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![]() DDAY wrote: ---------- In article . com, "FatKat" wrote: haven't read the book since the summer of '04) a high-level conference in the US to inspect parts of one of the defecting Iranian fighters to determine whether Iran had had access to spare parts despite attrition and the purported arms embargo. It's an interesting account, dampened That, to me, sounds highly plausible. US intel would have two primary interests in examining an Iranian fighter--determining if they had made any modifications, and determining if the Iranians were getting black market parts out of the US. No, I had no problem with the possibility that it might have occurred - a question I reserve for expressly fictionalized stories. Rather, in what is supposed to be an actual case history, proof that it had happened as Coop/Bishop describe. "Iran-Iraq" is an unwieldly tome and one of its chief fault is one that bedevils most historians - just who is the book written for? The book details many facts presumably unknown or not quite appreciated, but also many details of the science of mil/av that aren't quite clear to the casual reader - mostly the qualitive differences between various versions of military aircraft. The other biggest failing is that there's a lot of detail that simply isn't corroborated, and this is highlighted by those details that Coop/Bishop do give the laser-scalpel treatment to, like the one about the Phantom allegedly shotdown by an Iraqui helicopter. The claims that an F-14 went to Russia have never had any more details than that. Cooper and Bishop seem to have more details that it happened the other way. Which says more about the source than the facts. The authors have amassed a lot of fact, so much so that the book becomes less a critical analysis of the war than simply a super-sized abstract of their research. As such, access to information is critical, and the authors never become independent of their sources. There's no way to tell whether the lack of detail is the result of there being no detail, or the authors' inability to find the information. by the lack of details, follow-up or attirbution by footnoting. As a Schiffer book, "Iran Iraq" is unsurprisingly sloppy, so I won't get into the nitty-gritty as to who bears the fault for the books numerous structural and stylistic flaws. Suffice it to say that the account of As I'm sure you know, Schiffer is notorious for typos and other mistakes. I remember seeing an absurd example of this, where Schiffer reprinted some US Navy book (possibly a tour book from an aircraft carrier). In one of the front pages there was some curious disclaimer like "The publisher is not responsible for any mistakes in this book." Two pages later, they printed a photograph upside down! It was bizarre and it led me to wonder about their production process. My suspicion is that their layout people are really bad. That's what I mean when I said "as a Schiffer book". Since it was my first (yet only) book by Cooper, I didn't know that he published other books with Osprey. I'm surprised that he didn't go to Osprey with this one - they would probably have been put off by its size, but then he could have spun it off into several books, much as he's already done with his books on African Migs and Persian F-14's. As I said above, I don't care whose fault the end result is, I'm not out to lay blame, just give the potential reader a heads-up on what they can expect. BTW, for those who may have read the Amazon.com page for the book, I'm not the guy who posted as "Sharpest101". A colleague of mine published a couple of very well-regarded books with them. He told me that the upside is that they are easy to work with, but the downside is that they provide no copy editing or quality control checking at all. This requires the editor to very carefully check the page proofs. Speaking as someone who publishes a lot myself, typically authors get very little time to review page proofs, so unless the author is extremely attentive at that phase, the result will be a crappy Schiffer book. I wonder why anybody goes to them. Anyway, my copy lacked many of the things I would have thought critical in a book about a protracted conventional war, like maps, diagrams, an index and more color pictures. Ironically, a small-area map is used for the book's the dustjacket. Would the book have featured these had Schiffer done their job? Or did it otherwise reflect the author's efforts? Again, whose fault isn't my concern. just find it difficult to make the leap from disloyalty to the Islamic state to disloyalty to Iran as a whole, which defection would require. Well, huge wads of cash can also help in changing one's loyalty. According to the Squadron/Signal book on the F-5, the PRC supposedly tried to lure Taiwanese pilots into defecting with their aircraft with promises of a hefty bounty payable in gold. While Taiwanese pilots may have suspected the reds, there's every reason to believe that even American-trained pilots would have suspected an American intel op. |
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