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Victor Hanson, Victor Davis Hanson
An Autumn of War - What America Learned from September 11 and the War on Terrorism
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
Zusatztext “Bold and politically incorrect! An Autumn of War is like a breath of fresh air in pointing to the real causes of terrorist outrages and the need for a decisive response.” —Richard Pipes! author of The Russian Revolution “Victor Hanson is a national treasure. No one has written with such great prescience about the present war or more accurately predicted the course of events! on the fighting front! at home! and around the world. His wisdom arises from a deep knowledge and understanding of history! ancient and modern. His uncanny accuracy in prediction comes from a full and clear grasp of the facts and the application to them of an informed understanding of human nature and of the character of war. All this he presents in clear! vigorous! and eloquent prose. Every American needs to learn from him." —Donald Kagan! author of On the Origins of War and the Preservation of Peace “Together with John Keegan! [Hanson] is our most interesting historian of war.” —Jean Bethke Elshtain! author of Women and War Informationen zum Autor Victor Davis Hanson Klappentext On September 11, 2001, hours after the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, the eminent military historian Victor Davis Hanson wrote an article in which he asserted that the United States, like it or not, was now at war and had the moral right to respond with force. An Autumn of War, which opens with that first essay, will stimulate readers across the political spectrum to think more deeply about the attacks, the war, and their lessons for all of us.I. September (The destruction of the World Trade Center; the attack on the Pentagon; the explosion of four jet airliners; President Bush's promises of a worldwide war on terror; dispatch of American carriers to the Indian Ocean; initial criticism of proposed American response both at home and abroad) During the three-week lull between September 11 and our military response in early October, it was not clear when and if America would strike back. Despite our president's immediate and firm assurance that we would battle terrorists across the globe for years to come, critics both here and abroad immediately questioned the morality of our tactics in bombing the terrorist enclaves in Afghanistan and the military feasibility of finding the al-Qaeda camps--and then destroying them without either killing scores of innocent civilians or causing such disruption as to precipitate wide-scale starvation and disease. In addition, we did not know exactly the number of our own dead, as casualties on September 11 were at first feared to be in the tens of thousands, before generally being reduced to a round figure of between seven thousand and three thousand killed--a total by January 2002 that would be generally recognized as around three thousand fatalities. Both friends in Europe and neutrals and enemies in the Middle East demanded "proof" that bin Laden had, in fact, masterminded the attacks. Yet throughout these dark days, the Taliban and al-Qaeda alike promised annihilation for any Americans foolish enough to enter Afghanistan and raised the specter of further terrorist attacks here and abroad against the United States. In the numbing aftermath of September 11, Americans were presented with a daily variety of myths--military, cultural, and political--designed to temper our military response. I was chiefly worried that we were awash in a sea of false knowledge concerning everything from the military history of Afghanistan, the lessons of Vietnam, misinformation about the Northern Alliance, half-truths about the effectiveness of our air forces, the purportedly hopeless struggle against a "new" form of terror, the reasons for al-Qaeda's assault, and the nature of American foreign policy in the Middle East. September was perhaps the most hectic and depressing month in our nation's history. In the followi...
Product details
Authors | Victor Hanson, Victor Davis Hanson |
Publisher | Anchor Books USA |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 13.08.2002 |
EAN | 9781400031139 |
ISBN | 978-1-4000-3113-9 |
No. of pages | 218 |
Dimensions | 132 mm x 204 mm x 16 mm |
Subjects |
Humanities, art, music
> History
> Contemporary history (1945 to 1989)
Non-fiction book |
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