THIS IS AN UNSPARING ACCOUNT OF THE SHARP END OF WAR WRITTEN BY ONE OF
THE FINEST MILITARY HISTORIANS OF HIS GENERATION.
Andrew Wiest, author of the bestselling _Boys of '67_, traces the
experience of the 150th Combat Engineers of the Mississippi National
Guard in their 2005 tour of duty in Iraq, centered on the forward
operating base _Dogwood_. Comprising youth hoping to attain a way out
of grinding poverty, women seeking to break barriers, and patriots
answering their nation's call after 9/11, the 150th represented nearly
all of what America had to offer in 2005.
Amid the transformation of the US military in the 21st century, no
longer were they destined to be weekend warriors tasked mainly with
local disaster relief. The new Guard was a sharp weapon of war.
Soldiers grew up in the same communities, played sports and served
together. As _Dogwood_ reveals, this provides a singular advantage,
but also intensifies loss. Defying poor equipment, lack of specialist
training and heart-breaking losses, the 150th endured combat. They
also implemented their own homespun counterinsurgency policy that
turned an insurgency hotbed into a thriving community – one of the
war's few success stories. But all was forgotten.
Set within the context of a changing military, an evolving strategic
situation and an unpopular war, _Dogwood _is an unflinching history
which lays bare the harsh reality of combat through countless
first-hand accounts.
Les mer
A National Guard unit's war in Iraq
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472863201
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter