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The Mission: Waging War and Keeping Peace with America's Military Reprint Edition

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 32 ratings

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Walk with America's generals, grunts, and Green Berets through the maze of unconventional wars and unsettled peace.

Four-star generals who lead the military during wartime reign like proconsuls abroad in peacetime. Secretive Green Berets trained to hunt down terrorists are assigned to seduce ruthless authoritarian regimes. Pimply young soldiers taught to seize airstrips instead play mayor, detective, and social worker in a gung-ho but ill-fated attempt to rebuild a nation after the fighting stops.

The Mission is a boots-on-the-ground account of America's growing dependence on our military to manage world affairs, describing a clash of culture and purpose through the eyes of soldiers and officers themselves. With unparalleled access to all levels of the military, Dana Priest traveled to eighteen countries―including Uzbekistan, Colombia, Kosovo, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Afghanistan―talking to generals, admirals, Special Forces A-teams, and infantry troops. Blending Ernie Pyle's worm's-eye view with David Halberstam's altitude, this book documents an historic and thought-provoking trend, one even more significant in the aftermath of September 11 as the country turns to its warriors to solve the complex international challenges ahead. 34 maps and illustrations

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Editorial Reviews

Review

[A] fascinating set of answers to...important questions about America's role in today's world. --Joseph Nye, Harvard University"

[N]ot a dry tome aimed at policy wonks. Written in a journalistic style... [it] conveys its message through colorful stories. --William Wineke"

[S]uperbly written....should be required reading for anyone hoping to understand the goals and objectives of contemporary US foreign policy. --Lawrence J. Korb, Director of Studies, Council on Foreign Relations"

A book that is just in time for the great new debate between the hawks and the doves. --Benjamin C. Bradlee"

A clear-eyed portrait of American military culture....Rich in instruction for policymakers, soldiers, and politics junkies alike. "

An important, frequently troubling, portrayal...raises questions that urgently need answers. --Jessica T. Matthews, president, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace"

Anyone trying to understand the interplay between US military and foreign policy must read The Mission. --Jody Williams, Nobel Laureate for Peace, 1997"

Contains colorful anecdotal evidence...[that] the military cannot take the lead role [in nation building]. --Christian D. Brose"

Dana Priest's revealing, close-up look at this dramatic new development is especially timely as we view the challenges of the post-9/11 world. --Richard Holbrooke"

Examines America's increasing reliance on its military to manage and cure complex crises in foreign policy and international diplomacy. "

Insightful reportage that integrates the small with the large scale. --Gilbert Taylor"

Priest documents [how] the...armed forces pursue tasks for which they are ill suited, untrained and sometimes only loosely mandated. --John T. Finn"

Priest has done prodigious research, including travel....The result...is an often fascinating kaleidoscope of the US military circa 2003. --Max Boot"

The fine texture of [Priest's] reporting of the views of the personalities involved is impressive....well written. --Maj. Gen. Edward B. Atkeson, USA Ret., Ph.D."

"Dana Priest's revealing, close-up look at this dramatic new development is especially timely as we view the challenges of the post-9/11 world."

About the Author

Dana Priest reports on military and intelligence issues for the Washington Post and is the recipient of the 2001 Gerald R. Ford Award for Distinguished Defense Reporting. She lives in Washington, DC.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ W. W. Norton & Company; Reprint edition (March 17, 2004)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 432 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0393325504
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0393325508
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 13.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 1.1 x 8.2 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 32 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
32 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2015
One of those books you hate to read but must that covers the recent American history of using the military to do jobs that should be State Department but for whatever reasons has been relegated to the military.
Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2004
I was intrigued by the subtitle: "Waging War and Keeping Peace with America's Military" after trying to think of how many countries (dozens) the United States has committed its military forces to over the past couple decades, and why. Dana Priest had top-level access to various military personnel, visited a number of the countries she discusses, and from this creates an informative document around a major issue confronting our military/civilian leadership; namely, what is "The Mission"? She is mostly uncritical (contrary to the impression of previous reviewers who sound offended by the subject matter, as though the military were too holy a subject for any civilian to tackle) and highly complimentary, and informative about our soldiers, and CINc's (Commanders in Chief/theatre command generals). I think the book would've benefited from a more personal, opinionated account after having done all this research, however, like Mark Bowden ("Black Hawk Down", "Killing Pablo") she's a reporter at heart and keeps it pretty straight-forward.
"The Mission" raises fundamental questions about our government's ever-changing world-concept, and the role of our military in advancing goals better suited for diplomats and the UN. More specifically, she brings up the trend of using our forces for "peace-keeping" & "nation-building" missions which they're obviously not well suited for (at this time). Yes, our military is the best at what it does in most cases, but it has serious limitations when we attempt to use it for unclear post-war objectives in countries with broken infrastructure. She provides detailed accounts of Kosovo, where one Lt. Col. wanders the streets and is reminded of his experience in the 1991 debacle of Somalia. There is a brief and disturbing account of an Army soldier who raped and murdered a young Albanian girl, and details of other negative encounters between young, un-worldly American soldiers and their Serb & Albanian "protectees". One interesting chapter deals with the complex world of a female Albanian-American translator trying to fit in with her fellow American soldiers. Priest also touches on the nature of covert, Special Ops. military training and relations with various troubled countries such as Colombia, Nigeria, and Indonesia.
Fundamental questions arise throughout the book: What exactly is nation-building, and should we be engaged in it? Have we already abandoned Kosovo and Afghanistan? Do we have the funds, military resources, will-power, justification, or desire to play international policeman? Will we keep our promises to the peoples we set out to protect? The answers aren't here, but "The Mission" sets the table from which this crucial discussion will definitely continue.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2003
Unfortunately, this book helps explain why we will be having very limited peace-making success in Iraq and Afghanistan. Priest is very sympathetic to the military and, like many of its officers, she sees that the US has allowed virtually all other aspects of foreign policy to atrophy. This is in stark contrast to the 1950s, when the Marshall Plan rebuilt Europe. It is as if our leaders (in both parties) think that the free market will rebuild these nations by magic. Sad to say, that is not how it works.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2006
This book is an attempt to look at the U.S. Armed Forces, primarily the army, and their mission in the modern world: how it's changed, what it can and can't do, and what effect the changing mission has had on the force itself, and its ability to fulfill its missions. Author Priest is primarily a reporter, though this doesn't really show in the book: it's clear that while some of this materiel probably appeared in shorter form at some point, she's rewritten everything into a style that befits a book.

The author spends a good deal of time walking you around the American military establishment in the late 1990s, describing at great lengths Hugh Shelton and Anthony Zinni, and talks a lot about the C-in-Cs (pronounced "sinks", Commanders-in-Chief) and their roles in the modern world, trying to get nations to act in a more ethical fashion while working up plans for a reaction if those nations prove a threat to us our our interests. Priest describes them as modern proconsuls, with more retinue and equipment (and a better reception overseas) than most of the Cabinet, but strangely with their power very constrained at home.

Next she discusses the various wars the U.S. engaged in between 1996 or so and 2002. This includes a short section on Afghanistan and a much longer one on peacekeeping in Southeast Europe, mostly Kosovo. My guess is the book was pretty much written when 9/11 happened, and she or her publishers felt it would be irrelevant if it didn't include something on the new war. Her view of peacekeeping in Kosovo is that the whole thing is fundamentally flawed because the army has become too cautious, and because the government can't decide on how to handle the new mission of peacekeeping itself. At one point she characterizes George W. Bush as a "dangerous idealist".

There's a lot of interesting material here, but the author comes to some conclusions which don't seem warranted by the facts, even as she presents them herself. She seems to believe that the U.S. Army isn't going to be able to transform itself into a force that can handle peacekeeping missions, and that the government should keep it out of such a role. Instead she argues for a larger State Department involvement in these issues. While this makes sense, part of her logic--that peacekeeping is beyond the U.S. Army) is patently false, whether they've successfully done it in the past or not. Capability isn't the issue, it's knowledge and skill. Armies don't always start out good at performing new missions, and this one requires a rethinking of pretty much every aspect of warfare, so it's going to take a while.

Second, there's the issue of accuracy. One other reviewr took her to task for improperly using army acronyms, and for other percieved inaccuracies. I, on the other hand, objected to her referring to Herat as an "eastern province" of Afghanisatn, when it's about as far *west* as you can go in the country without dodging Iranian Revolutionary Guards on their border. When I catch a simple error like that, I alwas wonder what else crept in, which I *didn't* notice.

I enjoyed parts of this book, but other parts were of considerable concern to me. I would recommend it only for the specialist.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2020
Great read about leadership and diplomacy