Eyewitness to war : the US Army in Operation AL FAJR : an oral history
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Eyewitness to war : the US Army in Operation AL FAJR : an oral history
-- US Army in Operation AL FAJR
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39 Total copies, 39 Copies are in, 0 Copies are out.
"Eyewitness to War: The U.S. Army in Operation AL FAJR: An Oral History" is a unique publication for the Combat Studies Institute (CSI). It is their first publication to make exclusive use of oral history. The study is a derivative of the CSI Operational Leadership Experiences (OLE) project, a program that collects and archives first-person experiences from the Global War on Terrorism. It also can be considered a companion to the recently published CSI Occasional Paper No. 20: "Operation AL FAJR: A Study in Army and Marine Corps Joint Operations." Interviews collected for the OLE project formed the basis for that occasional paper and were so compelling that CSI felt a need to publish those interviews in a book series. In November 2004, the second battle for Fallujah was a brutal and bloody fight so characteristic of urban terrain. Under the overall command of the 1st Marine Division, four Marine infantry and two U.S. Army battalions (Task Forces 2-2 Infantry and 2-7 Cavalry) were committed to the streets of Fallujah. At this same time, the Army's 2d Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, formed a cordon to hold and isolate the insurgents in the city. Using the firepower and mobility of the Army's heavy armor and mechanized units to full effect, the Marine Regimental Combat Teams were successful in destroying the enemy and securing Fallujah in 10 days. "Eyewitness to War" interviews span a wide spectrum of participants, from commanders and senior non-commissioned officers at all levels to the first-hand accounts of combat and combat service support personnel on the battlefield. CSI makes no claim that this history is a comprehensive work, as these 37 people are but a fraction of the thousands who took part in the operation. This is primarily an Army oral history, though one of the Marine Regimental Commanders agreed to provide his story. The USMC bore the brunt of fighting in Fallujah, and this study does not attempt to overlook their tremendous accomplishments.
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