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Hardcover The Battle for Peace: A Frontline Vision of America's Power and Purpose Book

ISBN: 1403971749

ISBN13: 9781403971746

The Battle for Peace: A Frontline Vision of America's Power and Purpose

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Book Overview

Tony Zinni commands attention on the battlefield, at peace talks, in politics, and across the media spectrum. When he stood up and called for Donald Rumsfeld's resignation in 2006, the media paid... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Insightful blueprint for desperately needed changes

An extremely direct, intelligent and nonpartisan assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of American governmental structure and foreign policy. More importantly, General Zinni bluntly lays out what needs to change, how and why inorder to effectly deal with the post Cold War environment that we find ourselves in. Brilliantly insightful and in the line of General Zinni's many other writings in being pragmatically idealistic.

Knowledgeable approach

Zinni (with Koltz) surprised me with this read. I had not expected him to be so open-minded and practical in his approach. Instead of pointing fingers (no more than 3 or 4 times) without offering solutions, here he IS offering solutions, and not half-hearted or vague ones, but well thought-out and capable ones. In the beginning I was a little thrown off by some parts that seem to say "Hey look at me, I, Zinni, am great, I did this and that", but it does relay to the casual reader his credentials and knowledge on what he's writing. His focus is more on global policy, with some changes (although not small) to some of the departmental structuring in the American government. Some topics he tackles are the "Stove Pipe Effect " (no cross-talk between intelligence agencies, leaving us blind-sided), moving away from the Cold War-Era military framework, and the ignorance to any REAL civic response to global crisis. Worth reading, for anyone and everyone that believes America needs to adapt. Written without partisanship or superfluous chatter. Even though Tom Clancy is a top-notch military historians, I found his forward to be completely unnecessary, why would he need that extra credibility? Should be apparent by his (Zinni's) roles and experience.

THE Common Sense "Primer" for Everyone Including Bozo

I was initially inclined to give this book four stars because it does not "name names" and have footnotes or a bibliography, but as I got deeper into the book I realized that what Tony Zinni has produced is a world-saving "primer" that ANYONE can appreciate, including Bozo the Clown. This is not a dumbed down book as much as it is "straight talk" with no gobbly-gook. I have known over fifty flag officers in my time, and only a handful have actually been world-class, including Zinni, Gray, Stackpole in the USMC, Clapper and O'Lear in the USAF, Studeman in the Navy, and of course Schoomaker in the Army. No doubt there are others, but in my experience most flag officers have simply won a beauty/etiquette contest, and they do not acquire any additional strategic vision upon being promoted from the lower ranks. Zinni is incontestably the one general we have that has done three things brilliantly: 1) been a foxhole Marine with grievous wounds and innovative leadership at the company and field grade levels (see my review of his book "Battle Ready"); 2) been a general deeply experienced in Operations Other than War (OOTW--what a stupid former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff once said of "Real men don't do OOTW--which is about as stupid as the DNI still saying (we paraphrase) "we're in the business of secrets for the President, the hell with open sources and everyone else"); and 3) been a true inter-agency Commander-in-Chief (CINC) able to make full use of *all* the inter-agency capabilities, not just the military, and done so diplomatically and personally. He is the George Shultz (himself a former Marine) of the current warrior class. With that as pre-amble, here are the highlights of the book that demand its reading by every citizen in time to challenge their light-weight (and generally corrupt) Members of Congress prior to casting a vote in November 2006: 1) Chapters 1-7 are essentially an overview of reality and why global reality impacts on America's security and fortune. This is required reading for all but a handful, and needs to be read very slowly and carefully by those encumbered with ideological filters. As the author notes, very often perception is reality, and when an ideologically-biased perception conflicts with actual multi-cultural reality, what you get is a catastrophe such as Iraq. 2) The heart of the book is the author's prescription for achieving both an unbiased view of the real world, and the ability to fully plan for and leverage all the sources of national power as represented by the varied agencies, through three simple and elegant "hubs": 2a) At the national level, a National Monitoring and Planning Center (NMPC) that is able to integrate both intelligence (less than 20% of the relevant information) and operational inter-agency information (the other 80%), and to then plan, coordinate, and guide the execution of long-term inter-agency campaign plans. 2b) At the operational level, the modification of t

Honest Perspective of the Situation

What attracted me to this book was that here was a person who didn't seem to have an agenda per se...He isn't running for anything, he isn't out to bash the current administration nor is he writing to prop up momentous mistakes as "minor bumps in the road." I had a chance to throw the general an admittedly softball question/comment on NPR's The Diane Rehm Show on 4/12/06 but it was a point he has made in this book and in other appearances and needs to be said from a perspective of soldiers like myself that served during the 90's..The threat of Iraq was marganialized..The conflated threat of Sadaam was an insult to 10 years of blood, sweat, and tears of the US military that kept the dictator marginalized. You can debate at what cost to Iraqis this marginalzation was, but the FACT is as a successful military operation dictated by US foreign policy at the time, Sadaam was no imminent threat...then scrapping military planning that was crafted by years of experience and intel as "cold war" or "Clinton -era" planning is appalling. It was sound planning that should have been taken seriously. No one is saying, "I told you so," with any credibility but our failures to this point are by the hands of bad planning and execution in the Pentagon not the voices of criticism. That is why this book just made sense to me, coming from the perspective of an American who loves his country, but is boggled by the choices it makes. What I also enjoyed about Zinni's book is his understanding of the situation past a perspective of militarism. As the General says in the book, "The battle is a constant struggle to develop and build the measures, programs, systems, and institutions that will prevent crisis." I agree with this wholeheartedly and I appreciate this book. While he didn't tackle all aspects of this situation (corporatism, oil, Saudis, Project For The New American Century, ect.) I think General Anthony Zinni carved out a realistic view from his perspective. I also have to recommend the DVD "Elusive Peace: Israel and the Arabs." This documentary contains footage and commentary of and from General Anthony Zinni as Special Envoy and highlights the generals open yet focused perspective on the Middle-East.

The US empire is a fact, but how to make it work

Zinni, whose credentials are impeccable, clearly describes how not conduct foreign policy. Taking his oath of service, even though he is retired, seriously, he does not come out and openly critisize the Bush administraion, even though the implications are there. This might irk some opponens of the present Bush doctrine, but it also gives the book credence, and does not alienate Bush supporters. Zinni does not call for anything radical anyway, he just calls for moderation, consideration and proper planning. In many ways the situation the US is in today is very similar to situation the UK found itself in the nineteenth century. The British Empire was not planned - suddenly the Brits found themselves involved in all corners of the world fighting enemies, protecting allies, spreading Christianity, internal policing and taking themselves whereever business opportunities took them. Their technological superiority very soon made them end up with colonies in places they had never dreamt of! A situation very similar to the one US finds itself in today in the post-cold war era. This is one of the first US books that I know of that actually acknowledge this fact, British historians have pointed out this long ago, and urges the administration to tread carefully: too many Iraqs and to much unilateralism will not help the situation, and it can quickly spiral out of control. If there is a weakness in the book it is that he does not clearly address the complex issue of big oil, neocons, and evangelicals, and their influence on the US foreign policy. I was impressed by Zinni on Jon Stewart, how he refused to be goaded by Stewar and kept his integrity at all times.
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