Daniel P. Bolger currently serves as Chief of Staff of the 2d Infantry Division in Korea. His previous assignments include duty as J-5 (Director Strategy & Analysis) in U.S. Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Virginia; command of the 2d Brigade, 2d Infantry Division in Korea; duty as G-3 (operations officer) and Infantry battalion commanderwith the 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell, Kentucky; an earlier assignment as a major with an Infantry battalion in Korea with the 2d Infantry Division; and service from platoon leader through rifle company commander with the 24th Infantry Division, then at Ft. Stewart, Georgia. A graduate of the U.S. Army War College at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania and the U.S. Army Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Bolger also taught at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York. He holds a doctorate in history from the University of Chicago. Presidio Press has also published his books Dragons at War; Americans at War; Savage Peace; the Battle for Hunger Hill; and the military novel Feast of Bones.
“If Bolger is as good a soldier as he is a writer, he may become
the first four-star general to also win a Pulitzer Prize.”
–Booklist
“Infantry conjures many images: uncomfortable conditions, savage
close combat, constant patrols, and the thousand-mile stare. Our
popular media gives the impression that the wonders of precision
weapons can win wars without subjecting the soldiers of modern
militaries to these conditions . . . . The American way of war has
always emphasized sending bullets, not men, a historical structure
that continues in the current force structure. . . . Bolger’s
choice of operations illustrates two key points; first, that modern
warfare has not made the infantry obsolete, and second, even very
contemporary military history can be quite valuable in
contemplating future combat.”
–DR. SHAWN WHETSTONE
Military Heritage
"If Bolger is as good a soldier as he is a writer, he may become
the first four-star general to also win a Pulitzer Prize."
-Booklist
"Infantry conjures many images: uncomfortable conditions, savage
close combat, constant patrols, and the thousand-mile stare. Our
popular media gives the impression that the wonders of precision
weapons can win wars without subjecting the soldiers of modern
militaries to these conditions . . . . The American way of war has
always emphasized sending bullets, not men, a historical structure
that continues in the current force structure. . . . Bolger's
choice of operations illustrates two key points; first, that modern
warfare has not made the infantry obsolete, and second, even very
contemporary military history can be quite valuable in
contemplating future combat."
-DR. SHAWN WHETSTONE
Military Heritage
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