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On the Hunt: How to Wake Up Washington and Win the War on Terror

On the Hunt: How to Wake Up Washington and Win the War on Terror
By Colonel David Hunt

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Product Description

So says Fox News military analyst Colonel David Hunt in a book that cuts like a buzz saw through the half-measures and half-truths, the dangerous timidity, and the outright stupidity that—if left unchecked—will lead America to lose the War on Terror.

In the hard-hitting On the Hunt, Colonel Hunt draws on his twenty-nine years of active military service and his high-level military and intelligence contacts to give an inside perspective on this global struggle, setting him far apart from the usual pundits and talking heads. Here he presents fifty pages of previously unpublished documents that reveal the chillingly detailed plans of the terrorists and insurgents who target Americans, as well as U.S. tactics to stop our enemies.

From the Department of Homeland Security (“Get rid of it. Scrap it.”) to military leaders who have almost zero combat experience to risk-averse, politically correct strategic decision-making, Colonel Hunt pinpoints dire problems that need to be fixed before it’s too late (which it nearly is). Offering real solutions that most politicians and pundits are too timid to talk about, On the Hunt lays out specific steps to:

• Win the war in Iraq by changing the way we fight—by taking the gloves off and, in doing so, honoring the sacrifices our soldiers are making
• Deal with Iran, North Korea, and other dangerous threats
• Solve the illegal immigration crisis and keep America’s enemies from breaching our borders (both of them)
• Make our towns and cities more secure—not by looking to the federal bureaucracy but by taking responsibility ourselves
• Protect the liberties of American citizens at home
• Ensure that our soldiers are trained and equipped to fight today’s and tomorrow’s wars

As Colonel Hunt’s millions of viewers on Fox News and all the readers of his bestselling book They Just Don’t Get It will expect, he pulls no punches while incisively analyzing a war unlike any other. In On the Hunt, Colonel Hunt reveals exactly how high the stakes really are in the War on Terror. He condemns failed policies and the people who made them (and, yes, he names names). And most important, he clearly identifies the strategies, tactics, and qualities of leadership that we must bring to bear to ensure the survival of the proud and free nation we love.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #352566 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-04-03
  • Released on: 2007-04-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 259 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
Retired army colonel and Fox News military analyst Hunt offers what he calls a commonsense perspective on the war in Iraq in particular and the war on terrorism in general. Drawing on 29 years of military service, Hunt is harshly critical of military and civilian leaders. He charges that they are more concerned with their own careers than with the U.S. troops in Iraq and should have fired Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld long ago and poured more resources into a more aggressive effort earlier, including neutralizing Iran. As things stand, he speculates the war could last for decades. Hunt laments that the high expectations after 9/11 that America would take seriously the terrorist threat haven't materialized. Instead, politicians and military leaders have used the threat to advance their careers. Other advice includes scrapping the Department of Homeland Security, fighting the war on terror with guerrilla action, gathering better intelligence, and striking at the bank accounts of terrorism supporters. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
“Colonel David Hunt’s book is a call to arms and a gut check. If the American people don’t demand protection from terror killers, we won’t get it. On the Hunt lays out a clear strategy for our survival.”

—Bill O’Reilly, Fox News Channel

“Clausewitz would read this great book, and so should you. With his bracing On the Hunt, Colonel Hunt has told us how to win the War on Terror. Our country would be a lot better off if we all take his words to heart, do what he says, and then buy another copy to send to your congressional representatives.”

—Bob Drury, coauthor of Halsey’s Typhoon

“Colonel Hunt is on top of his game in On the Hunt. It’s a no-holds-barred rant—he skewers neocon, moonbat, and pencil pusher alike. If you think the Colonel’s blunt on TV, wait until you read him blistering the hacks of every stripe who are blowing the War on Terror and still don’t get it.”

—Howie Carr, radio host and bestselling author of The Brothers Bulger


From the Hardcover edition.

Review
“Colonel David Hunt’s book is a call to arms and a gut check. If the American people don’t demand protection from terror killers, we won’t get it. On the Hunt lays out a clear strategy for our survival.”

—Bill O’Reilly, Fox News Channel

“Clausewitz would read this great book, and so should you. With his bracing On the Hunt, Colonel Hunt has told us how to win the War on Terror. Our country would be a lot better off if we all take his words to heart, do what he says, and then buy another copy to send to your congressional representatives.”

—Bob Drury, coauthor of Halsey’s Typhoon

“Colonel Hunt is on top of his game in On the Hunt. It’s a no-holds-barred rant—he skewers neocon, moonbat, and pencil pusher alike. If you think the Colonel’s blunt on TV, wait until you read him blistering the hacks of every stripe who are blowing the War on Terror and still don’t get it.”

—Howie Carr, radio host and bestselling author of The Brothers Bulger


Customer Reviews

Real Stuff for a Real World5
Finally a book that doesn't pull any punches. Colonel Hunt proves that winning the "War on Terror" doesn't require a whole lot of sophistication - just a willingness and conviction to do what is necessary. Unfortunately, by clearly offering a blueprint for action as a back-drop, the reader realizes that America no longer has the courage to act with ferocity. From politicians down to battlefield leadership, our commanders are no longer concerned about protecting our interests, they only seek to cover their own posteriors and advance personal agendas. The book has an underlying sense of dread or perhaps resignation, and this reader believes that Hunt has accepted our fate and is writing not as a clarion call for action, but more in the way of an autopsy. I personnaly believe that what he says is true - America has softened, prepared to sing Kumbaya with our enemies - even as they destroy our culture and threaten our very survival. Political correctness and the desire to appease will not make us better, it will make us dead. Hunt points this out like no other author. But then again, he is an Amercan warrior, a rare commodity. Read this. The book is simply written and can be carefully digested in a night or two. It will make you stop and think. It will make you reminisce about the your grandfather's America. An America that truly believed our country was worth defending.

A lesson in character this nation sorely needs5
When one reads the news, and listens to the expert opinions of "talking heads" on TV, it's all too easy to believe that the free world is facing complex problems that allow for no reasonable or successful solutions. The messages we receive include the following: we face 1.3 billion Muslims who blame us for all the ills of the world, and we should understand that it's their world and not ours; nobody in Europe or Britain loves us any more, so we must be terribly wrong; every time we try and react, we only make things worse; we had our run, and now it's time for us to step aside; western civilization is obsolete and on the way out.

Reading Colonel David Hunt's "On the Hunt" tells us: No, we're still in the game; and now's the time for us to kick some butt, make no excuses, offer no explanations, come back home a victor, and marry the prom queen.

My experience, as just one reader, is that I sleep better when I read Hunt right at bedtime. It makes me feel safe knowing that somebody, somewhere, understands it the way he does. If I become discouraged by current events and find myself starting to whimp out and despair, a couple of pages of Hunt gets me back on track. You may have exactly the opposite reaction, and, if that's the case, I'd suggest you leave it alone because "On The Hunt" is pretty potent stuff, and not everyone can handle it.

Maybe the most reassuring part of "On The Hunt" is the author's attitude: David Hunt simply was not born to die as an enemy collaborator. His prose is personal, conversational, and expressive, and communicates his attitude and feelings as well as his ideas. When "his time comes" I suspect he'll go out a warrior, having never surrendered or submitted. That's a character lesson this country sorely needs.

If we heed Hunt's advice and follow his example, and he is wrong, at least we won't go down whimpering, soiling our drawers, and apologizing.

The way it should have been5
Just finished reading the book and it was a great read and told what should have been done during the Iraq War. It again proves to me that peacetime can be a badtime for the military in that many individuals rise up to leadership positions that are unqualified in the time of war.