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War Journal: My Five Years in Iraq - Firsthand Account of Military Life in Iraq War - Perfect for History Buffs & Military Enthusiasts
War Journal: My Five Years in Iraq - Firsthand Account of Military Life in Iraq War - Perfect for History Buffs & Military Enthusiasts

War Journal: My Five Years in Iraq - Firsthand Account of Military Life in Iraq War - Perfect for History Buffs & Military Enthusiasts

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Description

In the most dramatic and intimate account of battle reporting since Michael Herr's classic Dispatches, NBC News's award-winning Middle East Bureau Chief, Richard Engel, offers an unvarnished and often emotional account of five years in Iraq. Engel is the longest serving broadcaster in Iraq and the only American television reporter to cover the country continuously before, during, and after the 2003 U.S. invasion. Fluent in Arabic, he has had unrivaled access to U.S. military commanders, Sunni insurgents, Shiite militias, Iraqi families, and even President George W. Bush, who called him to the White House for a private briefing. He has witnessed nearly every major milestone in this long war. War Journal describes what it was like to go into the hole where U.S. Special Operations Forces captured Saddam Hussein. Engel was there as the insurgency began and watched the spread of Iranian influence over Shiite religious cities and the Iraqi government. He watched as Iraqis voted in their first election. He was in the courtroom when Saddam was sentenced to death and interviewed General David Petraeus about the surge. In vivid, sometimes painful detail, Engel tracks the successes and setbacks of the war. He describes searching, with U.S troops, for a missing soldier in the dangerous Sunni city of Ramadi; surviving kidnapping attempts, IED attacks, hotel bombings, and ambushes; and even the smell of cakes in a bakery attacked by sectarian gangs and strewn with bodies of the executed. War Journal describes a sectarian war that American leaders were late to understand and struggled to contain. It is an account of the author's experiences, insights, bittersweet reflections, and moments from his private video diary -- itself the subject of a highly acclaimed documentary on MSNBC. War Journal is the story of the transformation of a young journalist who moved to the Middle East with $2,000 and a belief that the region would be "the story" of his generation into a seasoned reporter who has at times believed that he would die covering the war. It is about American soldiers, ordinary Iraqis, and especially a few brave individuals on his team who continually risked their lives to make his own daring reporting possible.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I gave this book as a gift to my father, so this is in some ways a second-hand review, mixing my observations and comparisons of what he usually reads and enjoys along with what he's told me of his experience with this book.My dad's a retired Army Colonel and reads a ton of biographical, fiction and non-fiction military books, mostly centered on the Vietnam and Korean wars, and he's picky about his authors. I was a little hesitant about picking something for him from something so contemporary, but I just admire Richard Engel's reporting so much, I thought I'd give it a chance.My dad generally humors me and wouldn't tell me if he disliked something I bought him (as an example, I bought him Colin Powell's biography a few years back and he hated it, but never told me), so I never expected him to say anything, but about a week after Christmas, my mother called to tell me that he had picked up the book and the day before and was hardly putting it down. I finally had a chance to speak with him a bit later on and he said it was just an excellent, intelligent, unbiased and engrossing book. He hadn't expected to be interested in the conflict in Iraq as a war story at all, but Engel's writing was so vivid and his reporting was so exacting that he found he enjoyed the book as much as he enjoyed the other books that he usually read on topics that he was personally familiar with.So since I got a big huge thumbs up from my very picky military father about the quality and enjoyability of this book, and since I personally also love Richard Engel's reporting and writing and I've had a chance to start the book myself now, I have to give this book a great review from my dad and a great starting off review from me.