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THE UNIT by Adam Gamal

THE UNIT

My Life Fighting Terrorists as One of America's Most Secret Military Operatives

by Adam Gamal with Kelly Kennedy

Pub Date: Feb. 20th, 2024
ISBN: 9781250278173
Publisher: St. Martin's

A memoir from a member of “the military’s most secret intelligence/special operations unit.”

Gamal (a pseudonym) was born in Egypt to a family whose father, although struggling to make ends meet, put four children through college. As a child, the author grew up detesting the Muslim Brotherhood, Egyptian extremists who exerted great influence. As he was studying law, a professor explained that he would never practice what he was learning because there was no rule of law in Egypt. Brilliant but frustrated, Gamal moved to the U.S. in 1991 at age 20, with no job and speaking no English. Helped (and sometimes exploited) by fellow Egyptians, he passed three years working menial jobs but eventually finding success, marriage, and a family. In 1994, feeling he owed a debt to his chosen country, he joined the Army. Hardworking and tough, Gamal breezed through training, during which he encountered both encouragement and racism. He volunteered for a force so secret that he can only refer to it as “the unit.” The author describes it as similar to special forces, employing the same murderous training, teamwork, daring, and firepower, but with additional emphasis on surveillance and intelligence gathering. Most of the book recounts missions in the Middle East and Africa, and the text, some of it redacted, features plenty of fireworks, including an encounter when Gamal was shot and almost died. Fiercely patriotic despite regularly encountering prejudice, the author does not hesitate to point out the catastrophic consequences of Americans’ ignorance of other cultures. For example, despite the military’s being desperately short of personnel who can speak languages other than English, it dismissed hundreds with those skills under the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy (in effect from 1994 to 2011). Some may scoff at the term diversity, but Gamal clearly shows how its absence regularly hobbles military missions.

The compelling story of an unlikely hero in the war on terror.