General Sir Richard Shirreff
Autore di War With Russia
Sull'Autore
Fonte dell'immagine: Chatham House
Opere di General Sir Richard Shirreff
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Data di nascita
- 1955-10-21
- Sesso
- male
- Luogo di nascita
- Kenya
Utenti
Recensioni
Liste
Statistiche
- Opere
- 3
- Utenti
- 116
- Popolarità
- #169,721
- Voto
- 2.7
- Recensioni
- 3
- ISBN
- 10
- Lingue
- 3
Most of the action is set in the Baltics, because that's where the author did a lot of his service in various staff posts with NATO. Yet Belarus plays no part, Russian forces are depicted as (mainly) effective, and there is no role for mercenaries. The US President is an idealised Hilary Clinton and David Cameron is unmercifully mocked as well as vilified for the 2010 defence cuts, especially the scrapping of the RAF Nimrod fleet. There is no mention of the United Nations save for some passing mention of the Refugee Agency (so no arguments in the Security Council), and the author is completely silent on what happens to the combatant nations' embassies and diplomatic staff in each others' capitals. Brexit never happened, and in any case political processes and diplomacy amongst allies is completely discounted except where it would impact on the plot.
Shirreff does at least acknowledge that NATO expansion eastwards would be a legitimate concern for Russia.
We are taken inside a lot of meeting rooms for briefings and conferences. The Russian position on first use of nuclear weapons is discussed at length, but eventually nuclear Armageddon is avoided through cyberwarfare and a resourceful British squaddie who everyone is shocked to find isn't special forces.
Despite taking advice from a former colleague who also wrote a book (!), the writing is pedestrian. Whenever a new chapter starts, each of the principal characters is re-introduced with their full name (and, in the case of the Russians, patronymic) and their rank. Military terminology is spelt out, explained and then repeated. This must be irritating even for people who know no military terminology when the explanations are repeated again and again; I already knew what an F-16 was, that bergens are rucksacks and stag is standing guard.
Shirriff gives us minimal characterisation, although he doesn't make the mistake of transforming his more central characters into James Bond heroes. The Russian President is a rather different matter; he becomes a James Bond villain with very little embellishment. The whole thing reads like a 400-page briefing or a situation report, which I'm sure the author was very skilled at producing.
In the five years since publication, things have changed: the UK is now working up the F-35 fighters to go on our two supercarriers (even though they remain, in the eyes of many, priority targets); and the maritime observation gap is being filled by Poseidon patrol aircraft.
One thing intrigues me, though. I have to assume that copies of this book found their way to Russia, and probably to upper levels in the hierarchy. Did Shirriff's depiction of the Ukrainian army's almost immediate capitulation encourage the attack on that country? And if so, was this a blind spot for Shirriff as well, or did he know differently? Was this a clever bit of British maskirovka?… (altro)