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Operation Snakebite: The Explosive True Story of an Afghan Desert Siege (Unabridged)
 
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Operation Snakebite: The Explosive True Story of an Afghan Desert Siege (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Stephen Grey (Author, Narrator)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 11 hours and 48 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: AudioGO Ltd.
  • Audible Release Date: 12 Jan 2011
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B004J4YWOS
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Southern Afghanistan: reporter Stephen Grey is embedded with B Company, 2 Yorks, during Operation Snakebite. The mission: to take the stronghold of Musa Qala, deep in hostile Taliban territory.

Dropped in the thick of fighting, Grey provides a bombs-and-bullets glimpse of combat chaos as British, American and Afghan forces struggle to secure a town crucial to the drug trade. Amidst the flames and flying bullets, soldiers fought to simply stay alive, let alone take a dusty desert citadel.

PUBLISHER'S NOTE: This audiobook contains some explicit scenes/language.

©2009 Stephen Grey; (P)2011 AudioGO Ltd

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
74 of 76 people found the following review helpful
By Pedros
Format:Hardcover
Fortunate enough to get a copy of this book a couple of days ago in Hatchards. Unable to put down until finished. If you like war accounts then this is a trully gripping account of another fierce, brutal firefight with lives torn apart. Bloody and nasty battle worn soldiers getting down to a job that had to be done. Operation Snakebite is everything a reader wants from a war book. Sadly though this is not fictional and like so many accounts of a war against the Taliban the outcome is always so unpredictable. Many soldiers come home without colleagues and some without limbs. If you enjoy the book as much as I have please ensure you make a donation to help for heroes as these accounts could not be written without our boys and the enormous courage they have.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Operation Snakebite 30 April 2009
Format:Hardcover
Stephen Grey's book gives an excellent, sympathetic impression of what it is like to be at the 'sharp end' of operations in Afghanistan - and a severely critical view of Kharzai's government ! It's a rattling good read - and has excellent maps and graphics to explain the complications of modern warfare. If you want to find out what it's like to be a soldier in Afghanistan, with all its frustrations, then this is the book for you.
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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful
A stonking good read 11 April 2009
Format:Hardcover
For those who enjoy the "war book" genre, this is a stonking good read. It is finely crafted, with a well-structured narrative and a good mixture of characterisation, description and fact to keep the reader turning the pages to the very end. It also provides an account of - as the blurb puts it - "an at times horrifying story of a war which has gone largely unnoticed back home."

The reason it has gone "largely unnoticed", of course, is that the MoD not only avoided telling anyone about it, but put a security block on the official publication of details, which left the MoD website devoid of information, with journalists contacting the Taleban on their mobile telephones to get details of the operation.

Courtesy of Grey, we now know that there were several reasons for the MoD's reticence, one being the co-incidental visit of Gordon Brown to Camp Bastion. With the largest operation then to have been mounted in Helmand Province and with the outcome far from certain, officials were concerned that news of the operation might detract from the prime minister's visit, especially if there were casualties.

But the major reason, Grey tells us, was that both the British and the Americans had decided that this was to be an I/O - an "information operation" - otherwise known as a propaganda exercise. The intention was to convey to the outside world that this was an operation led by the Afghanis, assisted by coalition forces.

As a result, we had the bizarre scene of the "capture" of the town centre being photographed by the MoD's Defence Combat Camera Team, showing jubilant Afghani troops raising their national flag. To achieve this, British and US forces, who had fought their way into the town, after periods of intense combat, were forced to hide their vehicles and keep out of sight for the fiction to be perpetrated.

The fighting by the coalition forces, the lead up to the operation and the political background, are well-described by Grey, leaving the reader under no illusions that this major operation was almost entirely a coalition effort, made possible by the injection of massive US forces, including elements of the US 82nd Airborne Division, which paved the way for the assault with a daring, if risky, helicopter assault.

Behind this operation are the political machinations, both Afghani and military, which lends a conspiratorial overtone to the book, lifting it above the ordinary "war book", giving it more depth than would be expected from this genre.

With a highly informative account of the history of Helmand to open the book, this makes this a rounded narrative, which culminates in a short analytical chapter which tries to set the operation in the broader context of the counter-insurgency operation in Afghanistan.

Of special interest is Grey's detail of the number of mine strikes suffered by British forces, one of which he witnessed, giving a moving and personal edge to the account, which benefited from Grey's presence as an embedded reporter and his personal knowledge and friendships with some of his subjects. He also notes that the King's Royal Hussars were equipped with Mastiffs, with the squadron taking fourteen IED hits, suffering no serious injuries - although does not link the two issues.

There is also a graphic and detailed account of the intervention of USAF AC-130H Spectres in the final stages of the assault on Musa Qala, a role which Grey describes as "decisive", confirming the utility of these airborne gunships as a battle-winning weapon - something of which British procurement officials should take note.

If there is a small criticism, Grey is perhaps over-reliant on the opinions of those he interviews - of which there are an impressive number, in excess of 200. Despite his access to top-ranking military officials, he makes very little use of them - and we thus do not see enough of Grey's own thoughts in terms of evaluating their responses. Perhaps that is for another book.

That notwithstanding, this is a well-written historical narrative, in which Grey the journalist excels, aided by superb maps, illustrations and photographs. It is a valuable and important addition to the growing library of works beginning to emerge from the Afghani campaign and is an essential read for anyone who seeks a better understanding of what is indeed "a war which has gone largely unnoticed back home."
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Stephen Greys Operation Snake Bite
I enjoyed this book, I have read many other accounts of the conflict in Afghanistan, but this was a little more in depth. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Jalmo
Afghanistan as it is
We must all know someone who is there, was there or is going there. Being a Cold War Warrior I was not trained to this intensity. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Portlander
one of the best to date
from the start to the end it is hard to put this book down , it is so griping i hope another will follow
Published 23 months ago by Jmg Mcdonald
accurate depiction of what really happened on that mission!
Great book! I was apart of the mission that held place in Musa Qala. It has some small flaws to the story, but for the most part it was accurate. Page 212 mentions my name. Read more
Published on 10 April 2010 by Jasen Daniel Pruitt
Very good book!
I have read a number of books on the war in Afghanistan and this is the first one I've read that talks about the second taking of Musa Qala. Read more
Published on 20 Mar 2010 by S. Kazianis
Operation Snake Bite
I thought that the book was well written and was full of Action and had you on the edge whilst you read it.
Published on 8 Mar 2010 by Keith Blakey
Superb
One of the few books on Afghanistan that takes you into a theatre of war.

Brilliantly written and it makes compelling reading. Read more
Published on 4 Mar 2010 by P. Waller
Operation Snakebite, well written and riviting
This book takes you up close and personal in the military operation in Afghanistan. So well written you can imagine yourself there.
Published on 3 Aug 2009 by Tesa Murray
Just how it is!
A truly excellent narative which tells a soldiers story of just how this latest war is being fought. Read more
Published on 15 July 2009 by P. S. Oakley
snake bite
Amazing account describing the bravery,comradeship sometimes fear and un -ashamed tears shared by a unit in the heart of a battle lasting several days. Read more
Published on 15 Jun 2009 by carol carlo
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