Red Platoon: A True Story of American Valor
Red Platoon: A True Story of American Valor book cover

Red Platoon: A True Story of American Valor

Hardcover – May 3, 2016

Price
$15.95
Format
Hardcover
Pages
400
Publisher
Dutton
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0525955054
Dimensions
6.3 x 1.25 x 9.3 inches
Weight
1.35 pounds

Description

“This ranks among the best combat narratives written in recent decades, revealing Romesha as a brave and skilled soldier as well as a gifted writer....Romesha remains humble and self-effacing throughout, in a contrast with many other first-person battle accounts, and his powerful, action-packed book is likely to stand as a classic of the genre.”— Publishers Weekly (starred review)“The book is riveting in its authentic detail....Romesha ably captures the daily dangers faced by these courageous American soldiers in Afghanistan.”— Kirkus Reviews “[Romesha’s] account displays all the hallmarks of superlative wartime reporting: unflinching honesty; vivid, in-the-trenches description; and deeper reflections on the pathos of battle.”— Booklist “[A] clear and expertly crafted account of an iconic fight during the Afghan War.”— Library Journal “[ Red Platoon is] compelling and rich with detail into a world most of us will not experience. It will make readers really think about what soldiers go through for their country. Romesha is a great storyteller, knowing how to draw you in and leave you breathless.”— News and Sentinel “I couldn’t recommend [this] book, Red Platoon , any higher.”—Bill O'Reilly“An amazing read....A gripping account of men in desperate combat against an overwhelming enemy.”— The Tampa Bay Tribune “[Romesha’s] experiences blaze the pages of his new memoir.”— Investor’s Business Daily “The battle, from start to finish, is riveting....I’m confident in saying that anyone who reads the full account—from the initial assault to the end of the attack—will be sucked into the action.”—Conservative Book Club“ Red Platoon is an exceptional book....[A] meticulous and powerful telling of the 2009 battle at COP Keating in Afghanistan.”—Military.com“It is a gripping read. It's something that will have you gasping as you hold your breath, rooting for Romesha and his comrades to prevail. More important, it is something that rises to the level of literature in its portrayal of a battle most Americans probably know nothing about, as a part of a war our country still seems to be struggling to understand.”— Grand Forks Herald “What sets Red Platoon apart is Romesha’s thoroughness in recounting the frantic scramble of events.”— Herald and News “It is so well written you're likely to feel you're in the middle of the action.... Red Platoon will make you marvel at the courage of our young men in the face of a much larger force and the stupidity of the generals who put them there.”— Minneapolis Star-Tribune “This compellingly candid detail written by Medal of Honor recipient Clinton Romesha tells of the grisly tumult of the Battle of Keating through the rawest of lenses—his own.”— Parade “ Red Platoon by Medal of Honor recipient Clinton Romesha will probably prove to be the definitive literary contribution of the war in Afghanistan.”— Lincoln Journal Star "I read the first half of Red Platoon in one sitting and that night had such intense combat dreams that I actually thought twice about picking the book up again. In addition to being a superb soldier, Romesha is an utterly irresistible writer. I'm completely overwhelmed by what he has done with this book. The assault on Camp Keating is a vitally important story that needs to be understood by the public, and I cannot imagine an account that does it better justice that Romesha's.”—Sebastian Junger, journalist and authorxa0of The Perfect Storm “Rendered hour by hour and sometimes second by second, here is battle narrative the way it's supposed to be written. Gritty, plangent, and unflinching, Red Platoon isxa0sure to become a classic of the genre.xa0Through his courageous and no doubt painful act of remembrance, Romesha has done his comrades, indeed all of us, a great service — leaving an epitaph that will live through the ages.”—Hampton Sides, author of Ghost Soldiers and In the Kingdom of Ice “ Red Platoon is riveting. Like many who were in either Iraq, Afghanistan, or both, I often read books about the wars reluctantly, because it is hard to capture the essence of the experience. In my view Red Platoon is a brilliant book. Had Clint Romesha depicted the soldiers at Keating as a collection of steely-eyed warriors, their feat would have been impressive. Because he captures the reality of a collection of personalities as diverse as America itself, their courage is truly inspiring.”—General Stanley McChrystal, U.S. Army, Retired “ Red Platoon celebrates the most crucial aspect of military operations: the team. Clinton Romesha and the men of Black Knight Troop faced harrowing conditions and a determined enemy during the Battle for COP Keating, and in the process discovered exactly who they are. This account is an important tribute to everyone who fought, and especially to the eight Americans who on that day made the ultimate sacrifice for their country.” — Mark Owen, author of No Easy Day and No Hero “ Red Platoon exemplifies the courage and resiliency our country was founded on. Clint is a truexa0brotherxa0and a man thatxa0I look up to.”—Dakota Meyer, Medal of Honor recipient and author of Into the Fire “The men of Red Platoon and their actions at COP Keating deserve to be known. Clint Romesha's story takes hold from page one and makes you feel every inch of the battle, but it is the bond between soldiers that will stick with you. Red Platoon is on my list of the best books about the Afghan war.”—Kevin Maurer, bestselling coauthor of No Easy Day “A visceral, heart-pounding account of men in close-quarter combat that is simply impossible to put down. Astonishingly intimate and beautifully written. A word of advice: don't start this book if you're planning on doing anything else for the next few hours.”—Scott Anderson, author of Lawrence in Arabia “Danger and death accompany combat. When unexpectedly surrounded and outnumbered by a Taliban enemy force, the stakes soared. Responses by the men of Keating were courageous. Led by Staff Sergeant Clint Romesha, this band of brothers countered with supreme valor. This true story will make you proud of the American soldier. You will not want to put Red Platoon down.” — Colonel Bill Smullen, U.S. Army, Retired Former Staff Sergeant Clinton L. Romesha enlisted in the Army in 1999. He deployed twice to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, and once to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. At the time of the deadly attack on Combat Outpost (COP) Keating on October 3, 2009, Staff Sergeant Romesha was assigned as a section leader for Bravo Troop, 3-61st Cavalry, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division. He is the recipient of numerous awards and decorations, including the Medal of Honor, which has been received by only twelve others for the heroism they displayed while serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. Romesha separated from the Army in 2011. He lives with his family in North Dakota. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One Loss I come from an old Nevada ranching family with military traditions that date back to my grandfather Aury Smith, who took his brother's place in the draft during the summer of 1943 and eventually wound up getting sent into Normandy as a combat engineer just a couple of days after D-day. Six months later, Aury got himself stuck inside the besieged perimeter of Bastogne with the 101st Airborne Division during the Battle of the Bulge. Somehow he made it through, then finished out his time in Europe helping to put on USO shows as a bareback rodeo rider. Almost thirty years later, my dad was sent to Vietnam. And although he never said a single word about either of the two tours that he pulled up near the Cambodian border with the 4th Infantry Division, which was known to have taken some horrendous casualties during that time, his silence carried enough weight that all three of his sons enlisted in the military. My oldest brother, Travis, enlisted in the army right after high school, participated in the invasion of Haiti, then later transferred to the air force. Next in line was Preston, who hitched up with the marines. By the time I was a senior in Lake City, California, a town so tiny that our high school graduating class numbered only fifteen, my brothers assumed that I would join up too, despite my father's hopes that I might break the mold and follow the path he'd laid out by enrolling me in the Mormon seminary I had been attending since ninth grade. My brothers were right. I joined the army in September of 1999, and was assigned to Black Knight Troop, a mechanized armor unit whose sixty-five men were spread across three platoons: Red, White, and Blue. In military jargon, Black Knight belonged to the four-thousand-man 4th Brigade Combat Team, which itself was part of the twenty-thousand-man 4th Infantry Division. In laymen's terms, what that boiled down to was that I was a tiny cog nestled deep inside the world's largest and most sophisticated war machine. It also meant that I was part of the very same infantry division in which my dad had served. My first deployment was to Kosovo, where we performed peacekeeping duties and saw very little action. But following the attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001, I volunteered to go to Iraq. After a fifteen-month detour through Korea, I found myself commanding an M1A1 armored tank in Habbaniyah, an area about fifty miles west of Baghdad that sits directly between Ramadi and Fallujah. There we spent the better part of 2004 battling hard-core Al Qaeda fighters who specialized in improvised explosives. We took an average of roughly one IED strike per day. At the end of that first Iraq deployment, we were sent back to Colorado and the entire unit was reclassified from heavy armor to light reconnaissance so that we could start preparing for the type of fighting we'd eventually be facing in Afghanistan. As part of that transition, I was shipped off to school to learn how to be a cavalry scout. Eleven months later, in June of 2006, we were back in Iraq, this time in a place called Salman Pak, about twenty miles south of Baghdad along a broad bend of the Tigris River and not far from a notorious military installation rumored to serve as a keystone of Saddam Hussein's biological and chemical weapons program. It was also a hotbed of extremist militia, and they did their best to make our lives as miserable as possible. This was where my new training really began to kick in. A cavalry scout is generally thought to function as the eyes and ears of a commander during battle. But in fact, a scout's role extends quite a bit further. We refer to ourselves as "jacks-of-all-trades, masters of none," and we are trained to have a working familiarity with-quite literally-every job in the army. We are experts in reconnaissance, countersurveillance, and navigation, but we're also extremely comfortable with all aspects of radio and satellite communications. We know how to assemble and deploy three-man hunter/killer teams. We're pretty good at blowing things up using mines and high explosives. We can function as medics, vehicle mechanics, and combat engineers. And we have a thorough understanding of every single weapons system, from a 9-mm handgun to a 120-mm howitzer. Many soldiers find it challenging to master such an eclectic skill set. So it was odd that it all came so easily to me. Prior to the military, I found school to be quite difficult, especially when it came to abstract ideas. But these new disciplines came to me so instinctively that it was almost disturbing. Regardless of whether it was small-unit tactics or maneuvering an entire company's worth of armor, the logic seemed inherently obvious. What's more, I loved every aspect of being a scout-although I had a particular knack for something called "react-to-contact" drills, which involved coming up with a combat plan on the spur of the moment as the shit was hitting the fan. There were two things, however, that didn't come easily at all. The first had to do with the position in which we found ourselves in Iraq, where we were consigned to a reactive role, and where we found ourselves bound by strict rules of engagement, or ROEs, that prevented us from shooting first-which meant that we were usually able to return fire only when attacked. I found this intolerable not only from a tactical standpoint but also at a psychological level. And to compensate, I developed an unorthodox style of leadership that hinged on provoking a reaction from the enemy. When I was leading an armored convoy, for example, I would often order my tank driver to abruptly switch lanes, taking the entire column down a city street directly against the flow of traffic, forcing oncoming vehicles to get out of the way or risk head-on collision. At the extreme end of things, I would even use myself as a decoy. To ferret out snipers, for example, I would climb onto the sponson box, a big rectangular storage compartment on the turret of our lead tank, pretend it was a surfboard, and balance myself out there as we clattered through the streets of Habbaniyah, daring any Iraqi marksmen to take a shot at me and expose their positions. Often these tactics worked well, although they never fully relieved my frustration with the rules of engagement. But as impossible as I found the ROEs, this challenge was dwarfed by a second problem, one that arose as an inevitable consequence of serving in a leadership position in a war zone. What I found harder than anything else, by far, was witnessing one of my guys get killed. The first time this happened to me was just outside of Sadr City, and it involved one of the finest soldiers I've ever known. The summer and fall of 2007 was a bad time for all three frontline platoons in Black Knight Troop. By this point we were several months into a new strategy in which the administration of George W. Bush attempted to stabilize Iraq by sending in five additional brigades while extending the tour of almost every soldier who was already on deployment. While the surge did lead to a drop in overall violence, for reasons that remained mysterious (and which may simply have resulted from bad luck), our troop started getting hit harder and more often. In September, one of White PlatoonÕs team leaders got shot in the back, and although he survived, the bullet severed his spine and paralyzed him from the chest down. Not long after that, White lost two other men to a roadside bomb. And then, in September, Snell got hit. Eric Snell was a thirty-four-year-old scout when I first met him in Iraq, but even as a newly enlisted private he'd managed to stand out as something extraordinary. He had been drafted as an outfielder for the Cleveland Indians straight out of high school in Trenton, New Jersey, but he had decided to forgo a career in the major leagues and instead focus on academics. He got a degree in political science, then moved to South Africa to work as a project manager for AT&T. He could speak French and he'd lived in Italy. He was also good-looking enough that he'd been recruited as a male model, appearing in magazines like Mademoiselle, Modern Bride, and Vibe. Snell had the entire package, and he brought all of it to the task of being the type of soldier that did everything perfectly. You never had to give him an order or an instruction twice. He learned fast and he learned well. He showed initiative and he demonstrated leadership. In fact, that only thing that seemed even remotely off about the guy was the confusion he provoked among the rest of us over why he had signed on as an ordinary soldier in the first place. "For Chrissake, Snell, you got all this education and all these credentials," we'd say to him. "Why the fuck did you come into the army as enlisted?" "Well, yeah, I'm gonna go and be an officer one day," was his response. "But first I want to know what it's like to be a soldier." That impressed us too. He was promoted to sergeant two years after he enlisted, far ahead of his peers. Just over two weeks later, on September 18, 2007, me and him and two other guys were ordered to perform overwatch just outside of Sadr City on a group of Iraqi soldiers who were setting up concrete barriers to block suicide bombers. White Platoon had been on duty for most of that morning and our captain had ordered Red to relieve them-an idea that me and my platoon sergeant deemed unwise, because if there were any snipers in the area, they now knew our pattern of movement. Our objections were overruled, so me and Snell started setting up our perimeter security. I was leaning inside the Humvee, coordinating on the radio with another platoon on the other side of the battle space, and Snell was standing right beside me in back of the vehicle with just his head exposed, when a sniper from across the way got him. The bullet came in just beneath the lip of his helmet, went through his right eye, and blew out the back of his head. As soon as I looked down and saw him lying on the ground, I knew he was dead. It was the first time I'd seen one of my own guys get killed. Up to that point, I'd been convinced that there was some sort of connection between how good you were and what happened to you in the theater of battle. But after watching Snell get assassinated like that, I realized that one of the fundamental truths about war is that horrible things can-and often will-happen to anybody, even to a soldier who has everything dialed to perfection. In the days that followed, I found myself wrestling with the implications of this. While you could strive to be your best, and while you could demand that everyone under you adhered to those standards, the reality was that in the end, none of this might make a rat's ass of difference-even for an ace like Snell. When you lose a man like that, it can fuel a sense of resignation that can be totally debilitating. If there is no causal link between merit and destiny-if everything on the battlefield boils down to nothing more than a lottery-what's the point of bothering to hone your skills or cultivate excellence? The loss can create a practical problem too. When a soldier as good as Snell gets drilled through the brain, even if you want to try to replace him, how could you ever find someone to fill his shoes? As it turned out, however, the rotten luck of losing Snell wound up having a silver lining to it because it triggered the arrival of a soldier who was destined to become my right-hand man in Afghanistan. A man who would provide the foundation of what Red Platoon was to become, and what it would later accomplish during its trial by fire in Afghanistan. About a month after Snell died, a batch of new replacements arrived in Iraq from Fort Carson, just outside of Colorado Springs, to fill the ranks of our dead. Whenever a surge of soldiers arrived, the sergeants from all three platoons would size up the new guys and then haggle over how to divvy them up. These assessment-and-bargaining sessions were often intense because the outcome would have a big impact on the quality of each platoon. And the criteria on which everything hinged basically boiled down to our greatest pastime: platoon-on-platoon football. Ray Didinger, a sportswriter who covered the NFL for more than twenty-five years, once said that football is the "truest" team game because nothing happens if all the players aren't performing their roles to perfection. "Everyone has to contribute on every single play," he argued. "You could have the guys up front all do everything exactly the way they're supposed to; but if one guy breaks down-if he doesn't get the play right or goes in the wrong direction-then the whole play falls apart." That's not a bad summary of small-unit military tactics either-especially when you consider that football is all about assaulting another team's territory, then holding that ground against a series of counterassaults. Plus, and this is Didinger again, "football is also a violent game and the guys who play it have to accept that fact." Maybe that's why we bonded so deeply with the game-especially in Red Platoon, where we took it with such hyperseriousness that we literally went for years without losing a single platoon-on-platoon matchup. Brad Larson was a recruit from Chambers, Nebraska, a town whose population (288) was almost as tiny as the miniscule spot where I'd come from. He had jug-handle ears that kicked out from the sides of his head, cartoonishly thick eyebrows, and almost nothing to suggest that he possessed the sort of athletic prowess we were looking for in Red Platoon. So when we wound up getting stuck with him, I initially made a point of ignoring the guy and saying as little to him as possible, despite the fact that he was serving as the driver of my Humvee. Aside from "go left" and "turn right," I don't think I directed a single word to him for more than two weeks. As it turned out, Larson had played free safety at the junior college he'd attended in Nebraska before joining the army. But as we discovered after finally condescending to allow him on the field during one of our platoon-on-platoon games, he could play just about anywhere because he was so astonishingly fast. Even more impressive was his uncanny sense of vision. Whenever the quarterback drew back his arm to throw, Larson knew exactly where the ball was heading. Except for one guy who had a weird sidearm throw that was almost impossible to read, Larson could figure out where the ball was headed just by looking at the quarterback's eyes and the angle of his forearm. And then, thanks to his ferocious speed, he was able to make a beeline for that spot and destroy whoever was the target. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • THE
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER
  • The only comprehensive, firsthand account of the fourteen-hour firefight at the Battle of Keating in Afghanistan by Medal of Honor recipient Clinton Romesha, for readers of
  • Black Hawk Down
  • by Mark Bowden and
  • Lone Survivor
  • by Marcus Luttrell.
  • “‘It doesn't get better.’ To us, that phrase nailed one of the essential truths, maybe even the essential truth, about being stuck at an outpost whose strategic and tactical vulnerabilities were so glaringly obvious to every soldier who had ever set foot in that place that the name itself—Keating—had become a kind of backhanded joke.”
  • In 2009, Clinton Romesha of Red Platoon and the rest of the Black Knight Troop were preparing to shut down Command Outpost (COP) Keating, the most remote and inaccessible in a string of bases built by the US military in Nuristan and Kunar in the hope of preventing Taliban insurgents from moving freely back and forth between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Three years after its construction, the army was finally ready to concede what the men on the ground had known immediately: it was simply too isolated and too dangerous to defend.    On October 3, 2009, after years of constant smaller attacks, the Taliban finally decided to throw everything they had at Keating. The ensuing fourteen-hour battle—and eventual victory—cost eight men their lives.
  • Red Platoon
  • is the riveting firsthand account of the Battle of Keating, told by Romesha, who spearheaded both the defense of the outpost and the counterattack that drove the Taliban back beyond the wire and received the Medal of Honor for his actions.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Outstanding retelling of a terrible event

Red Platoon, like all such books of the USA's recent conflicts, was a tough read. I expect the prior generation had much the same feeling regarding books about the Vietnam War. Perhaps I simply know too many men and women who've fought in these conflicts. Either way, the books is fantastic.

Red Platoon first introduces the NCOs and officers of the platoon. Most of them were veterans of either Iraq of Afghanistan already, though few had been assigned to the same unit prior to being sent to COP Keating. COP Keating is accurately described as a wretched folly, mainly because of its completely indefensible position. When the members of Red Platoon arrive, ostensibly to shut down the base, they immediately realize their predicament.

Constant harassing by the Taliban confirmed the platoon's worst fears. They were literally vulnerable from every angle, and being at the bottom of the valley allowed the insurgents to target them with almost no risk of harm themselves. Red Platoon, along with White and Blue Platoons, settled into a sort of rhythm. They came to regard the steady attacks as just part of the routine of COP Keating. However, when a determined, large Taliban force some 300-strong decided to assault the outpost directly, it came as a terrible surprise. The men of Keating were outnumbered nearly 5:1, and the enemy applied the lessons they'd learned from all their minor attacks to focus on the defensive positions. The sudden attack put even these professional soldiers on their heels. The immediate collapse of the allied Afghan forces aided the enemy greatly. Once the insurgents penetrated the base itself, the men of Keating had to fall back to the Alamo.

This is not an easy read in terms of the subject matter. The almost clinical recounting pulls no punches. There is proper scorn heaped on those who established the outpost in the first place, especially for the reasons noted by the author. The situation regarding support and supply for the remote outpost makes it clear that the men of Keating were all but on their own. The thought is rather chilling, and one can hardly imagine that feeling. The author relates the last moments of many of those who were killed, some by snipers, some by heavy firepower concentrated by large numbers of Taliban.

The book is a fast read, but it's one to slow down intentionally while reading to absorb the impact of each stage of the battle. As an account of the events that culminated in the author receiving the Medal of Honor, this is a wonderful book for military supporters and those with loved ones in the military.
87 people found this helpful
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Best Military Book in Ages, A+

Fantastic book that is incredibly well done. If you have ever been in the military you will laugh out loud at some of the sections when they are stateside forming the unit. Once the battle begins you can't put the book down. I recommend going online and viewing maps/images of COP Keating to understand just how horrible their tactical situation was. A+++, best military book I have read in ages.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Best Military Book in Ages, A+

Fantastic book that is incredibly well done. If you have ever been in the military you will laugh out loud at some of the sections when they are stateside forming the unit. Once the battle begins you can't put the book down. I recommend going online and viewing maps/images of COP Keating to understand just how horrible their tactical situation was. A+++, best military book I have read in ages.
6 people found this helpful
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Brave warriors all

I had the good fortune of reading Jake Tapper’s “The Outpost: An Untold Story of American Valor”, which provides an overview of the operation described here.
Combat Outpost Keating shouldn’t have existed. Even a civilian could see that the position was poorly sited and ultimately indefensible. It sat deep in enemy dominated territory. Resupply was difficult.
Yet the Americans assigned to defend this post rose to the occasion when the 50 or so of them were attacked by more than 300 Taliban.
The 14 hour against-the-odds battle cost the lives of 8 Americans. The courageous actions of the author, Clinton Romesha, were recognized by the awarding of the Medal Of Honor.
Tapper’s book set the stage by providing an overview of the battle itself and the strategy responsible for it happening. Romesha fills in the details from a closer and far more gut-wrenching perspective.

When I was very young, like all young boys of the time, myself as a great warrior in the making. Having grown up, I learned that few people are warriors, much less great, heroic warriors. Clinton Romesha and his comrades, living and dead, were great warriors in this small, but historic battle.

This is a significant addition to any library of militaria. More importantly it provides a better understanding of and respect for the brave men who leave the comfort of their homes behind to defend our nation’s interests. Brave men, so very brave.

Jerry
5 people found this helpful
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One of the most intense books I have ever read ...

One of the most intense books I have ever read. I couldn't put it down. The author put me right in the middle of the most intensive fire fight ever put into print . A most unforgettable and well written book. Ranks right up there with Sympathy for the Devil as far as writing goes. A book that must be read to truly understand what really what happens in combat under fire and gives new meaning to the phrase " fog of war ". For those who have never faced a firefight or combat will come away with new understanding of our men in action against overwhelming odds and never give up. Remarkable. I sent a copy of this to my Son, a decorated Marine..
4 people found this helpful
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Gritty, Astonishing, Heroic, an Instant Classic!

This book by Medal of Honor recipient Clinton Romesha is incredible in every way. It depicts how a group of orinary men, faced with doing an impossible task in simultaneously defending and dismantling Fort Keating in Nuristan, Afghanistan, do extraordinary things. It's one of the best books written on the asymmetrical warfare in Afghanistan, and the ludicrity of governmental decisions to place them in a fishbowl deathtrap. I high recommend this book! Buy it!
2 people found this helpful
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This is an American story of valor

Red Platoon is a book that all of America should read. Beautifully written by Clinton Romesha, it is the story of the Battle of Kamdesh on that faithful day on October 3, 2009, when 350 Taliban-led insurgents attacked Combat Post Keating and the 50+ soldiers manning that post. This is the story of young men, from all over America, who are brought together, trained well and sent in harm’s way. The writing is graphic and intense and shows the valor of these United States Cavalry soldiers. Death and injury occurs so quickly in combat and in spite of causalities’, these soldiers fought on and on during this 13-hour battle.

Each war has its books. For my war it was Phil Caputo’s Rumor of War and Jim Webb’s Fields of Fire among others. For my son’s war it will be Red Platoon and Sebastian Junger’s War. At least 184 books have been written about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, yet Red Platoon holds a very powerful place at the top of that list.

When my memory goes back to 2009, I wondered at the time why would the U.S. Army place a combat post or forward operating base in a valley surrounded by mountains, especially when lacking the appropriate fortifications. The enemy was given excellent cover and positions from which to fire into the post.

Eight Americans died violent deaths that day and 27 men were wounded. Over 150 Taliban were killed. When Romesha mentioned each new death it brought pain to this reader, knowing the anguish of family and friends when their doorbell would ring. For the majority of Americans when reading about this battle in 2009 probably simply went on to other news, as this was an event that had no meaning to them. For the 1% of America that served or were serving in the military, it meant everything.

The story of Red Platoon was difficult to put down. Perhaps it was even difficult for Romesha to write, as he had to relive that day. Former Staff Sergeant Romesha fought with valor throughout the battle. He showed leadership, especially when the Taliban crossed the wire and combat was in close quarters. His valor was eventually recognized with President Obama presenting him the Medal of Honor on February 11, 2013.

Read this book and you will feel proud of these American soldiers. As Orwell said “People sleep peacefully in their beds at night only because rough men stand read to do violence on their behalf.”
2 people found this helpful
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Just a great account of men at war. Terrific!

I don't know how to describe this book. First off, it is a fantastic read.

Clinton Romesha won a Congressional Medal of Honor winner, put together a history of one of the largest battles in the Afghan War at a remote fire base.

From the first few pages, this book grabbed me with its sensational account of the men and the battle. I had a hard time believing this was not a novel, but it is written as a non-fiction account.

I started this book, and couldn't wait to continue the book. I have read a few different accounts of several different battles and skirmishes in Afghanistan, both fiction and non-fiction, and this book may truly be the best account I have read. It is gripping, tough and real. Romesha has written one of the best books of war I have come across in a long time.

Highly recommended.
2 people found this helpful
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the best of this genre that I've read

Exceptional book that far exceeded my expectations. Very well written account of combat and brotherhood, the best of this genre that I've read. Well researched. Although he was awarded the Medal of Honor, Romesha almost downplays his own role. He highlights the role other played in the battle, and does an especially good job of crediting and describing the role of the supporting forces e.g. USAF and Army helicopter pilots. Romesha has done us all another tremendous service by writing this book. Highly recommend.
1 people found this helpful
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The details in this book are so vivid that you feel like you're right there in the platoon standing along side ...

What strikes you in reading this book is that it's written by the man who lived it and whose actions resulted in him receiving the Medal of Honor.
The details in this book are so vivid that you feel like you're right there in the platoon standing along side of the Sergeant as the Taliban attack with vastly superior numbers while the American troops, enormously outnumbered and outflanked, manage to hold them off for an indeterminably long period of time, and are even able to counter attack them.
On one hand This book shows the stupidity of those who set up this base camp in a valley that easily allowed the Taliban to control the high ground above them, yet these men were able to defend an indefensible position even though they were virtually trapped by a force that vastly outnumbered the defenders in this situation. And on the other hand it shows the bravery and self-sacrifice of every man who fought with Sgt.Romesha.
In reading this it's obvious that this man is so modest that while he must have been basically almost a one-man fighting force, he gives the credit to everyone who was with him and seeks no Glory for himself. In reading this book, the description of battle doesn't get any more real then the way this author wrote it.
1 people found this helpful