- Warfare
- Books published in the last 10 years
- Nonfiction
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By Bryan Mealer
967.4103 MEA 2008
A foreign correspondent in Africa shares his dramatic experiences in the Congo as set against the region's troubled history, in an account that discusses the impact of the past decade of war, the activities of violent militia, and the nation's hopes for recovery.
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By Thomas Ricks
956.7044 RIC 2006
This is a thorough history of the war in Iraq from the planning stages through the continued insurgency in early 2006. The inclusion of internal documents and research from interviews with American soldiers and officers makes his tragic portrait particularly damning and compelling as Ricks makes a case for a war poorly planned and bravely but blindly fought.
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By Rupert Smith
355.02 SMI 2007
Smith states, "war no longer exists,” claiming that nuclear warfare has changed the face of warfare, ending the large-scale industrialized warfare which made use of massive tank and air power offensives. supported by the application of intensive air power. The result is a need for understanding of politic contexts of opponents’ actions and then revised strategies.
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By David Kilcullen
355.425 KIL 2009
Kilcullen differentiates between insurgents who have local grievances versus those who support movements with a worldwide agenda and argues that the U.S. had done a poor job of applying different tactics to these very different situations, continually misidentifying insurgents with limited aims and legitimate grievances (whom he calls "accidental guerrillas") as part of a coordinated worldwide terror network.
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By Craig Mullaney
Mullaney 2009
Mullaney is a young veteran of the war in Afghanistan who writes of his military education, through West Point and the camps and retreats involved in becoming an Army Ranger. His story builds to the ‘unforgiving minute’ when he finds himself leading his men through a brutal gunfight with Afghan insurgents.
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