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An Autumn of War: What America Learned from September 11 and the War on Terrorism Kindle Edition
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAnchor
- Publication dateDecember 18, 2007
- File size649 KB
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Editorial Reviews
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Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“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
From the Trade Paperback edition.
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About the Author
Hanson has written articles, editorials, and reviews for the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Daily Telegraph, International Herald Tribune, American Heritage, City Journal, American Spectator, National Review, Policy Review, The Wilson Quarterly, The Weekly Standard, and Washington Times, and has been interviewed on numerous occasions on National Public Radio and the BBC, and appeared with David Gergen on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He writes a biweekly column about contemporary culture and military history for National Review Online.
He is also the author of some eighty scholarly articles, book reviews, and newspaper editorials on Greek, agrarian, and military history, and contemporary culture. He has written or edited eleven books, including The Western Way of War, The Soul of Battle, and Carnage and Culture. He lives and works with his wife and three children on their forty-acre tree and vine farm near Selma, California, where he was born in 1953.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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 following nine essays, composed in those times of chaos and uncertainty, I employed occasional parody, posed counterfactual scenarios, and drew on classical history--as well as the careers of General Sherman and Winston Churchill, the 2,500-year Western military tradition, the heroism of the New York policemen and firefighters, and our struggle against the Japanese during World War II--all to argue that we had no choice but to counterattack long and hard in Afghanistan.
Product details
- ASIN : B000XUAET4
- Publisher : Anchor (December 18, 2007)
- Publication date : December 18, 2007
- Language : English
- File size : 649 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 240 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #867,827 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #583 in 21st Century History of the U.S.
- #861 in Iraq War History (Books)
- #1,405 in Political History (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow in military history and classics at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, Fresno. He is the author of over two dozen books, including The Second World Wars, The Dying Citizen, and The End of Everything. He lives in Selma, California.
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Customers find the essays insightful and compelling. They also describe the writing as precise and very readable.
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Customers find the book's content insightful, compelling, and encouraging. They also say it's a great book from their favorite historian.
"...These are just some of the many insightful and compelling essays in this collection...." Read more
"Excellent analysis of events with historical insight and perspective. Victor never disappoints and always leaves the reader looking for more." Read more
"The author combines knowledge of history, shewd and smart judgements, and extreme readability. Everything I am read by him is Excellent...." Read more
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Customers find the writing precise and readable.
"...His writing is precise and very readable. I continue to read any and all of his works. He is fast becoming one of my favorite historians...." Read more
"...combines knowledge of history, shewd and smart judgements, and extreme readability. Everything I am read by him is Excellent...." Read more
"Very encouraging. Well written book." Read more
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This book contains many essays that shed light on America, the Islamic world, and the nature of warfare, both classical and modern. Hanson presents humorous counter-factual essays with "What If?" and "The Time Machine" in which America's war against terror is compared with its war against Japan in WWII, where pundits and talking heads debate the 'misunderstood' Japanese and debate the moral repercussions of the Doolittle Raid. In "Pillars of Ignorance" and "The Iron Veil", Hanson takes the Islamic world to task for its denial of liberties, and lack of truly free institutions such as a free press, and he writes of how America needs to adopt almost a Cold War approach to the Mid East as a bloc. "It Really Is Your Father's Europe" looks at our European allies and their foot dragging after 9/11 while offering insights on how to deal with them in the future. In "General Sherman, the Western Way of War, and September 11", Hanson considers Sherman's role in history and how the old warrior would view America's present conflict. A similar riff is offered in "A Voice from the Past", a wonderful 'interview' with Thucydides in which the Greek general and historian gives his take on the War on Terror.
These are just some of the many insightful and compelling essays in this collection. Each one pulls no punches and demands that Americans wake up to the frightening realities of the 21st century world. Throughout, however, Hanson remains optimistic of America's ability to prevail against an Islamic world that needs us far more than we need it. This is a wonderful and important book.
Overall I think the author does an excellent job of critically examining the reaction coming from the left. The only type of detraction that I can make from the book is that the essays do become redundant after a certain point. I also felt like the satirical essays were a little out of place given the tone of the other essays.
“TO PARAPHRASE CHURCHILL, with the conclusion of hostilities in Afghanistan we are not at the beginning of the end, but rather at the end of the beginning in our fight against the terrorists.”
The pieces have aged well. Hanson is full of praise for our military, and full of threats for our enemies. The news media emphasized our mistakes, but the American military and diplomatic achievement in Afghanistan was remarkable. What the lumbering Soviet army couldn�t do in eight years, a few units of American sea, air and air-mobile forces did in three months. With plenty of help from local friendlies, which the Sovs also didn�t have much luck keeping.
His historical satires, in which he mocks the hypothetical responses of contemporary liberals to great moments of decision in our past, are savagely funny. The high-handed dim-wittedness that he puts in the mouths of Ted Koppel and Peter Jennings in response to the Doolittle Raid are laugh-out-loud hilarious, depending on your POV.
Hanson has also read his Bernard Lewis and Samuel Huntington, and incisively details the now-familiar reasons that Islamic lands are so backward and resentful of the West. It�s a lesson that can�t be learned too thoroughly, especially when so many other voices insist upon their negative faith in America the Bad. Consensual, secular self-government is unglamorous, but is still a rare gift from history.
He makes many appeals to our own martial past, as well as the deeper, wider Western past, invoking Lepanto, Thermopylae, and Marathon in addition to Pearl Harbor and Okinawa. He execrates the American Left hot and strong, and deservedly so. In contrast to the amoral, irony-crippled, ideology-addled elites, he posits a sturdy, plucky yeomanry, good and true and brave and morally unblinkered. This is more problematic, as I didn�t find it very hard to find �ordinary working folks� who wanted no part of the war, and who also thought the Israelis were getting what they deserved in the wave of suicide bombings. But it was indeed instructive to see the psychic indigestion *some* people got from viewing all those American flags flying everywhere that autumn.
Toward the end, his columns drift into speculation about what to do about Iraq�s weapons of mass destruction program. The sitzkrieg that developed after the conclusion of the Afghanistan war seemed to give the lie to the urgency of that problem, though the reasons Hanson advanced were still current among proponents of military action to remove Saddam. So this is that journalistic rarity, a collection of columns that is of lasting value. Inspiring.






