Misplaced Pages

Robin Moore: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 17:27, 18 June 2004 edit66.20.28.21 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 21:11, 18 June 2004 edit undo66.20.28.21 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Robert Lowell Moore Jr.''' or ''Robin Moore'' (1925 - ) is the author of a number of popular non-fiction military histories such as '']'' and police detective novels such as '']'', both of which were made into feature length films. A resident of the United States, Moore is the first and only civilian to be permitted to go through the Special Forces qualifiaction course at ], ]. '''Robert Lowell Moore Jr.''' or ''Robin Moore'' (1925 - ) is the author of a number of popular non-fiction military histories such as '']'' and police detective novels such as '']'', both of which were made into feature length films. A resident of the United States, Moore is the first and only civilian to be permitted to go through the Special Forces qualifiaction course at ], ].


His works reveal a fascination with heroic male figures, supplemented with mysogenistic portrayals of women and political ideological conservatism. His most recent book, '']'' is a non-fiction history of the part played by United States Army Special Forces in a) organizing coordination of U.S. and British air strikes with Afghan warlord militia ground attacks to defeat the ] in ] and b) their efforts to capture ]. The author assigns the Special Forces full credit for the success in defeating the Taliban but no blame for the failure to capture Osama Bin Laden. That failure is blamed on the Central Intelligence Agency, whose agents are characterized as cowardly, pp. 207-208, and the careerism of United States Army Generals, including ] and ], pp. 343-344. The author's contempt for women is evident in his amusement that United States backed ] and former California ], ], raped young brides on their wedding days, pp. 231-232. His political ideological conservatism is evident in his praise for Secretary of Defense ]'s decsion to authorize the use of ], pp. 376-377, and criticisms of U.S. Senator ], pp. 282-284, U.S. Senator ], pp. 316-317, and former President ], p. 400. The author is also highly critical of the ]. His works reveal a fascination with heroic male figures, supplemented with mysogenistic portrayals of women and political ideological conservatism. His most recent book, '']'' is a non-fiction history of the part played by United States Army Special Forces in a) organizing coordination of U.S. and British air strikes with Afghan warlord militia ground attacks to defeat the ] in ] and b) their efforts to capture ]. The author assigns the Special Forces full credit for the success in defeating the Taliban but no blame for the failure to capture Osama Bin Laden. That failure is blamed on the Central Intelligence Agency, whose agents are characterized as cowardly, pp. 207-208, and the careerism of United States Army Generals, including ] and ], pp. 343-344. The author's contempt for women is evident in his amusement that United States backed ] and former California ], ], raped young brides on their wedding days, pp. 231-232. His political ideological conservatism is evident in his praise for Secretary of Defense ]'s decision to authorize the use of ], pp. 376-377, and criticisms of U.S. Senator ], pp. 282-284, U.S. Senator ], pp. 316-317, and former President ], p. 400. The author is also highly critical of the ].

Revision as of 21:11, 18 June 2004

Robert Lowell Moore Jr. or Robin Moore (1925 - ) is the author of a number of popular non-fiction military histories such as The Green Berets and police detective novels such as The French Connection, both of which were made into feature length films. A resident of the United States, Moore is the first and only civilian to be permitted to go through the Special Forces qualifiaction course at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina.

His works reveal a fascination with heroic male figures, supplemented with mysogenistic portrayals of women and political ideological conservatism. His most recent book, The Hunt for Bin Laden: Task Force Dagger is a non-fiction history of the part played by United States Army Special Forces in a) organizing coordination of U.S. and British air strikes with Afghan warlord militia ground attacks to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan and b) their efforts to capture Osama Bin Laden. The author assigns the Special Forces full credit for the success in defeating the Taliban but no blame for the failure to capture Osama Bin Laden. That failure is blamed on the Central Intelligence Agency, whose agents are characterized as cowardly, pp. 207-208, and the careerism of United States Army Generals, including Tommy Franks and Paul T. Mikolashek, pp. 343-344. The author's contempt for women is evident in his amusement that United States backed warlord and former California Hells Angel, Said Jaffar Naderi, raped young brides on their wedding days, pp. 231-232. His political ideological conservatism is evident in his praise for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's decision to authorize the use of torture, pp. 376-377, and criticisms of U.S. Senator John Kerry, pp. 282-284, U.S. Senator Tom Daschle, pp. 316-317, and former President Bill Clinton, p. 400. The author is also highly critical of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.