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Old 04-04-2008, 21:13 PM   #1 (permalink)
Shek
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Prodigal Soldiers

I just picked this up from the bookstore and look forward to reading it: Amazon.com: Prodigal Soldiers: How the Generation of Officers Born of Vietnam Revolutionized the American Style of War (An Ausa Institute of Land Warfare Book): James Kitfield: Books
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Old 04-08-2008, 11:35 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Must be nice to be in academia and have all of this time to read while your cadets are beavering away on their assignments!!!
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Old 04-08-2008, 11:45 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Must be nice to be in academia and have all of this time to read while your cadets are beavering away on their assignments!!!
I typically read in spurts with 30 minutes here and 30 minutes there. Over breaks I get to tear through books depending on what the family is doing. For example, I read four books over the Thanksgiving Break and Prodigal Soldiers will be book #4 since then. Christmas was spent watching sick kids, driving to the in-laws, etc., and so I didn't get to read much at all.

As you probably know from teaching as an adjunct, you probably spend 3-4 times the amount of time on a lesson as does a student. Reading the assignment, coming up with a game plan on how to present it, looking for additional material/resources to try and make the subject come alive, etc. Throw in office hours, additional duties, and what appears to be a cozy schedule is actually full-time work. I'm not complaining, as there are definitely less enjoyable jobs out there.
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Old 04-08-2008, 13:06 PM   #4 (permalink)
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I typically read in spurts with 30 minutes here and 30 minutes there. Over breaks I get to tear through books depending on what the family is doing. For example, I read four books over the Thanksgiving Break and Prodigal Soldiers will be book #4 since then. Christmas was spent watching sick kids, driving to the in-laws, etc., and so I didn't get to read much at all.

As you probably know from teaching as an adjunct, you probably spend 3-4 times the amount of time on a lesson as does a student. Reading the assignment, coming up with a game plan on how to present it, looking for additional material/resources to try and make the subject come alive, etc. Throw in office hours, additional duties, and what appears to be a cozy schedule is actually full-time work. I'm not complaining, as there are definitely less enjoyable jobs out there.
I agree totally. One of my best buddies is a business professor at a small liberal arts college just north of Richmond. He now has all of his classes on Tue & Thu. I kid him about having a part time job...he just snears at me!

I understand the reading in spurts. I am currently reading Lee's Endangered Left about Sigel and Hunter in the Shenandoah - 1864 to get ready for a tour next month. I stepped down a Scoutmaster but have become the District Eagle Scout Coordinator, a Unit Commissioner, and Vice Chair of District Committee...this voluntyeer stuff is just killing my time.

I find most of my reading gets done after 9 PM with a ball game on!

BTW, let me know how you like the book
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Old 04-08-2008, 13:21 PM   #5 (permalink)
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I typically read in spurts with 30 minutes here and 30 minutes there. Over breaks I get to tear through books depending on what the family is doing. For example, I read four books over the Thanksgiving Break and Prodigal Soldiers will be book #4 since then. Christmas was spent watching sick kids, driving to the in-laws, etc., and so I didn't get to read much at all.

As you probably know from teaching as an adjunct, you probably spend 3-4 times the amount of time on a lesson as does a student. Reading the assignment, coming up with a game plan on how to present it, looking for additional material/resources to try and make the subject come alive, etc. Throw in office hours, additional duties, and what appears to be a cozy schedule is actually full-time work. I'm not complaining, as there are definitely less enjoyable jobs out there.
Agreed Sir, If I did not have 30-60 mins a day of reading the results would be absolutely maddening. Thank god for good books and a few minutes to spare daily.
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Old 04-20-2008, 22:26 PM   #6 (permalink)
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I'm about halfway through right now, and having read Colin Powell's and Schwartzkopf's autobiographies, a lot of the material is very familiar. One thing that has been fascinating to read about is the high rate of fatalities within the USAF during their training missions during the Cold War.
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Old 04-23-2008, 11:28 AM   #7 (permalink)
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I finished the book last night. It does a good job in telling the story of the Vietnam era generation of officers that rose to command in ODS as well as the story of their mentors that commanded the Army through the 1970s and put into place the systems that came to fruition in ODS. Having read Powell's and Schwartzkopf's book before, I don't think that I gleaned a whole lot of new information or insights, so if someone has already read either of those books, I wouldn't make this book a must read recommendation.

I'll try to write up my review tomorrow.
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Old 04-23-2008, 11:43 AM   #8 (permalink)
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One thing that has been fascinating to read about is the high rate of fatalities within the USAF during their training missions during the Cold War.
What were the causes of the fatalities? Was it intensive training leading to risks being taken in order to more accurately tune training to actual combat?
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Old 04-23-2008, 12:03 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Into the Storm: A Study In Command

Clancy's later stuff has held little fascination and much disappointment for me. This departure, however, into semi auto-biographical work (I know that he did something similar with Chuck Horner) was, for me, particularly revealing along the lines of Shek's offer here.

Franks' own post-Vietnam experience impressively mirrored the Army's own re-birth. That he was a combat-arms officer and an astute student of battle added credibility to insights regarding the renovation and expansion of the Army's education and training base during the twenty years between 1971-1991.

I felt that Franks largely portrayed the angst existing between Schwartzkopf and himself appropriately when describing events leading up to ODS. He was balanced and not particularly pre-occupied with the surrounding debate, it seemed.

A very introspective and intellectual commander. Sorta reminds me of Hermann Hoth a bit. Easy to underestimate in a beguiling, grand-fatherly type of way.
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Old 04-23-2008, 12:49 PM   #10 (permalink)
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What were the causes of the fatalities? Was it intensive training leading to risks being taken in order to more accurately tune training to actual combat?
The impression I got was that pre-Vietnam, there was a strong element of hot dogging that went hand-in-hand with the mindset of a fighter pilot, i.e., a live hard, live fast mentality. Post-Vietnam, they set up the Red Flag exercises at Nellis AFB, and there were initially some commanders and pilots who performed extended maneuvers that would to a degree force Bluefor pilots into dangerous maneuvers that had a higher risk of a fatality. My impression was that it wasn't due to the initial maneuver that would give the initiative to the aggressor pilot, but that the aggressor pilots would continue to press the Bluefor pilot when it didn't really contribute to the learning. The learning was in how to avoid getting into the situation, not in seeing how long you could last until the "official" kill.
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Old 04-23-2008, 12:56 PM   #11 (permalink)
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I think also som eof it may have changed with the change in tactics. The advent of SAMs forced pilots down on the deck...where the Earth-aircraft interface chances greatly increased!

I can remember inthe early 1980s when the Air Force and Army were brushing up AirLand Battle doctrine. It was almost a daily occurence to see 2 F-16s scream across the landscape at abouit 200 feet practicing what was called Battlefield Area Interdiction....sort of an H&I fires at 500 mph. And you would also see Jaguars, Phantoms and F104s() doing the same thing. This may have also caused some of the casualties as well.
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