Livros que recomendo...

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #105 em: Outubro 07, 2025, 09:29:51 pm »
Que achaste do livro Cabeça

Já li à vários anos e como li vários antes e depois sobre a mesma temática. Vou procurar o livro, que penso que deixei na casa dos meus pais e depois faço um refresh e digo algo.
Contra a Esquerda woke e a Direita populista marchar, marchar!...

 
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Duarte

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #106 em: Outubro 08, 2025, 02:08:22 am »
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"Even the dumbest among us can see the writing on the wall for Putin"
 
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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #107 em: Outubro 11, 2025, 12:00:06 pm »
Não li, mas quero ler.

Contra a Esquerda woke e a Direita populista marchar, marchar!...

 

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mayo

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #108 em: Outubro 11, 2025, 11:42:39 pm »
Não li, mas quero ler.



Normal ! É só ver os bananas que aqui vejo, para não ter nenhuma duvida !

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Lightning

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #109 em: Dezembro 28, 2025, 09:15:24 pm »


Outro bom livro para patriotas.

Esquerdistas ..........não é bom para o vosso coração ! :G-bigun:

Tanto eu como o meu pai lemos esse livro, eu sou de Direita, ele é de Esquerda, ambos somos patriotas e portugueses.

Tenho sérias dúvidas que o senhor meu pai vá aceitar lições de patriotismos de alguém que aparentemente nem sequer é português.

Os meus pais são portugueses ! Eu proprio tenho a nacionalidade portuguesa ! Não é por ter nascido em França, e servi aí que perdi esse direito !!! Quando se sabe que dá-se a nacionalidade deste país a qualquer grunho do 3º mundo, que chega de pneumático a uma praia  !

O teu pai, se calhar combateu nas províncias, e por isso tenho um imenso respeito, mas tu..........não és de direita, és um esquerdista mental !

Por curiosidade, se quando serviste a França se existisse um conflito contra Portugal terias atacado Portugal? É que normalmente faz-se um juramento de bandeira...

O Cabeça ao menos serviu Portugal, e como não teve envolvido em PRECs lol, acho que nunca pôs em perigo a democracia em Portugal, até hoje é legal identificar-se e votar em partidos de esquerda que estejam legais em Portugal, até o maldito PCP que abomino, espero na minha vida ainda ver esse partido sem um único deputado no Parlamento, o Chega também lhe podia acontecer o mesmo...
 

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Lightning

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #110 em: Dezembro 28, 2025, 09:18:22 pm »
Comecei a ler este hoje



e mais dois na mesma temática que me foram recomendados aqui por um colega do FD

https://purl.pt/12121/4/

https://purl.pt/7030/4/

Este canal de YouTube tem feito vídeos sobre os Descobrimentos portugueses inspirado nos textos desse livro.

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpA6sZxl1jJvGMOnq41RZfEm9M4lKAEBC&si=ujE6kZ_x-jQEagVA
 
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Duarte

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #111 em: Janeiro 10, 2026, 02:53:49 am »
Fireforce: One Man's War in The Rhodesian Light Infantry



Citar
FIREFORCE - ONE MAN'S WAR IN THE
RHODESIAN LIGHT INFANTRY
Chris Cocks
Covos Books, Roodepoort: 1998
ISBN 0-620-21573-9

"They have the faces of boys but they fight like lions"
The history of the Rhodesian Light Infantry is an illustrious one. The
RLI produced many of the senior brass who led the Rhodesian Army
including Gen Peter Walls. It was arguably Rhodesia's premier fighting
unit (if one excludes Rhodesia's two special forces outfits, the Special Air
Service and the Selous Scouts). The spirit of the RLI runs deep in
Rhodesian military lore, it was to all intents and purposes a unique
Regiment. The RLI was a regular unit, which absorbed many young
conscripts. It was also one of the Rhodesian Army's premier frontline
regiments alongside the Rhodesian African Rifles, the Scouts and the
SAS. The fundamental difference between the RLI and these other units
was that the RLI was a mixture of conscripts and regulars whereas the
remaining three units made use of regular volunteers and territorials.
The author of this book, Chris Cocks, was a teenage conscript in the RLI
and this is his story. This book is a challenge to the straightforward
writing of Military History, where so many historians choose to focus on
prominent personalities and battlefield tactics. This is the story of a
soldier's war - it is a gripping and bittersweet look at Army life. Cocks
brings the constant thread of death to the forefront of this book. At no
time does he attempt to disguise the brutality of the Bush War or hide the
atrocities, which were committed by troops and guerillas alike. The
writer's own sense of doubt as to whether this was a just cause adds a
further dimension to the book. Many of the young Rhodesian conscripts
accepted the status quo without question, others, like Cocks were
constantly plagued by the morality of a war that ultimately witnessed a
society feeding upon itself.

For the military enthusiast, Fireforce is loaded with vivid descriptions of
tense contacts, detailed description of weaponry and discussion on the
tactics favoured by the Rhodesian Infantry at that time. If you enjoyed
Ron Reid Daly's ''''Selous Scouts or Barbara Cole's "The Elite"" then
you will find that Fireforce completes the trilogy. The RLI Fireforce
teams were usually summoned into action by the Selous Scouts pseudo
sticks. However, whereas the Scouts were seasoned professionals, the
average RLI Commando was an inexperienced and very young soldier.
The author does well in conveying the sense of mounting anticipation,
apprehension and nausea, which must accompany any greenhorn on
operations. The mental and physical nervous exhaustion of fighting a hot
war is a recurring and strong theme throughout the book.
There are many different characters in Fireforce, but to his credit Chris
Cocks has employed really effective character formulation, to the extent
that he brings the book to life. Sadly as the story unfolds, the characters
begin to diminish, one by one as they are killed in battle, wounded or
eventually desert the Army and Rhodesia. It is desperate stuff, and it
brings home the saddest truth about war, that it normally claims the
young as its first victims. To a large extent this is the essence of this
work, the loneliness and fear that one feels in war and the long term
effects of a war, especially a civil war. Most of those who fought
alongside Cocks and survived the Bush War died later, either by suicide,
alcohol abuse or in car accidents.
Fireforce has its lighter moments too. Chris Cocks has an excellent tum
of phrase and a quick, dry sense of humour. The tales of the various
troopies exploits are brought vividly to life. He successfully manages to
recreate the atmosphere of the time and combines this well with the trials
and tribulations of passing from adolescence into adulthood.
Fireforce is a hardcover book in an attractive dustcover. The book
contains three sections of colour photographs, mainly taken from Chris
Cocks' private collection'. The author has also commendable attention to
detail and has included rather definitive technical appendixes. To many
readers this technical jargon is rather meaningless but no doubt certain
'nuts and bolts" junkies will appreciate the information. The inclusion of
the regiments' roll of honour and decoration citations provides an
extremely useful research tool reflects the ravages of the War on the RLI.
This is the first account that I have read of the Rhodesian War that was
written by an ordinary soldier. Many other excellent books on the war or
the history of certain units exist, but Fireforce is unique given the
perspective that it offers. Fireforce has also been hailed in certain
quarters as the definitive work on counter-insurgency warfare in Africa.
It is certainly worthy of the widespread critical acclaim, which has been
heaped upon it.

Scientia Militaria - 28( 1) 1998
« Última modificação: Janeiro 10, 2026, 05:15:56 am por Duarte »
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"Even the dumbest among us can see the writing on the wall for Putin"
 

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Camuflage

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Re: Livros que recomendo...
« Responder #112 em: Hoje às 10:16:45 pm »
 The Fort Bragg Cartel
Drug Trafficking and Murder in the Special Forces





**INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

A New Yorker Best Book of 2025
A Forbes Best True Crime Book of 2025

“Probably the most gripping, memorable, eye-opening book I’ve read in months.” —David Wallace-Wells, The New York Times

“Propulsive.” —The Washington Post

“Engrossing. . . . Truly shocking.” —The New Republic

“The Fort Bragg Cartel opens like a nonfiction thriller and never lets up. A page-turning investigation into the dark side of our forever wars.”
—Steve Coll, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Ghost Wars and Directorate S

A groundbreaking investigation into a string of unsolved murders at America’s premier special operations base, and what the crimes reveal about drug trafficking and impunity among elite soldiers in today’s military**

In December 2020, a deer hunter discovered two dead bodies that had been riddled with bullets and dumped in a forested corner of Fort Bragg, North Carolina. One of the dead men, Master Sergeant William “Billy” Lavigne, was a member of Delta Force, the most secretive “black ops” unit in the military. A deeply traumatized veteran of America’s classified assassination program, Lavigne had done more than a dozen deployments in his lengthy career, was addicted to crack cocaine, dealt drugs on base, and had committed a series of violent crimes before he was mysteriously killed. The other victim, Chief Warrant Officer Timothy Dumas, was a quartermaster attached to the Special Forces who used his proximity to clandestine missions to steal guns and traffic drugs into the United States from abroad, and had written a blackmail letter threatening to expose criminality in the special operations task force in Afghanistan.

As soon as Seth Harp, an Iraq war veteran and investigative reporter, begins looking into the double murder, he learns that there have been many more unexplained deaths at Fort Bragg recently, other murders connected to drug trafficking in elite units, and dozens of fatal overdoses. Drawing on declassified documents, trial transcripts, police records, and hundreds of interviews, Harp tells a scathing story of narco-trafficking in the Special Forces, drug conspiracies abetted by corrupt police, blatant military cover-ups, American complicity in the Afghan heroin trade, and the pernicious consequences of continuous war.