Brotherhood of War

The Brotherhood of War is a series of novels written by W. E. B. Griffin about the United States Army from the Second World War through the Vietnam War. The story centers on the careers of four U.S. Army officers who became lieutenants in the closing stages of World War II and the late 1940s. The series is notable for the amount of attention it does not devote to combat. Rather than skipping forward, it follows the main characters though their peacetime service as the Army evolves in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, particularly in the development of Army Aviation and the Special Forces.

Novels

Primary cast of characters

Colonel Sanford "Sandy" Thaddeus Felter, USA

Sandy Felter is a son of Jewish immigrants who resigns while a Cadet Corporal during his third year at the United States Military Academy (or West Point) to accept a direct commission as a 2nd Lieutenant and a German and Russian linguist in the last year of World War II. While doing so, he is instrumental in locating a group of Allied POWs and assists in their repatriation. He subsequently goes to Ranger and Parachute school and serves as a 1st Lt. in Greece under Lt. Col. Paul T Hanrahan, and with 2nd Lt. Craig W Lowell, who becomes his best friend.

Afterwards, he serves in Berlin as an intelligence officer. During the Korean War he commands a covert, behind the lines operation with Captain Rudolph G. MacMillan. He subsequently becomes Counselor to the President for four US Presidents. Though Felter wishes several times to return to the conventional army, he is kept on in his role as Counselor to the President due to his demonstrated abilities. In the books, Felter is respected, feared, and even hated because of the clout he wields with the President and his analytical and espionage abilities, as he usually has information before anyone else and is sometimes the only one to analyze that information correctly. Despite his short stature and unimposing appearance (earning him the nickname, "Mouse"), he becomes a highly capable officer. In the Epilogue of The Generals, he reaches the rank of Lieutenant General, and head of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA).

Colonel Rudolph George "Mac" MacMillan, USA

Mac MacMillan was an 82nd Airborne Division Sergeant who received a battlefield commission while participating in Operation Market Garden, although he was taken prisoner before he learned of it. For his actions in that abortive river crossing, he was later awarded the Medal of Honor. He was the senior NCO of the prisoners of war in the same POW camp as Bob Bellmon. As a former NCO with a tenth grade education, he doesn't always think very far ahead, but is a survivor and knows his way around paperwork in his recurring role as an aide-de-camp. MacMillan qualifies as an aviator prior to the Korean War although his flying escapades are limited largely to The Captains. Following an altercation with another officer in an officers' club in the pages of The Colonels, Mac is assigned as Red Hanrahan's deputy at the Special Warfare Center. He dies, apparently of a stroke, during a raid on a POW camp in the final pages of The Generals.

Colonel Craig W. Lowell, USA

Craig Lowell is an extremely wealthy Harvard drop-out who was drafted and sent to the US occupation forces in Germany, where his duties include being the Constabulary golf pro. Because of his polo skills, he, as a Private First Class, was assigned to manage a polo team for the commanding general "Porky" Waterford. Since he was essential to the general's team and since a game against the French could only be played by officers, the General orders Mac MacMillan to get him commissioned before the game.

When the general dies during the polo match, General Waterford's replacement, disgusted by the direct commissioning of Lowell just to play polo (which he views as a breach of military ethics) uses Lowell to fill a request to be an advisor to the Greek Army in the Greek Civil War since Lowell had not been an officer long enough to rate an efficiency report.

Here he meets Sandy Felter and serves under Paul "Red" Hanrahan. During heavy action in which most of the Greek officers and soldiers in the unit to which he is assigned are killed, Lowell takes command and they successfully hold the position. He is eventually awarded the medal of the (fictional) Order of St. George and St. Andrew, the highest award for bravery that Greece can bestow on a foreigner.

Upon his return to the US, Lowell stays in the Army a couple of years until his commission expires, but later joins the Pennsylvania Army National Guard where he is given a tank company command. Lowell is accepted to, and graduates from, the Wharton School of Business (Master's degree) before having attained a baccalaureate degree.

In Korea, Lowell commands an element of the 73rd Heavy Tank Battalion, "Task Force Lowell", so well that he is promoted to Major at the age of 24. An incident with a visiting movie star, his appearing as a witness for the defense of Phil Parker during Parker's murder trial, his smart mouth, and his penchant for circumventing the rules when it suits him all hurt Lowell's career.

Upon returning to the US, Lowell attends the Advanced Armor Officer's course at Fort Knox where one of his studies (in an Orwellian twist) includes analyzing and recommending improvements to the organization and operations of Task Force Lowell in Korea. He privately tells Parker that he felt he did it correctly the first time. He is almost thrown out of the Army several times before finally being promoted to Lieutenant Colonel after rescuing Sandy Felter and an "A" Team during the failed Bay of Pigs invasion.

An accomplished, though reluctant, staff officer, Lowell was instrumental in the formation of the Army's first airmobile division, the First Cavalry Division. Due to the insistence of General H.H. Howard, Lowell was given a command in the First Cav. "The Generals" only lightly addresses Lowell's two full tours in Vietnam, first in command of an aviation battalion where his performance earned him a second award of the Distinguished Service Cross, several Air Medals and promotion to full Colonel, and a second tour in command of an aviation group (brigade) where several of his helicopters were shot out from under him.

His last posting is as tactical commander of a mission to rescue POWs from the Hanoi Hilton POW camp. Lowell is a civil aviator, an army helicopter pilot, and a de facto Green Beret.

Though Lowell ends the series as quite the reputed ladies' man, he was a faithful and devoted husband to Ilse von Greiffenberg Lowell and their son, "P.P." (Peter-Paul), until Ilse was killed in a car accident while Lowell was serving in Korea. Lowell's escapades with women often nearly cost him career. His most notable affairs included Georgia Page, a Hollywood starlet whom he allegedly took to the front lines and had a liaison in a tank, Jane Cassidy, his married secretary while stationed at Fort Rucker, and Cynthia Thomas, a wealthy journalist to whom he became engaged, though Cynthia left Lowell at the altar.

His last affair with Dorothy Sims, the wife of an Air Force POW in Vietnam, was so far beyond acceptable behavior that he was immediately retired. His administrative skills, along with his planning ability and superb leadership abilities, make him an invaluable asset to almost every unit to which he is assigned. Lowell is also described as quite the "guardhouse lawyer" and knows how to manipulate the rules, his rank, and situations to his advantage.

Lowell was admired and respected by the soldiers who served with him, though some of the more traditional officers, such as Bob Bellmon and Bill Roberts, dislike Lowell because of his apparent womanizing (the women involved are universally portrayed as seducing him) and his disregard for the rules. They all have a grudging respect for both his administrative skills and his demonstrated warrior abilities.

Colonel Phillip Sheridan Parker IV, USA

A 1946 graduate of Norwich University, Phil Sheridan is a 4th generation Army officer. His grandfather was a member of the distinguished unit of African-American soldiers known as the Buffalo Soldiers Like his father, Phil IV began his career serving as an Armor officer. He commands a tank company with distinction in Korea, though his record is marred by an incident where Parker shoots a cowardly fellow officer. Because he is black, he knows that he has to be the best in every class to stay even with the others in an Army just beginning desegregation. He begins a lifelong friendship with Craig Lowell while attending the same Basic Armor Officer's course at Fort Knox (as told in Book I: The Lieutenants), where he is the top graduate and Lowell is second in the class.

However, this friendship with Craig Lowell often works against his career. His career is very nearly ended by the shooting incident in Korea for which he is charged with murder. He is subsequently acquitted of the charge with the help of testimony given by Craig Lowell, but they are both branded as troublemakers. Following their graduation from the Armor School, both are given dead-end assignments, but the intervention of a Senator (at Lowell's cousin's suggestion) helps revive their careers. Parker is recruited to Army Aviation by then Colonel Bill Roberts and becomes dual-qualified to fly both fixed wing and rotary aircraft. Parker remains a Captain for over fifteen years, which he assumes is the result of the Korea incident. Frustrated by his lack of advancement, Phil volunteers for the Green Berets and is accepted by General Paul Hanrahan. Shortly thereafter, it is discovered that his promotion has been held up by a clerical error, and he is promoted to Major. Given the option to leave Special Forces once he has been promoted, Parker elects to stay and is the de facto aviation section of Special Forces in its early days.

He marries Antoinette Parker, a doctor and former associate professor of pathology at Massachusetts General, at the end of Book II: The Captains.

Parker is sent to Vietnam as an aviator and becomes a Prisoner of War through an act of sabotage on his OV-1 Mohawk (as told in Book VI: The Generals). Parker is ultimately rescued from a prisoner of war camp during a daring mission commanded by Lowell.

Supporting cast of characters

Lieutenant General Robert F. Bellmon, USA

Bob Bellmon, USMA '39, the son of one general and the son-in-law of another (Porky Waterford), is a quintessential career Army officer. As a very young Armor Lt. Col in the Army of the United States he is captured at the battle of Kasserine Pass. As a POW of the Germans in Poland, he is executive officer of the prisoner detachment and its de facto commander. Bellmon moved from Armor to Army Aviation and eventually became the Commanding General of Army Aviation at Fort Rucker. While he is a typified as a bit of a stuffed shirt, there is no doubt as to his abilities and his devotion to the US Army. In The Generals he was the Commanding General of XVIII Airborne Corps at Ft. Bragg. The General Robert F. Bellmon character probably in part resembles General John K. Waters who was the real son-in-law of Patton and a POW in Germany after he was taken prisoner while fighting in Tunisia in 1943.

Major General Paul T. "Red" Hanrahan, USA

One of the original Airborne officers before the war, Red Hanrahan served in the OSS in Greece during World War II, nominally as a Signal Corps Officer. He served as Felter's and Lowell's commanding officer when they were advisors during the Greek Civil War. He is an advocate of the concept of Special Forces to assist allies in fighting their own wars. Eventually, Hanrahan was named Commandant of the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School at Fort Bragg. Hanrahan's real-life counterpart as commandant during that era was then-Brigadier General William P. Yarborough, who arranged for President Kennedy to approve the famed green berets worn by Special Forces.

Barbara Waterford Bellmon

The daughter of General Porky Waterford, Barbara is the classic officer's wife, assisting with the families of her husband's command. She is amused by some of the junior officers and often reminds her husband to relax a little with them.

She is tremendously fond of Craig Lowell, and treats him as a little brother, including arranging his (aborted) marriage to Cynthia Thomas.

Colonel Phillip Sheridan Parker III, USA, Retired

A Norwich graduate, Colonel Parker commanded a colored tank destroyer regiment in North Africa and Northern Europe under General "Porky" Waterford. Without orders, he led the task force that rescued Bob Bellmon.

Generalleutnant Graf Peter Paul von Grieffenberg

A member of the German professional officer corps, he is made commandant of the POW camp where Bob Bellmon is held he (von Grieffenberg) had been wounded while commanding a Regiment in the Ardennes. After the war, he becomes the head of German intelligence. For nearly five years after the war he was a prisoner in a Russian Gulag, and was identified and repatriated by Sandy Felter, whereupon he found his daughter had married Craig Lowell and had a son named Peter Paul. According to the books, he is also one of the few, who were not discovered, German officers that were part of a plot to kill Hitler.

Ilse von Greiffenberg Lowell

Ilse is Graf von Greiffenberg's daughter and becomes Craig's wife. She is killed in an automobile accident in Germany caused by a drunk US Army Quartermaster Officer, while Craig is in Korea.

Major George Washington "Father" Lunsford, USA

A talented, black Special Forces Officer, his skills at Swahili allow him to play a key role in support of operations in the Congo. He becomes a good friend to John Oliver. Lunsford appears in The Aviators, The New Breed, and Special Ops.

Brigadier General [Select] Geoff Craig, USA

Craig Lowell's cousin (see Porter Craig; Other notable characters), he was drafted into the army and placed in the stockade after assaulting his NCO (in response to being hit first by the sergeant). Craig Lowell was able to get him into Special Forces school where he was given a promotion to Sergeant. While in Vietnam, he received a battlefield commission after being the last American able to fight in a Special Forces base they were defending. After Vietnam, he became an aviator. As an aviator and Brigadier General [Select] in the Pentagon in Washington, he plays a critical role in Army aviation and with covert operations around the world.

1st Lieutenant Jacques Emile "Jack" Portet, USAR

The American-born son of a commercial airline pilot from the former Belgian Congo, he is an accomplished aviator whose knowledge of the area proves invaluable in the operation detailed in The Aviators, Special Ops, and The New Breed. He later marries the Bellmons' daughter Marjorie.

Captain John S. Oliver Jr., USA

A Norwich University graduate, Captain Oliver served in Vietnam commanding the 170th Assault Helicopter Company. He earned the Combat Infantryman Badge during a Special Forces operation where his helicopter was shot down. As the only surviving officer, he led the Green Beret A-Team to safety through the jungle. He served as General Bellmon's aide-de-camp while stationed at Fort Rucker.

Sharon Felter

Sandy Felter's wife. She hated Sandy for wanting to be a soldier but has come to love the life they have. Later in the series, she wishes Sandy was a regular soldier but understands the importance he has to the President. Sandy's role as an intelligence officer leaves her yearning for life like her friends have. She helped bury Craig's wife, Ilse, when he was in Korea and when Sandy was believed to have died in Korea, and later in a plane crash at Dien Bien Phu, helped comfort Craig Lowell (when Lowell should have been comforting her). She, and Barbara Bellmon, regard Lowell as a mischievous younger brother. Lowell regards Sharon probably more fondly than any other woman in his life, and often jokes that if anything were to happen to Sandy, he would quickly propose.

Dorothy Sims

A wife of a prisoner of war during Vietnam. She becomes involved with Craig Lowell and they fell in love and married after she divorced her husband, Thomas Sims, USAF, after Craig rescued him from a POW Camp. Their relationship costs Craig his career.

Other notable characters

Inconsistencies and historical integration

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.