Publisher: Bantam
Date of Publication: 2011
Pages: 280
Genre: War/Military
Reviewed By WC
About the Book: One of the most critical battles of the Afghan War is now revealed as never before. Lions of Kandahar
is an inside account from the unique perspective of an active-duty U.S.
Army Special Forces commander, an unparalled warrior with multiple
deployments to the theater who has only recently returned from combat
there.
Southern Afghanistan was slipping away. That was clear to
then-Captain Rusty Bradley as he began his third tour of duty there in
2006. The Taliban and their allies were infiltrating everywhere, poised
to reclaim Kandahar Province, their strategically vital onetime capital.
To stop them, the NATO coalition launched Operation Medusa, the largest
offensive in its history. The battlefield was the Panjwayi Valley, a
densely packed warren of walled compounds that doubled neatly as enemy
bunkers, lush orchards, and towering marijuana stands, all laced with
treacherous irrigation ditches. A mass exodus of civilians heralded the
carnage to come.
Dispatched as a diversionary force in support of
the main coalition attack, Bradley’s Special Forces A-team and two
others, along with their longtime Afghan Army allies, watched from
across the valley as the NATO force was quickly engulfed in a vicious
counterattack. Key to relieving it and calling in effective air strikes
was possession of a modest patch of high ground called Sperwan Ghar.
Bradley’s small detachment assaulted the hill and, in the midst of a
savage and unforgettable firefight, soon learned they were facing nearly
a thousand seasoned fighters—from whom they seized an impossible
victory.
Now Bradley recounts the whole remarkable story as it
actually happened. The blistering trek across Afghanistan’s infamous Red
Desert. The eerie traces of the elusive Taliban. The close relations
with the Afghan people and army, a primary mission focus. Sperwan Ghar
itself: unremitting waves of fire from machine guns and rocket-propelled
grenades; a targeted truck turned into an inferno; the death trap of a
cut-off compound. Most important: the men, Americans and Afghans
alike—the “shaky” medic with nerves of steel and a surgeon’s hands in
battle; the tireless sergeant who seems to be everywhere at once; the
soft-spoken intelligence officer with laser-sharp insight; the
diminutive Afghan commander with a Goliath-sized heart; the cool
maverick who risks all to rescue a grievously wounded comrade—each
unique, all indelible in their everyday exercise of extraordinary
heroism.
WC's Review: If, and only if, you have never read a book on the travails of the
miserable country of Afghanistan,you might entertain reading this one. A
good book for those who are supremely interested in the motivations of
those who are assigned the onerous task of conducting, and often,
mismanaging war.
The soldiers rise above such nebulous shenanigans through their commitments to duty and to their fellow man.
Major Rusty Bradley
was wounded during the Battle of Sperwan Ghar in command of a Special
Forces A-team, on his third combat tour as a Special Forces team leader.
A native of North Carolina, he graduated from Mars Hill College and
enlisted in the Army in 1993, serving as an infantryman for six years
before earning his commission from Officer Candidate School in 1999.
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