Tom Clancy’s „Airborne: a Guided Tour of an Airborne Task Force” delivers exactly what the title says to the reader, a vivid, detailed and very enthusiastic but outdated and purely descriptive overview of U.S. Army airborne forces.
The author is widely known as a military and technology enthusiast and this book provides him with ample opportunity to indulge in both. The author wants to provide an overview of the airborne forces for the average reader with no background knowledge. He thus starts out with a short historical introduction how the airborne forces developed over time. The main part about modern day forces is introduced with a lengthy interview with General John M. Keane, then the corps commander of the airborne forces. Then the author provides a documentary-style look on the airborne training program in Fort Benning in great detail. Following this he does a detailed review of weapons, equipment, vehicles and even combat rations with much detail but also his usual grandeur, that every piece of equipment was world class, the best there was, etc. Although the descriptions for example of the helicopters only provide an overview, especially the technical drawings are nicely done. The next chapter on the Air Force recognizes the close coordination of Army and Air Force units in deploying airborne forces. Here this coordination is described as well as the aircraft used to transport and support the forces. The following chapter on the rotating ready brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division describes the training and certification cycle the brigades rotate through and stand ready to deploy on short notice globally. Only in the last chapter Clancy writes fiction as he tries to describe realistically how an airborne task force was to deploy in a fictitious scenario.
Overall this work is by now severely outdated. Written in 1997 Clancy provides information on organizational structures, which have since changed, equipment long exchanged or systems like the RAH-66 and LOSAT, which never became operational. Although many elements Clancy describes are still valid today, the uninformed reader has no way of knowing, which information is still relevant and which is not. A second major drawback of the book is its completely descriptive nature. The author only describes and neither analyzes nor reviews critically. He enthusiastically describes how everything was working just fine, everybody was hard working and motivated and the equipment was superb. Even for the uninformed reader a more realistic appraisal of the situation would have been nice. Nevertheless the book provided a good introduction to the topic at the time and came with a nice bibliography, good drawings and organigrams and provided information in a vivid and accessible fashion.
Overall this is an outdated introduction to the airborne forces of the U.S. Army, which is well written, if somewhat overenthusiastic and may still be used to get access to the topic as long as more updated works are also consulted.