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"Good morning, sir," Francona tells an arriving Iraqi general. "I am Major Francona from General Schwarzkopf's staff. If you will step out of the car, I will take you to meet the general, and we can begin."
The Iraqi just sits there, glowering. So Francona, agitated by his recalcitrance, leans in closer and says, in Arabic slang, "Get out of the car, [expletive]." The negotiations with Schwarzkopf began shortly thereafter.
Some of the most interesting comments concern the struggle between the services. After the war, Francona was one of the team who compiled the Defence Department's report to Congress on the war. This, he declares, was "the real war", in which the services fought for recognition of its contribution, in the knowledge that the perceived contribution would be reflected in future budgets. -- London Times Literary Supplement, Friday, September 3, 1999
Rick Francona was ideally placed to write something worth reading about U.S.-Iraq relations in the late 1980s and early 1990s. "Ally to Adversary: An Eyewitness Account of Iraq's Fall from Grace," is a gem, a book that gives serious lessons in the paradoxes of contemporary U.S. foreign policy, whose author reveals himself plainly and straightforwardly, with little guile or affectation.
In 1988, Francona was assigned to the Department of Defense's "cooperative military-to-military" program assisting the Iraqi armed forces. Following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, Francona found himself back in the Middle East, serving as the interpreter for General Schwarzkopf. The campaign brought Francona face to face with an Iraqi intelligence officer who had been his friend.
Francona's "eyewitness account," consistently easygoing and understated, conveys painful, sober truths for American readers.
Bottom Line: Francona has written a fascinating account of what he saw in the Middle East. -- The Oregonian, October 3, 1999
The publishing arm of the U.S. Navy offers this chilling account of the Iraq war by Oregon's Rick Francona, a retired Air Force Middle East specialist.
Francona was point man to Iraq in 1987-1988 and served as Gen. Schwarzkopf's personal interpreter. He chronicles the decline of United States/Iraqi relations, then offers a firsthand account of the day-to-day operations of Desert Storm.
Unlike many carefully documented histories, this is readable, with moments of both humor and tension. -- Register-Guard (Eugene, OR), August 1, 1999
Unique insights...excellent, well-written book about the US relationship with Iraq during the Iran-Iraq War -- Military Review, March-April 2000
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