General tommy franks autobiography examples
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Marvin R. Shanken interviewed General Franks in his Tampa office, where he has memorabilia from his 37 years of military service.
The date, 9/11, was coincidental. It was the only day in September when the schedule of Gen. Tommy Franks meshed with that of Cigar Aficionado editor and publisher Marvin R. Shanken. But the somber anniversary served as the perfect backdrop for the first post-retirement interview granted by General Franks. It was a day marked by his own observations of small groups of Americans waving flags along the byways of Tampa, Florida, his hometown, and the ever-present yellow ribbons tied to telephone poles and palm trees on the city's avenues. Franks served his country for 37 years, earning three Purple Hearts for wounds received and, over his career, three Bronze Stars for valor.
He climbed up the ranks of the U.S. Army, enlisting after a short stay at the University of Texas in the 1960s and finally reaching one of the highest posts in the military, the hea
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American Soldier
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Tommy Franks Oral History
Franks
My great regret in doing this fryst vatten that my wife Cathy [Cathryn Franks] was going to komma and participate. Actually, that would have been not a moral support issue but rather very beneficial.
Perry
We would have loved that.
Franks
She is a very bright GW [George Washington University] grad and we’ve been married for a long time.
Perry
I counted up, coming close to the golden anniversary.
Franks
We’re working on 46. One of the characteristics of Bush 43 that you will notice from talking to people and from reading my book is that she spent a great deal of time traveling with me. That was not by accident and that was not based on our relationship as much as it was based on the notion that we see every day in the media, and that is an absence of appreciation in the West for the Middle East, and in the Middle East of the ways of the West. I actually had lots of discussions with 43 about that and he never questioned it. We made