC Reading List |
Starship
Troopers
Starship Troopers does not advocate a facist goverment! It considers a
democracy where individuals who desire the right to vote must prove that they
are willing to pay the cost of freedom. The fact, that so many people today find
this requirement for personal responsibility threatening, does not bode well for
our nation. I first read the novel in a high school English class. I was a 16
year old punk at the time. It greated a great deal of debate, to say the least,
but had a profound impact on me. I enlisted in the Marine Corps on my 18th
birthday, against the wishes of my parents, and have served, as both an enlisted
Marine and Marine Officer, for 11 years. I have reread the book several times
and was excited to learn, in 1992, that the Commandant of the Marine Corps had
made Starship Troopers required reading for all Marines. Read this book with an
open mind. It is science fiction literature, more importantly it challenges the
reader to examine our role in society. Bryon J. Fugate |
Old CSAF Reading List
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Supreme
Command
This is Eliot Cohen's most intriguing and accomplished work to date. As one who has disagreed with Professor Cohen almost as often as I have agreed with him in the past, I must acknowledge the immediate (and likely enduring) value of this very well-done study of the relationships between heads of state and the military men working for them. While this book will not end the debate over "Who's on first?", it certainly deepens it. And it's simply good reading. I'm still not convinced that civilian leaders always know best--especially given their often-willful ignorance of the military experience--but I certainly believe that the civilians must always be firmly in charge, and Cohen makes that case indisputably along the way. It would have been interesting to bookend these studies with a look at the relationship between Bismarck and the elder Moltke, who enjoyed perhaps the most suspicion-laden symbiotic relationship in history--and whose grand successes illustrate Cohen's thesis with something near perfection--and the relationship, so very different, between President Clinton and his generals, all of whom were hobbled by fear, though of very different things. But this is Professor Cohen's book, not mine. I recommend this book highly--especially to military officers, not all of whom will be pleased by it. Intellectually engaging in the best sense. -- Ralph H. Peters |
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CSA Reading List |
This
Kind of War
If you only read one book on the Korean War, this is the one. Fehrenbach
provides a well-balanced mix of impressions of fighting at the ground level with
the broader vision of the war from a strategic and political level. He is
unsparing in describing the appalling unpreparedness of the US Army and, more
important, the underlying reasons for it that can easily be repeated in the
future. |
Old CSAF Reading List
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Tournament
of Shadows
This book covers many interesting aspects of the Central Asia game as played
by Britain and Russia in the 19th century. As other reviewers have mentioned, it
covers a lot of ground but lacks a central coherence which renders it less
effective. Chinese historical sources are not used --which could throw some
light on the Manchu empire's strategy toward the area. There is also a glaring
geographical mistake: At the mouth of the Amur the Russians founded the city of
Nikolaevsk NOT Vladivostok which was founded ten years later on a bay close to
the Korean border formerly named Haisenwei. Other than that the book is an
interesting and engrossing read.
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Old CSAF Reading List
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The
Transformation of American Air Power (Cornell Studies in Security Affairs)
Ben Lambeth has written a brilliant and much needed analysis of the transition
of airpower in the past two decades. This book ranks with John Warden's, The Air
Campaign, as two of the best books on airpower to have been written since World
War II. Lambeth, who has worked for Rand for many years, has flown many of the
world's best combat aircraft but even better, he has great sources and a
discerning mind. Also, he gives a candid look at what the future holds. |
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USMC Reading List |
The
United States Marines, 1775-1975
General Simmons has written a great general history of the Marine Corps. This
classic account is very readable. I understand the Naval Institute Press has
just published an updated and revised 3rd edition of this book. General Simmons
was also the senior editor of the just released pictorial history entitled The
Marines. |
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CSAF Reading List
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Victory at Yorktown This history covers the period 1780-83
and not only the Battle of Yorktown. Ketchum's writing is lively and
includes many personal vignettes. Perhaps the outstanding feature of the
book is that he includes the writings, decisions, and actions of the British
and French figures, which are often ignored in the American perspective on
the Revolution. He also does well to convey the war weariness of America at
this point and how nearly the Revolution did not succeed. Finally, he
continues the narrative to 1783 and does not end it at Yorktown, so you get
an appreciation of the uncertainty after that battle and the two-year wait
for the war actually to end. |
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Old CSAF Reading List |
War
at the Top of the World
This book is well written and not a difficult read given the complex topic.
The main suffering point is that Margolis is not a research Historian and the
book is not written from the point of view of journalist. Margolis makes many
good points, especially in concerns to potential future problems, but he really
fails to deliver the kind of un-biased factual evidence to back some of his
points. Margolis does know the area, people, and events but this is not enough
for a book that is presenting History. |
USMC Reading List |
The War of the Running Dogs: The Malayan Emergency, 1948-1960
The twelve-year British-led war against Chinese Communist insurgents in Malaya resulted in total defeat for the rebels and the installation of a relatively stable and independent (if racially discriminatory) Malaysian government in Kuala Lumpur. This book, which is a historical narrative of the war from the British perspective, is still on the United States Marine Commandant's recommended reading list for the valuable lessons the British strategy has to teach. Inevitably, comparisons and contrasts arise between victory in Malaya and defeat in Vietnam; a principal difference (which Barber doesn't fully draw out) is that the Chinese-speaking population (from whom the rebels drew their support) was heavily counterbalanced by the Malay population (which was and remains antagonistic towards the Chinese). Nevertheless, the British methods in this war were in many respects much more sophisticated than the American strategy in Indochina, and the Malaysian Emergency still repays study. This remains by far the best book on the topic. -- Matherson |
CSA Reading List
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We
were Soldiers Once...And Young - This book is a stunning accomplishment written by the on scene American
commander of the first major combat engagement in VietNam in late 1965 at the Ia
Drang Valley. It threads the line masterfully between human interest story and
gripping actual war story. It is quick to read, but also remarkably detailed. It
is not a "literary" masterpiece, but it is in no way a "dumbed
down" book.
This 560 page paperback tells the story of the formation and first time use of what would become a standard image of the war in VietNam, Air Assault by helicopter. The book opens with a number of pages telling how portions of the 1st Cavalry Division were being converted by technology and need from old style mobile ground infantry into highly mobile, helicopter-bourne shock troops for use in the hostile territory and hostile terrain of the growing conflict in South East Asia. We follow many of the participants from their training in the United States over to deployment "on the cheap" in South VietNam. Lieutenant Colonel Hal Moore was the battalion commander and Joe Galloway was the UPI reporter who found themselves dropped right into a massive hornet's nest of eager for battle North Vietnamese Army regulars massively outnumbering the Americans at Landing Zone X-Ray. The details of the battle from BOTH SIDES are described in vivid detail giving the reader a harrowing image of the horror that combat actually is. The main battle rages on day and night for a couple days as every bit of the new training and tactics taught to the battalion are put to desperate use. New tactics are developed on the spot as American soldiers frantically fight to save themselves and their buddies. The history of the embattled unit (the 7th Cavalry of General Custer's last stand at Little Big Horn) weighs heavily on the Americans as they fight to prevent being overrun again nearly 90 years later half-way around the world. The value of Hal Moore's excellent leadership during the X-Ray battle is vividly illustrated later when poor leadership gets the unit's sister battalion decimated nearby at Landing Zone Albany. This book is well worth reading even to the casual reader. It is not a "flag-waver" or an anti-war book. It simply tells the true story of relatively ordinary humans who find themselves mixed up in "a new kind of war" that seems destined to get all of them killed brutally. "We Were Soldiers" is expertly presented and researched. Many of the American survivors of the battle meet each year in remembrance and the authors have used these gatherings to make sure they got the details and full stories right. The authors also met the North Vietnamese commander of the battle at length when writing this book who gave them fine insight into the perspective from the "other side". You can smell the sweat, and the fear, everywhere. This book is not to be missed by any human being who wants to understand (and hopefully avoid) what war is like. It is sobering and very much worth your effort. |
CSAF Reading List | Winged Defense: The Development and Possibilities of Modern Air Power Economic and Military |
The World Is Flat [Updated and Expanded] : A Brief History of the Twenty-first
Century Before you read this review here is a small comment from Dom: I picked this book because a couple of friends recommended it. It is not the typical military reading guide but a guide of global management. it has been hinted that Gen Cartwright, commander USSTRATCOM thinks highly of this book, and it is how he is working on globalizing USSTRATCOM. If you've already finished "The World is Flat" or have trouble understanding
how Friedman's observations into results personally, purchase "THE
BLACK BOOK OF OUTSOURCING". |
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