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The Story of the Malakand Field Force: An Episode of Frontier War

por Winston S. Churchill

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1493183,108 (4)2
Seeking military distinction, the 22-year-old Winston S. Churchill talked his way into the Malakand Field Force as a war correspondent, reporting on the front line in a struggle against restless tribes on the Northwest Frontier. Churchill describes dramatic campaigns, his writing always rooted in the exotic and, at times, adverse environment of the area now part of Pakistan. This experience of entrenched and increasingly mechanized warfare almost certainly influenced his command during the First World War, when he was better able than most to understand the nature of military stalemate. In this, his first book, he collected his reports of the conflict, providing a fascinating look at the start of Churchill's career as both a writer and as a soldier.… (más)
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You can tell there's something brewing here, a superb, if self-serving, account. ( )
  expatscot | Oct 10, 2022 |
A very early work by Churchill; in fact, one of the first books he produced over a long career. As related in his autobiography, he was able to obtain a position in a force sent to quell an uprising in the "Northwest Frontier" (present-day Pakistan-Afghanistan border), and in the course of doing so, sent dispatches to both an English and an Indian newspaper. This book contains those articles, rearranged. Some of the book is a bit of dry exposition of casualties, but the descriptions of combat, particularly clashes that Churchill himself saw, show flashes of the style that millions would come to know. There are also some asides and comments on policy and tactics (such as the destruction of the Afghan villages [which he favoured]) that seem slightly presumptuous coming from a newly-minted Sandhurst graduate. The battle itself is comparatively small, and were it not for this book, would probably be forgotten. Of definite interest to Churchill fans (and in that light should be read with "My Early Years"), and of interest to those who follow wars in this part of Southwest Asia. ( )
  EricCostello | Aug 31, 2018 |
Winston Churchill’s first book. Churchill got himself attached as a war correspondent to a force sent to “chastise” border tribes; an interesting accomplishment since he was on active duty with another unit and already had a reputation for reporting that was less than fully complementary to the military. Rumor has it that this assignment was accomplished by his mother’s bedroom negotiations with commanding officer Sir Bindon Blood. Perhaps; Churchill certainly is more complimentary to Blood than he is to Kitchener in The River War. Relatively straightforward accounts of action on the Northwest Frontier. Mullahs rouse the local tribes; skirmishes with garrisons ensue, an expeditionary force gets organized to “teach them a lesson”; it does so (it doesn’t take, though). Contains the famous quote “There is nothing in life so exhilarating as to be shot at without result”, although it’s applied to a cavalry unit Churchill observes returning from action, not to himself personally. Churchill’s politics are interesting; he’s contemptuous of home politicians who don’t understand the realities of war on the frontier, particularly how civilian casualties are unavoidable since there aren’t any civilians. However, Churchill is sympathetic to native units in the Indian Army, suggesting that the Victoria Cross be awarded regardless of race and that British and native officers be treated equally (he suggests that since they meet as equals on the polo field they should meet as equals elsewhere). A short, quick read; much of the book is appendices consisting of dispatches mentioning various officers (this, of course, is back when being “mentioned in despatches” was a major boost to promotion chances). ( )
  setnahkt | Dec 29, 2017 |
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Major-General Sir Bindon Blood, K.C.B. under whose command the operations therein recorded were carried out; by whose generalship they were brought to a successful conclusion; and the whose kindness the author is indebted for the most valuable and fascinating experience of his life.
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Seeking military distinction, the 22-year-old Winston S. Churchill talked his way into the Malakand Field Force as a war correspondent, reporting on the front line in a struggle against restless tribes on the Northwest Frontier. Churchill describes dramatic campaigns, his writing always rooted in the exotic and, at times, adverse environment of the area now part of Pakistan. This experience of entrenched and increasingly mechanized warfare almost certainly influenced his command during the First World War, when he was better able than most to understand the nature of military stalemate. In this, his first book, he collected his reports of the conflict, providing a fascinating look at the start of Churchill's career as both a writer and as a soldier.

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