Beyond the call Three women on the front lines in Afghanistan

Eileen Rivers

Book - 2018

Follows the experiences of four women who fought in active combat duty in Afghanistan and also worked to gather intelligence about the Taliban from local Afghani women, with whom they were able to cultivate relationships, unlike their male counterparts.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Da Capo Press 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Eileen Rivers (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxix, 254 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-241) and index.
ISBN
9780306903076
  • Chronology: A History of Women in the Military
  • Preface: Finding Women's Stories of War
  • Prologue
  • Part 1. Battle
  • Jamila Abbas
  • 1. The First Run
  • 2. Revolt
  • The Women of Team Lioness
  • 3. The Beginning of Female Engagement
  • 4. The Surge in Afghanistan
  • Sheena Adams
  • 5. Always Wanted to Be a Combat Fighter
  • 6. The Long March
  • Maria Rodriguez
  • 7. Invisible
  • 8. Police in Name Only
  • 9. Waiting
  • 10. Breakthrough
  • 11. The Afghans, the Romanians, and the Americans
  • 12. Businesses More Important than Bombs
  • Johanna Smoke
  • 13. Very Old Concept, Very New Mission
  • 14. Teaching Others to Flee
  • 15. Jamila's Chief of Staff
  • 16. When Radio Changes a War
  • 17. An Unexpected Run-In
  • 18. The Small Victories Women Left Behind
  • Part 2. The Wars at Home
  • 19. Promote or Perish
  • 20. Lawsuit-Pushing Against the Brass Ceiling
  • 21. Military Messes Up Your Life
  • 22. State of the Union
  • 23. And Then You Win
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Rivers served in the U.S. Army in the Middle East after Desert Storm, and her coverage of the military's Female Engagement Teams (FET) is rooted in that experience. The FET were deployed in Afghanistan to interact with Afghani women, engagements that were impossible for male soldiers due to cultural traditions. The FET gathered an enormous amount of intelligence and were also able to build relationships with Afghani women, easing U.S. military operations. Rivers focuses primarily on two American FET members and an Afghani woman to show what the war was like on the ground starting in the late 1990s. She also covers the difficulties the American women had in earning respect from their male peers and commanding officers, even when they proved themselves again and again. The text relies heavily on precise descriptions and verbatim conversations dating back 20 years, which some may question, but as an intimate primer on the FET program, Rivers' account, which includes a historical overview of American women in combat, is of clear interest.--Colleen Mondor Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Journalist and USA Today editor Rivers offers a view of the front lines in Afghanistan from the perspective of women who served there. Through the eyes of Maj. Maria -Rodriguez, Sgt. Liz Carlin, and Capt. Johanna Smoke, the book's focus is on Female Engagement Teams (FET), which were deployed to work with and gather information from Afghani women who, owing to religious and cultural traditions, could not interact with male soldiers. In addition to FETs, the author includes the story of Jamila Abbas, an Afghan woman who campaigned for women's rights and worked with FETs to register women to vote. These untold stories detail accounts of the fight for gender equality within the American military and within Afghanistan, shedding light on the relationships and experiences that shaped the war effort. As a veteran herself, the author also weaves in her own experiences, which add useful insight to the narrative. VERDICT While the prose is perhaps not as tight as one might expect from a journalist, the stories here are well worth a read. Recommended to those with an interest in the war in Afghanistan, military history, women's history, gender studies, and biography.-Crystal Goldman, Univ. of California, San Diego Lib. © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

How the presence of Female Engagement Teams has affected the attempt to bring change to Afghanistan.USA Today editor Rivers, an Army veteran who served in Kuwait, follows three American womenSgt. Sheena Adams, Maj. Maria Rodriguez, and Capt. Johanna Smokewho worked to engage Afghan women in the effort to improve their lives and weaken the Taliban's hold on their country. The book begins with a brief history of women in the American military and then shifts to Afghanistan, where we meet Jamila Abbas, who watched her husband, a former officer in the Afghan army, beheaded by the mujahideen. Determined to help others escape oppression, she became an activist for women's rights, a choice that put her in great danger. But she was not without alliesspecifically, American FETs. Ironically, the American women were themselves subject to rules limiting their roles. Adams fought hard to get assigned to Afghanistan. After being injured by an IED while on vehicle patrol and taking part in the subsequent firefight, she found her advancement blocked because the system gave her no credit for combat service. Rodriguez, working to give Afghan policewomen the tools and training to fulfill their mission, fought not only the provincial government, but her own chain of command, which prevented female service members from leaving base without male escorts. Smoke led an effort to register Afghan women to vote, effectively becoming Jamila's chief of staff in an effort to empower the downtrodden female population. Eventually, Adams became an advocate for FETs working in other countries, including some in Africa. Rivers gives detailed accounts of their time in Afghanistan. While the pace of the narrative occasionally lags and the prose is undistinguished, the overall story of the fight for women's rights in a country where the male power structure opposes them is compelling. The author's own military experience gives the book a perspective that is especially useful.A solid, fact-filled look at an underreported piece of the American military. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.