Books: Books on America and the Philippine Moros by Robert A. Fulton

Books on America and the Moros by Robert A. Fulton

http://www.morolandhistory.com/Books_page/Book_Page.htm

 

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Released January 15, 2012

    The Battle of Bud Dajo took place over three days, March 5-8, 1906. It pitted the U.S. ArmyU.S. Navy, and the Philippine Constabulary against 800-1,000 dissident Muslims who had fortified the top of a rugged, 2,175 feet high dormant volcano on the island of Jolo in the southern Philippine Islands. Although beginning as a genuine military contest, it ended as a tragic and terrible, one-sided massacre, with no more than a small and pitiful handful of the Muslims left alive. 

    Although lesser known. It ranks beside such infamous names as “Sand Creek” (1864), “Wounded Knee”(1890), and “My Lai” (1968) as one of the darkest, bloodiest, and most controversial episodes in America’s long and troubled history of deadly encounters with indigenous peoples.

    More than just a straightforward account of an epic fight on a spectacular mountain, it is also the story of a second and equally vicious donnybrook within the nations’ press and on the floor of Congress to comprehend what had actually occurred on that remote field of battle and why. At stake were the careers of one the most well known soldiers of the early 20th Century, General Leonard Wood, former commanding officer of the famed Spanish-American War cavalry regiment, the Rough Riders. Also risk was a future President and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, William Howard Taft, as well as the reputation of one of the country’s most popular Presidents, Theodore Roosevelt.

    But there is also a mystery here. The real story of what happened would remain buried for more than another century. Why? Was there a deliberate, and successful, cover up? If the real facts had come to light sooner, would it have mattered? Could it have impacted the course of American history? Is there a lesson to take away here, or at least a warning?

    HONOR FOR THE FLAG is based on path finding research into the original files, which was first published in 2007 my book MOROLAND; but it is much broader in scope and not only narrates a reliable account of the battle itself but how it rapidly evolved into a contentious and divisive debate over the moral basis of American intervention in foreign lands.

    200 pages, including 72 photographs and illustrations.

To see reviews and purchase, click on the web links below:

  PRINT - @ Amazon.com     KINDLE - @ Amazon.com

NOOK - @ Barnes & Noble.com

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Moroland is the lost history of the once-famed struggle between the United States Army and the “wild” Moros, the Muslims of the southern Philippine islands. Lasting over two decades, it was this country’s first sustained encounter with a volatile mixture of nation building, insurgency, counterinsurgency, and militant Islamism.

    An unanticipated byproduct of the Spanish-American War, the task of subduing and then “civilizing” the “Land of the Moros” was delegated to the U.S. Army. Working through the traditional ruling hierarchy and respecting an ancient system of laws based on the Qur’an, Moro Province became an autonomous, military-governed Islamic colony within a much larger, overwhelmingly Christian territory, the Philippine Islands.

    An initially successful occupation, it transitioned to a grand experiment: an audacious plan to transform and remake Moro society, values, and culture in an American image; placing the Moros on an uncertain and ill-defined path towards inclusion in an eventual Western-style democracy. But the Moros reacted with obstinate and unyielding resistance to what they perceived as a deliberate attack on the religion of Islam and a way of life ordained by God. This ignited a constant stream of battles and expeditions known in U.S. Army history as the Moro Campaigns and lasting more than a decade. In violence and ferocity they may have equaled, if not surpassed, the more famous late-19th Century Indian Wars of the Great Plains. It also led to the creation of the fabled Moro Constabulary, small contingents of native troops led by American, European, and Filipino officers.

    The backdrop is a bustling, raucous, newly-prosperous nation finding its way as a world and imperial power. But with this new-found status came a near-religious belief that the active spread of America’s institutions, values, and form of government, even when achieved through coercion or force, would create a better world. A subtext is a deep and bitter rivalry between two of its most prominent players, Captain John J. Pershing and General Leonard Wood, born only one month apart, each championing markedly opposed military philosophies. Eventually they would compete to lead one-million American “doughboys” into the cauldron of the world’s first Great War.

    Few Americans are aware that a century later the U.S. military has quietly returned to Moroland, to battle “radical Islamist terrorism”; using Army Green Berets, Navy Seals, and other elite forces. It is the smallest of the active fronts of the “global war on terror” and the least-covered or critically examined. It leads the reader to an obvious question: are we avoiding or are we repeating our own past?

    524 pages. Originally published 2007, revised in 2009 to add six new chapters.

To see reviews and purchase, click on the web links below:

PRINT - @ Amazon.com                    PRINT - @ Barnes & Noble.com

KINDLE - @ Amazon.com                    NOOK - @ Barnes & Noble.com

For iPad or Sony Reader users:

Neither book is currently available from iTunes Books or the Sony ePub formatHowever you can download Free Readers by clicking on one of the links below and then purchasing either the Kindle or Nook eBook:

  KINDLE - @ Amazon.com                    NOOK - @ Barnes & Noble.com

NoticeFor persons who own the earlier, 2007 editionMoroland 1899-1906: America’s First Attempt to Transform an Islamic Society, you can obtain a PDF file of the eight chapters added to the new 2009 edition without charge by sending your mailing address to  mail101@morolandhistory.com.

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