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Hardcover Cold Zero: Inside the FBI Hostage Rescue Team Book

ISBN: 0316601039

ISBN13: 9780316601030

Cold Zero: Inside the FBI Hostage Rescue Team

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

For the first time a member of the F.B.I.Us elite Hostage Rescue Team--its most highly trained and specialized squadron that handles large-scale emergencies in the U.S.--reveals his experiences,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Inside Scoop

I first heard Christopher Whitcomb on a local NPR program and was fascinated by his stories. Interested enough to buy his book.The book is hard to put down. It gives us a first hand look at the physicality and courage it takes to go through this rigorous training: first to become an FBI agent and then to go on to the Hostage Rescue Team. I fear Mr Whitcomb is a might too coy to allow us to see the real fear and pain it takes to make this team. It is a very elite team that is in danger most of the time-he was on-call 24/7, and required constant vigilance and training to stay within the group. His version of the sorties that he took part in are insightful. I felt like I was part of the group. Mr. Whitcomb did not share much of his family life and it would have been a better book if he had- how does the family endure the amount of time they were apart? His decision to leave the FBI and take part in civilian life tells some of the story. Hope there are more books to come..

A complete account

For anyone familiar with Danny Coulson's No Heroes, this book should be the requisite companion. Where Coulson's book suffers, Whitcomb's account excels. Coulson's book claimed to be an insider's account into the HRT, but really failed in that respect. Coulson's role was never really of the HRT operator but, rather, a skilled supervisor. Whitcomb's Cold Zero is all that and more.More than anything I've seen, Cold Zero is a nearly exact account of an HRT operator/sniper's daily life. The rigors of selection and training and the hell of having to laying motionless for hours on end, always ready to take a shot that WILL kill someone, often only inches from an innocent hostage.Whitcomb is, in a word, skilled. As the reader should quickly realize, HRT members excel at everything. They approach everything they do with the same intense concentration and focus on perfection that is required of the FBI's elite counter-terrorism force. Whitcomb's prose in unencubered and to the point. His descriptions of the seiges at Ruby Ridge, Waco and others are total sensory experiences. (Actually, ever visual picture in the book is partnered with this same sensory drama. One of my favorite, although brief, parts of the books is Whitcomb's description of his guille suit. It's easy to assume what it looks like, but the reader learns how it smells, feels, sounds, etc.)The one flaw, which I think is unavoidable, is Whitcomb's distaste for Bureau resistance to his mission. One will recall from Coulson's book the apprehension of Bureau higher-ups about the role of HRT. Whitcomb's account calls upon the same pattern. Whitcomb has little patience for decisions made at FBI HQ that run completely against what training and experience have taught him is right (case in point, Ruby Ridge, where the rules of engagement were altered to allow HRT members to shoot anyone with a gun, regardless of whether or not they posed an immediate threat. Thankfully, Whitcomb and his brethren chose to ignore this order).Cold Zero tells more about the HRT than anything I have seen. It is exceptionally well written and leaves the reader wishing Whitcomb had remained with the team. More stories would not have been unappreciated.

No sugar, this

I am mad at myself. How could I have missed this book when it came out last year! For once, there is a book in my hands where the FBI is not Efrem Zimbalist sugar-coated, where warts are admitted and quite openly discussed. Don't go to the library, brother, buy it.And how I hate to admit that other book reviewers can be right! Don't bother to read anymore reviews (of course, my own is excepted), but go into what Tim Smith and Dianne Davidson had to say.All I wish to add is that this is the first FBI-sanctioned publication where (page 21) you find out that chubby he-man J. Edgar had a predilecton for "madras sun dresses and suede pumps". But what poleaxed me was one sentence I almost missed: where Whitcomb speaks of the magic bullet that went through bones and soft tissue of two people, twisting and turning all the way, and yet, two days later was found in remarkably clean, nay pristine condition, looking as though it just had been recovered from the water barrel, found on a gurney that was never used to transport JFK. One sentence - but how revealing. Where is this sentence? Go buy the book, it is worth it.PS: Going back to the sentence that nags me so. Will I live long enough to read a rewrite of the US's lengthiest series of one-subject fiction, the Warren Report?

Sensitive and Fascinating

Christopher Whitcomb writes a nuanced real life thriller about his experiences at 'ground zero'in the FBI Hostage Rescue Team. His HRT is not a collection of automated uber-policemen, but men who are well trained, who are asked to do extraordinary things for this country, and who struggle with the impact of their actions on themselves and their families. Yes, we all remember the newspaper and CNN accounts of Ruby Ridge and Waco, Texas; Whitcomb, though, conveys a reality that is certainly not as obvious as either side would like us to believe. This may be the central point of Cold Zero: with the resources and skills of the FBI and the HRT, we must be very careful in deploying this capability where both the root causes and eventual fallout are unclear. Throughout the book it becomes clear that the scope of the HRT's responsibilities have changed greatly. Mr Whitcomb describes his role in LA during the riots, the HRT's drug interdiction missions, and most heartbreakingly, its work in Bosnia investigating war crimes while essentially re-burying its dead. His confusion and horror is viscerally obvious.Cold Zero is such a relief from other similar books written by "warriors". He portrays himself as neither an FBI synchophant nor as a rogue agent. Here is a man with self doubt, tremendous physical confidence, and a love for his family and upbringing. If this is an example of the typical FBI man, we have great reason to feel confident of our future post 9/11/01.

A Real Life Action Hero

As a 15-year veteran who has worked on some of the most infamous cases in recent American history, Christopher Whitcomb gives us the opportunity to take a peek inside the FBI. But not only the inside story in the field, also a look at the day-to-day dealings from headquarters.We follow his story from the unbelievable moment he is told that he's been accepted into the FBI and then into the elite Hostage Rescue Team (HRT). It's in this unit that he was involved in some of the FBI's most well known hostage situations and has been awarded the FBI's Medal of Bravery. Whitcomb's account reads like any best-selling thriller, the only difference being that this is real life. You can track the author's fast learning curve that takes him very rapidly from a raw recruit to a seasoned veteran. But it's not only the action that the author saw that really makes a mark. The amount of training that this unit goes through is truly phenomenal, and gives you an amazing insight into just how dedicated these men must truly be.We get a unique inside view on events surrounding such high profile and high-pressure situations as Ruby Ridge and Waco and even the atrocities he witnessed towards the end of the Kosovo conflict. This gives us a fascinating insider's view of what goes on inside the FBI as well as the toll, both emotional and physical, that it takes on the agents. A brilliant and fascinating read for anyone interested in true crime, action stories and the workings of the FBI.
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