Mark Perry is a military and foreign affairs analyst whose articles have appeared in the Nation, Foreign Policy, Washington Post, and Politico. Perry lives in Arlington, Virginia.
"A 'tour de force' of insights into the senior-most decision-making
surrounding the critical political-military events of the last
quarter of a century. Author Mark Perry's perceptive insight and
years' worth of professional experience yields a highly accurate
description regarding the personality traits and relationships
between the Presidents and their respective senior military leaders
in the years following the Cold War to present day. Deft prose adds
readability to an incredibly complex set of issues making this book
difficult to put down until complete. A must read."
--Lt General David A. Deptula, USAF (Ret), Dean, The Mitchell
Institute of Aerospace Studies
"A book that does much to explain quirks of foreign policy,
providing a military context for them-and one that makes one wonder
who's really in charge."
--Kirkus
"In unflinching detail, Mark Perry takes us behind the scenes of
America's often tense civil-military relationship. The public and
the national security community will want to ponder carefully the
implications of this fascinating and engaging narrative."
--Richard H. Kohn, Professor Emeritus of History and Peace, War,
and Defense, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; former
Chief of Air Force History, USAF
"Once again Mark Perry has produced an extremely well-written and
thought-provoking book. War is an extension of politics, and this
book is a must-read for anyone interested in the critical and
sometimes controversial role that senior generals and admirals have
played in American foreign policy since the end of the Cold
War."
--David B. Crist, PhD, executive director, Joint History Office,
Joint Chiefs of Staff
"This is a hard-hitting insider's walk through the corridors of
American power. Mark Perry marshals decades of interviews and
applies his keen journalistic insight to grapple with a question
that all citizens need to ask: Why can't the most powerful nation
in the world achieve its strategic policy aims when it goes to war?
He does a great service by explaining in clear, human terms the
failures and the limits of American military power. A must
read."--David E. Johnson, author of Fast Tanks Heavy Bombers:
Innovation in the U.S. Army, 1917-1945
"When it comes to America's senior military leaders, Mark Perry has
a gift for exposing the truth. The Pentagon's Wars is a historical
narrative of enormous value to Americans trying to understand the
disastrous military interventions of the last twenty-five
years."
--Colonel (ret) Douglas Macgregor, US Army, PhD, author of Margin
of Victory
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