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5.0 out of 5 stars Utterly fascinating
I went into this book thinking "how in the world could this happen" and finished it asking "how is it that this didn't occur before."

A fascinating book that has significance for all types of emergency responders, who need to understand how such "mistakes" might occur and thus how to potentially prevent such mistakes from occuring in the...

Published on Nov 28 2002 by Shawn Herron

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars I wish the author had written a more accessible book . . .
"Friendly Fire" is the definitive account of the tragic incident that took place in 1994 in the skies of northern Iraq. If you ever wanted to know how the US Air Force managed to shoot down two US Army helicopters and kill 26 people this is the book for you.

However, this is not a book intended to be "popular." At times, its analysis of the event is extremely dense...

Published on Jan 14 2003


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars I wish the author had written a more accessible book . . ., Jan 14 2003
By A Customer
"Friendly Fire" is the definitive account of the tragic incident that took place in 1994 in the skies of northern Iraq. If you ever wanted to know how the US Air Force managed to shoot down two US Army helicopters and kill 26 people this is the book for you.

However, this is not a book intended to be "popular." At times, its analysis of the event is extremely dense and difficult for someone to understand who does not know about complex models of behavior and perception.

This being said, I would definitely recommend it to someone who wants to understand how a terrible tragedy unfolded.

However, I wish that the author had written a book which put a good deal of the theorical aspects of the incident in appendices and given a straightforward narrative of the incident and subsequent fallout. Some passages of the book read very easily and dramatically, and I have a feeling such an account might have found a wider audience.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Utterly fascinating, Nov 28 2002
By 
Shawn Herron "kylandshark" (Louisville, KY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Friendly Fire: The Accidental Shootdown of U.S. Black Hawks over Northern Iraq (Paperback)
I went into this book thinking "how in the world could this happen" and finished it asking "how is it that this didn't occur before."

A fascinating book that has significance for all types of emergency responders, who need to understand how such "mistakes" might occur and thus how to potentially prevent such mistakes from occuring in the future.

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5.0 out of 5 stars An Organizational Analysis, Dec 13 2000
By 
Steven M. Leonard (Fort Leavenworth, KS) - See all my reviews
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Friendly Fire is a insightful, intriguing analysis of the 1994 incident that resulted in the needless deaths of 26 peacekeepers in the Iraqi Norther No Fly Zone. Snook presents a compelling tale of a complex system gone awry, an organization operating on the edge of chaos, and the ultimate result of a deterministic system spinning out of control. Drawing on his extensive knowledge of systems theory and organizational behavior, LTC Snook presents his thesis with exceptional clarity and depth of understanding; his conclusions are as disturbing as they are fascinating: a series of rational decisions made by equally rational human beings still failed to prevent the very incident the organization was designed to forestall. A concise, well-written account of and incident with lessons that we should all take to heart.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An Exceptional Account and Evaluation, Sep 29 2000
By A Customer
Friendly Fire is a marvelous analysis of one of the most horrific accidents in recent military history. Snook is unfaltering in his tenacity to get to the root causes of this tragedy. The reader is given a broad perspective of how events, even those occuring years previous, led to the fateful day when 26 peacekeepers lost their lives. His ability to put the reader into the mind of each participant is riveting. More than just a recitation of facts or an outpouring of emotion, this book blends all the elements into a comprehensive understanding of a most complicated event. Friendly Fire should be required reading for all military personnel and anyone whose actions hold the lives of others in their hands.
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5.0 out of 5 stars When bad things happen to good organizations, April 12 2000
By A Customer
In this book, Scott A. Snook, Ph.D. provides a thoughtful and readable account of how things can go tragically wrong in normal, healthy organizations. The author creatively applies several key theories in organizational structure and change to develop an understanding of (1) the tragic shootdown of two Army helicopters by U.S. Air Force jet fighters, which occurred in northern Iraq in 1994, and (2) "friendly-fire" events in general and broadly-defined --- or how it is that bad things can happen to good organizations, and there really is no one to blame. The book begins with an impressive, detailed examination of the data surrounding the 1994 Blackhawk shootdown. This includes thousands of hours of transcribed testimony gathered in hearings and court martial proceedings. In addition to official reports, Snook personally interviewed many of the key players in the Blackhawk friendly-fire incident. Using a "grounded-theory" approach, the author allows the data to shape and guide his reconstruction of the event itself, and his subsequent theoretical formulations to explain what happened. His resultant theory of "practical drift" spans multiple levels-of-analysis, from the individual to the cultural, providing dramatic insight into how such seemingly impossible events can be expected to occur in complex organizations. This book sheds the kind of light which both clarifies and disturbs. It should prove of real value not only to military leaders interested in reducing friendly-fire incidents, but also to leaders in non-military organizations who wish to understand, and perhaps avoid, normal disasters.
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Friendly Fire: The Accidental Shootdown of U.S. Black Hawks over Northern Iraq
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