A report on Task Force Catamountthe U.S. Army unit that completed the longest combat deployment of the war in Afghanistan. The task force endured 485 days of uninterrupted combat and engaged in 565 clashes with the enemyamidst some of the most inhospitable terrain on Earth. Task Force Catamount emerged from a unique U.S. Army initiative that kept soldiers together as a cohesive unit from basic training through to their overseas deploymenta structure that fostered extraordinary cohesion on the battlefield but left many of the soldiers deeply vulnerable upon their return home. Since their return, more soldiers from the Catamount unit have taken their own lives than were killed in combat. This book is far more than a mere study of tactics and military operations; it examines precisely how the very bonds that made the unit so effective in war may also have intensified the emotional and psychological burdens the soldiers carried back into their civilian lives. Furthermore, the work sheds light on strategic consequences that have received scant attention in public discourse until now. It documents the largest Taliban invasion of the entire waran attack supported by elements of the Pakistani military, which Task Force Catamount repelled in January 2007. The immediate aftermath of this event led to a direct confrontation between U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney and Pakistani President Pervez Musharrafan episode long overshadowed by the media's focus on Iraq, but one that now reveals the complex web of alliances that defined the conflict in Afghanistan. Narrated by the units commander, Colonel Chris Toner (Ret.), this book offers a rare, unfiltered glimpse into the reality of modern warfaredrawn from his personal diaries, interviews with soldiers, classified briefings, operational logs, and thousands of pages of official records. As the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan continues to face critical scrutiny, this account serves equally as a tribute to the American soldiers on the front lines and as a critical examination of the human cost of political failure and strategic miscalculation. It is the first comprehensive account of the deployment of a single task force at the height of the Talibans resurgencea narrative that blends reports from the immediate combat zone with strategic insights and profound emotional weight.
Group
Books (first-hand)
Author
Toner, Chris
Title
485 Days of Combat
Details
English text, approx. 15 photos, maps. 320 pages.
State
new
Subtitle
Task Force Catamount in the Longest Deployment of the Afghan War