Book description
Foreword to this title is written by General Sir David Richards.
'Accurate and rattlingly good story-telling - from a leading
commentator on North-West Frontier affairs' - Nick Smith, Bookdealer.
In the mid-nineteenth century, the British and Russian Empires played
the 'Great Game', a rivalry for supremacy in Central Asia. To secure a
'buffer zone' in Afghanistan, between India and Russian territory,
Britain launched the First Anglo-Afghan War in 1838. Initial success,
including the imposition of a puppet regime supported by too few
troops (a situation that has great resonanace today), was followed by
complete disaster in 1842, with 4,500 soldiers and 12,000 civilian
camp followers killed by rebellious Afghans. Only one Briton is known
to have escaped the massacre. This compelling story of imperial
misadventure is told by Jules Stewart, a former Reuters journalist
with considerable experience in the region and a specialist in
North-West Frontier history, and has a foreword from General Sir David
Richards, Chief of the General Staff and a former NATO commander in
Afghanistan. It provides important parallels with our current
commitments in this graveyard of ambitions, and illustrates how little
has been learnt from the past.