The dust of Uruzgan / Fred Smith.

By: Smith, Fred, 1970- [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Crows Nest, NSW : Allen & Unwin, 2016Copyright date: ©2016Description: xii, 399 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly colour), map, portraits (chiefly colour) ; 24 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781760292218Other title: Dust of Uruzgan : the first comprehensive on-the-ground account of Australia's mission in Afghanistan : making sense of that country and that war, one song at a timeSubject(s): Smith, Fred, 1970- | Australia -- Armed Forces | Afghan War, 2001- -- Campaigns -- Afghanistan -- Uruzgan | Afghanistan -- Military relations -- Australia | Diplomats -- Australia -- Biography | Musicians -- Australia -- Biography | Afghan War, 2001- -- Participation, Australian | Military assistance, Australian -- Afghanistan | Uruzgan (Afghanistan) -- History, Military | Afghanistan -- Military relations -- Australia | Afghanistan -- History -- 2001-Genre/Form: Personal narratives. DDC classification: 958.1047 | 327.092 Summary: Fred Smith has been described as 'Australia's secret weapon' in international diplomacy. As a career diplomat, he served in Afghanistan during the time Australian Defence Forces were engaged in our 'longest war' against Taliban insurgents. It was Fred's second career as a musician that came to the fore in Uruzgan province, where his guitar served as a bridge not only to the Australian troops, but also to the people of this war-torn region. His song about the death of Australian soldier Ben Ranaudo, 'The Dust of Uruzgan,' captured the hearts of many serving in Afghanistan and was recoded by Lee Kernaghan on his bestselling Tribute to Anzac album. Now, with Australian forces out of Afghanistan, this book is the first comprehensive insider account of Australia's deep involvement there. Part memoir, part history, part anecdote, it is set against a subsistence agricultural province with a 5% literacy rate, in which tribal leaders colluded and conspired against one another in a society where trust had been smashed by 35 years of brutal warfare. The cast of characters includes charismatic tribal leaders, corrupt Provincial Governors, domineering warlords, bustling US colonels, and courteous interpreters, all of whom Fred worked with daily during his unique mission...
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Adult Nonfiction
958.1047 SMI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111067623379

Fred Smith has been described as 'Australia's secret weapon' in international diplomacy. As a career diplomat, he served in Afghanistan during the time Australian Defence Forces were engaged in our 'longest war' against Taliban insurgents. It was Fred's second career as a musician that came to the fore in Uruzgan province, where his guitar served as a bridge not only to the Australian troops, but also to the people of this war-torn region. His song about the death of Australian soldier Ben Ranaudo, 'The Dust of Uruzgan,' captured the hearts of many serving in Afghanistan and was recoded by Lee Kernaghan on his bestselling Tribute to Anzac album. Now, with Australian forces out of Afghanistan, this book is the first comprehensive insider account of Australia's deep involvement there. Part memoir, part history, part anecdote, it is set against a subsistence agricultural province with a 5% literacy rate, in which tribal leaders colluded and conspired against one another in a society where trust had been smashed by 35 years of brutal warfare. The cast of characters includes charismatic tribal leaders, corrupt Provincial Governors, domineering warlords, bustling US colonels, and courteous interpreters, all of whom Fred worked with daily during his unique mission...

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