Огромное спасибо за перевод!
Список использованной литературы:
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS
Afghan Guerrilla Warfare—In the Words of the Mujahideen Fighters, by Ali Ahmad Jalali and Lester W. Grau, published 2001 by MBI Publishing Company (originally published as The Other Side of the Mountain by the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Development Command).
Afghanistan’s Endless War, by Larry Goodson, published 2001 by the University of Wash-ington Press.
The Bear Went Over the Mountain—Soviet Combat Tactics in Afghanistan,by Lester W. Grau, published 1998 by Frank Cass.
Black Hawk Down, by Mark Bowden, published 1999 by Atlantic Monthly Press.
Brave Men, Dark Waters—The Untold Story of the Navy SEALs, by Orr Kelly, published 1993 by Pocket Books.
Delta Force, by Colonel Charlie A. Beckwith (Ret.) and Donald Knox, published 2000 by Avon Books (originally published in 1983).
Ghost Wars, by Steve Coll, published 2004 by The Penguin Press.
Inside Delta Force, by Eric L. Haney, published 2003 by Dell (first published in hardcover in 2002 by Delacorte Press).
Jihad—The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia, by Ahmed Rashid, published in 2003 by Penguin (first published in the United States in 2002 by Yale University Press.)
Killing Pablo, by Mark Bowden, published 2002 by Penguin Books.
The Mission, by Dana Priest, published 2003 by W.W. Norton and Company, Inc.
Stumbling Bear—Soviet Military Performance in Afghanistan, by Scott R. McMichael, published 1991 by Brassey’s.
Taliban, by Ahmed Rashid, published 2001 by Yale University Press.
Weapons and Tactics of the Soviet Army, by David C. Isby, published 1988 by Jane’s Publishing Company Limited.
NEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICAL ARTICLES
“The ‘Revolution in Military Affairs’ has an Enemy: Politics,” by Michael Catanzaro, published October 1, 2001, in The American Enterprise.
“The War’s Bloodiest Battle,” by Sean D. Naylor, published 18 March, 2002, in Army Times.
“Intel Take From Enemy at Shah-e-Kot Great, MIs say,” by Sean D. Naylor, published 25 March, 2002, in Army Times.
“In Shah-e-Kot, Apaches Save the Day—And Their Reputations,” by Sean D. Naylor, pub-lished 25 March, 2002, in Army Times.
“Anaconda Winds Down,” by Sean D. Naylor, published 25 March, 2002, in Army Times.
“Deadly Find,” by Sean D. Naylor, published 1 April, 2002, in Army Times.
“In Search of Casualties,” by Sean D. Naylor, published 15 April, 2002, in Army Times.
“What We Learned from Anaconda,” by Sean D. Naylor, published 29 July, 2002, in Army Times.
“Pentagon Faces Transformation,” by Tom Bowman, published March 13, 2001, in The Baltimore Sun.
“Al Qaida’s Uzbek Bodyguards,” by Owais Tohid, published September 28, 2004, in The Christian Science Monitor.
“Wolfowitz: More Resources, Better Management Keys to Defense Transformation,” by Hunter Keeter, published August 9, 2001, in Defense Daily.
“Left In Dark For Most Anaconda Planning, Air Force Opens New Probe,” by Elaine Grossman, published October 3, 2002, in Inside The Pentagon.
“Losing the Peace?” by Michael Massing, published May 13, 2002, in The Nation.
“A Different War—Is the Army Becoming Irrelevant?” by Peter J. Boyer, published July 1, 2002, in The New Yorker.
“Special Forces OD Alpha-555,” by Lance M. Bacon, published September 2003 in Soldier of Fortune.
“The Infiltrator: Ali Mohamed Served in the U.S. Army—and Bin Laden’s Circle,” by Peter Waldman, published November 26, 2001, in The Wall Street Journal.
“Bravery and Breakdowns in a Ridgetop Battle,” by Bradley Graham, published May 24, 2002, in The Washington Post.
“A Wintry Ordeal at 10,000 Feet,” by Bradley Graham, published May 25, 2002, in The Washington Post.
“U.S. Concludes Bin Laden Escaped at Tora Bora Fight,” by Barton Gellman and Thomas E. Ricks, published April 17, 2002 in The Washington Post.
OFFICIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS AND DOCUMENTS
Afghanistan and the Future of Warfare: Implications for Army and Defense Policy, by Stephen Biddle, published November 2002 by the Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania.
“Ali Mohamed: The Defendant Who Did Not Go to Trial,” by Judy Aita, published May 16, 2003, by U.S. Department of State International Information Programs; accessed on the Internet at
http://usinfo.state.gov/regional/af/sec ... 051502.htm.
The Army of Excellence—the Development of the 1980s Army, by John L. Romjue, pub-lished 1993 by Office of the Command Historian, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.
“Afghanistan—Fire Support for Operation Anaconda,” by Robert H. McElroy, published September-October 2002 in Field Artillery.
COMACC Sight Picture—Joint Air-Ground Operations (a December 2002 press release from the U.S. Air Force’s Air Combat Command).
Emerging Lessons, Insights and Observations—Operation Enduring Freedom, published 2002 by the Center for Army Lessons Learned, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
“Enduring Freedom: An Air Force Combat Controller’s Experience,” briefing by Technical Sergeant James Hotaling, September 2002. Text accessed at
http://www.afa.org/media/scripts/afsoc.pdf.
“Lessons Learned From A Light Infantry Company During Operation Anaconda,” by Captain Nelson G. Kraft, published Summer 2002 in Infantry, the official magazine of the U.S. Army Infantry Center and School, Fort Benning, Georgia.
Infantry Rifle Platoon and Squad—Army Field Manual 7-8, published by the U.S. Army.
Information Operations—Army Field Manual 100-6, published by the U.S. Army.
“Investigation Report for Suspected Friendly Fire Incident Involving AC-130 Spectre Gunship and U.S./Afghan Forces Near Gardez, On or About 02 March 02.” The Central Command investigation; redacted version released November 2002 and obtained via the Freedom of In-formation Act.
JSOTF-N Command Briefing, a PowerPoint slide briefing produced by Task Force Dagger.
“SIGINT Marines Help Fight War on Terrorism in Afghanistan,” Intelligence Community Newsletter, published February 2003 by Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps Intelligence Department.
“Texas14 Monogram of Activities in Support of Operation Enduring Freedom (12 October 2001–26 March 2002),” an unpublished paper by Captain Glenn Thomas.
“10th Mountain Division Observations—Operation Enduring Freedom.”
“The Milani Report,” by Colonel Andrew N. Milani, the official U.S. Special Operations Command chronology of the Takur Ghar battle, released to me in heavily redacted form.
“Operation Anaconda,” briefing by Lieutenant Colonel Pete Blaber, given to many different military audiences.
“Operation Anaconda” CJTF Mountain Command Briefing.
“Operation Anaconda—CJTF Mountain C2 Plans,” a briefing by Major Francesca Ziemba.
Operation Anaconda: Command and Confusion in Joint Warfare, an unpublished paper by Major Mark Davis, June 2004.
Operation Anaconda—Lessons for Joint Operations, by Richard L. Kugler, Michael Baranick and Hans Binnendijk, published September 2003 by National Defense University, Washington, D.C.
Operations—Army Field Manual 3-0, published by the U.S. Army.
Pitfalls of Technology: A Case Study of the Battle on Takur Ghar Mountain, Afghanistan, an unpublished paper by Colonel Andrew N. Milani.
“Special Operations Forces in Operation Anaconda, 1-14 March 2002,” a briefing by Dr. Richard Stewart, U.S. Army Center of Military History.
“TF 1-187 IN AAR: Operation Anaconda,” unpublished “Memorandum for the Commander” dated March 21, 2002.
10thMountain Division (Light Infantry)—Operation Enduring Freedom, Afghanistan, Joint
Center for Lessons Learned Final Report, published June 6, 2003, by Joint Forces Com-mand.
Victory in Papua, by Samuel Milner, published 1957 by the Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the [U.S.] Army
Weapon of Choice—ARSOF in Afghanistan, by Charles H. Briscoe, Richard L. Kiper, James A. Schroder, and Kalev I. Sepp, published 2004 by the Combat Studies Institute Press, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.