| In this extraordinary book, Robert D. Kaplan
lets readers experience up close the American military worldwide
in the air, at sea, and on the ground: flying in a B-2 bomber,
living on a nuclear submarine, and traveling with a Stryker
brigade on missions around the world. Provided unprecedented
access, Kaplan moves from destroyers off the coast of Indonesia
to submarines in the central Pacific, from simulated Iraqi
training grounds in Alaska to technology bases in Las Vegas,
from army and marine land forces in the heart of the Sahara
Desert, to air bases in Guam and Thailand and beyond.
Hog Pilots, Blue Water Grunts provides not only
a riveting ground-level portrait of the Global War on Terrorism
on several continents, but also a gritty firsthand account
of how U.S. soldiers, sailors, marines, and airmen are protecting
sea-lanes, providing disaster relief, contending with the
military rise of China, fighting the war in Iraq, and crafting
contingency plans for war with North Korea and Iran.
Expanding on Kaplan’s acclaimed Imperial Grunts,
the first volume of his exploration of the American military,
which “offers the reader an enlightened way to understand
what is happening in the world” (San Francisco Chronicle),
Hog Pilots, Blue Water Grunts shifts focus to the
Pacific, where emerging Asian powers present vexing diplomatic
and strategic challenges to U.S. influence. In this volume,
Kaplan completes his analysis of army Special Forces and the
marines, while also taking readers into the heart of the myriad
tribal cultures of the air force, surface and subsurface navies,
and the regular army’s Stryker
brigades. Kaplan goes deep into their highly technical and
exotic worlds, and he tells this story through the words and
perspectives of the enlisted personnel and junior officers
themselves — men and women who, as he writes, have “had
their national identities as Americans engraved in sharp bas-relief.”
This provocative and illuminating book, like Imperial
Grunts before it, not only conveys the vast scope of
America’s military commitments, which rarely make it
into the news, but also shows us astonishing and vital operations
right as they unfold — from the point of view of the
troops themselves.
Robert D. Kaplan is a correspondent for
The Atlantic Monthly and the author of eleven previous
books on foreign affairs and travel, which have been translated
into many languages. These books include Imperial Grunts,
Balkan Ghosts, Warrior Politics, and The
Coming Anarchy. He is the Class of 1960 Distinguished
Visiting Professor in National Security at the United States
Naval Academy.
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