Ministry of Defeat: The British War in Iraq 2003-2009

Ministry of Defeat: The British War in Iraq 2003-2009

by RichardNorth (Author)

Synopsis

This book presents a damning analysis of Britain's military involvement in the Iraq conflict. Ministry of Defeat is a devastating account of military and strategic incompetence. When Tony Blair insisted that British Armed Forces form part of the invasion of Iraq, little attention was paid as to how this might work out in practice or what the consequences might be. Here we have for the first time a detailed account of just what an abject failure Britain's military intervention in Iraq has been. The British occupation of south eastern Iraq has lasted six years, a period longer than the Second World War. Despite the astonishing bravery of countless individual soldiers the only real success of the British Government has been to hide from view, thanks to catastrophic misjudgements, this has become one of the most humiliating chapters in British Military History. The British Army leaves Iraq in July 2009, ahead of schedule, and the full story of the campaign needs to be told. Richard North presents in considerable detail one of the most painful and lasting legacies of the Blair era.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 280
Edition: 1st ed
Publisher: Continuum
Published: 31 May 2009

ISBN 10: 1441169970
ISBN 13: 9781441169976

Media Reviews
[Ministry of Defeat] is not a descriptive, eyewitness chronicle of events, but an analysis of policy, military tactics and strategy, and their effect on combat troops ... The publication of this book anticipates the withdrawal being presented by politicians and the MoD as the natural consequence of a job well done. - Telegraph & Argus (Bradford). 30 May 2009.
Author presentation of the book in Yorkshire Post (North/York), (East/Hull), (West/Leeds), (South/Sheffield)3 July 2009
Title mention in Tribune, August 2009
'Devastating' - Simon Jenkins, The Guardian
Mention, telegragph.co.uk. 30 May 2009.
'Timely and thought-provoking' - Philip Jacobson, Daily Mail
Mention on Russia Today, July 2009 http: //www.russiatoday.com/Top_News/2009-07-31/british-soldiers-iraq.html
'This forceful and searching analysis of the British military's failings in Iraq provides greater plausibility than anything else put forward to date ... If the important inquest into Britain's questionable performance in Iraq is going to have any impact then those in positions of power should take heed of North's urging that to recognise failure is not to apportion blame, but to prevent it from being repeated. ' - Thomas Harding, Daily Telegraph
'Book of the year ... An admirable investigation of Britain's most rotten ministry, it helps explain the questionable performance of British troops and especially their equipment in Iraq, with tales of incompetence worthy of the trenches.' - Simon Jenkins, Times Literary Supplement
a devastating account of our occupation of southern Iraq. North shows that the MoD's one real triumph was the extent to which it managed to conceal how our six-year occupation, thanks largely to Tony Blair, became one of the most humiliating chapters in the history of the British Army. - Sunday Telegraph--Sanford Lakoff
Author Bio
Christopher Booker was one of the founders of Private Eye and its first editor. He has a weekly column in the Sunday Telegraph and a regular column in The Daily Mail. He has published several books including The Neophiliacs (Harper Collins), The Great Deception, Seven Basic Plots and Scared to Death (all published by Continuum). Richard North is a political analyst who has been a research director in the European Parliament and was formerly a nationally known consultant on public health and food safety. He has co-authored several books with Christopher Booker.