An unconventional war requires unconventional men--the Special Forces.
Green Berets - Navy SEALS - Rangers -
Air Force Special Operations - PsyOps - Civil Affairs -
and other special-mission units
The first two Commanders books, Every Man a Tiger and Into the Storm,
provided masterly blends of history, biography, you-are-there narrative,
insight into the practice of leadership, and plain old-fashioned
storytelling. Shadow Warriors is all of that and more, a book of
uncommon timeliness, for, in the words of Lieutenant General Bill
Yarborough, "there are itches that only Special Forces can scratch."
Now, Carl Stiner--the second commander of SOCOM, the U.S. Special
Operations Command--and Tom Clancy trace the transformation of the
Special Forces from the small core of outsiders of the 1950s, through
the cauldron of Vietnam, to the rebirth of the SF in the late 1980s and
1990s, and on into the new century as the bearer of the largest, most
mixed, and most complex set of missions in the U.S. military.
These are the first-hand accounts of soldiers fighting outside the
lines: counterterrorism, raids, hostage rescues, reconnaissance,
counterinsurgency, and psychological operations--from Vietnam and Laos
to Lebanon to Panama, to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq, to the new wars
of today...