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Al-Qaeda: The True Story of Radical Islam
 
 

Al-Qaeda: The True Story of Radical Islam [Kindle Edition]

Jason Burke
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Review

"fascinating... packed full with totally new material" Gilles Kepel, author of 'Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam'; "... a book which vastly increases our understanding of the al-Qaeda phenomenon. Burke writes with admirable lucidity and the benefit of his frontline reporting and deep research". Peter Bergen, author of 'Holy War, Inc.: Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden'. "Impressive...it challenges the myth of Al-Qaida as a monolith orchestrating terrorist activity worldwide" Peter Marsden, author of 'The Taliban: War and Religion in Afghanistan'.

John Gray, New Statesman, July 2003

"He has given us an indispensable guide to the multidimensional reality of Al-Qaeda"

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
29 of 29 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I came across Jason Burke on the BBC program The Power of Nightmares, and a lot of what this program covered is expanded on in this book.

It does not say there is not an Al-Qaeda but shows the way this "organisation" is portrayed in the West is wrong, and shows how our "War on Terror" will not tackle the real events going on in our world today.

I did find some of the book heavy going, especially in places where there a lot of names mentioned. I must admit to my ignorant western eye, a lot of the Arabic names started to look the same. Even so I found the subject matter fascinating.

His obvious knowledge of Afghanistan shines through, and the fact that he has come as close as possible to some of the other sources of information is remarkable.

It makes you question the view we get on this subject by the mass media, and you realise most journalists covering this matter are either ignorant or towing a line to reinforce the myth of Al-Qaeda. It is interesting that i have seen recently some British ex-ministers talk along the same lines as this book, now they do not have to toe party lines.

I would give this book 5 stars, but I do think that maybe the books chronological order and story telling could have been a bit tighter, but otherwise a definite recommendation.

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37 of 38 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
While so much of the literature or journalism about 'Al-Qaeda', and the melange of issues that the name 'Al Qaeda' spews up, tend to leave the reader more confused, Jason Burke has written a book that grounds specific judgements in specific historical facts and brings the reader to some very balanced conclusions about the size, scale, threat, and disparate structure of 'Al-Qaeda' while implicitly pointing out the folly of our 'war on terror'.
For those however seeking snippit, Michael Moore-style, ammunition to aim at the Bush administration and their cronies, disappointment will prevail because this is not a book of soundbites. It contains the narratives of various terrorist attacks pre and including September 11th 2001 that have been dubbbed posthumously 'Al-Qaeda'. Burke explores, with remarkably lucid prose, the histories and associations of the characters involved in the various episodes and paints quite a terrifying picture. Throughout the incidents told, connections to Osama Bin Laden are sought and much of his motivation is explained. From disillusionment with the Saud dynasty and his dismissal of indulgence in the Bin Ladens' riches Burke traces Osama's international trail. Burke has not been too timid to address the relationship of Islam with the terrorist movement either, much of the book in fact revolves around the idea of Islam being a massively political religion and argues that although many terrorists are currently aiming their hostility at the west it is in order to remedy political hypocrisy in their native lands. It is a very well balanced book that has a lot of contemporary importance. It shows what the political Islamists are fighting for and goes some way to categorising the different strands of the movement without making it seem too straightforward. If bigots and various dogmatic stances about Al-Qaeda or George Bush and his cronies are beginning to grate and you wish to return to the beginning of the saga as we know it (ie brief overviews of the effects of Suez, Nasser, the assasination of Sadat, the Iranian Revolution, the storming of Mecca, the first Gulf War, the embassy bombs, and the subsequent blitzes in 1998) this book will revise the foundations and clear the cobwebs from these rather bigoted times.
The only reason I haven't given it five stars is because when starting out I was an ignoramus with regards the names of so many of the key players and it is easy to get very lost. Burke has obvioulsy met many key players and knows and writes of many more. It was a baptism of fire which can only really be a reflection of how good a journalist he is but was still quite overpowering when plodding through it. It is however a very, very important book that I really hope our representatives in the international sphere have the intellect to read!
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36 of 38 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This does an excellent job of penetrating the fog of myth and misconception around the subject of radical Islam. Burke traces the development of militant movements and the interactions of extremist individuals and groups. He shows how extremism has developed in different regions and for what reasons. He is very good on disproving the idea that "Al-Qaeda" is a single organisation with a clear command structure, and that shows that bin Laden is not "the CEO of Terror, Inc.". Unfortunately, he identifies the reality as potentially far more dangerous.
This is readable and informative, and fascinating. If you want a clear, dispassionate, explanation of the subject you need look no further.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
An ok read
This book was an ok read. I found it a little convoluted, but none the less it give me some new insight into the subject.
Published 8 months ago by Ben Rawson
Dry Roasted
Burke roasts the old neocon and media chestnuts regarding al-Qaeda. Beginning with the history of Islamic radicalism and its cast members (with the odd digression into general... Read more
Published on 5 May 2010 by Oliveman
excellent!
this is an excellent book to get back to the basics of where is all started, very hard going, but i would say dont give up, read to the end and it all kind of falls into place to... Read more
Published on 24 Jun 2008 by Christine Mann
Intriguing but stylistically lacking
This is an interesting exploration of some of the myths and realities surrounding Al Qaeda, and is a book which remains deeply relevant. Read more
Published on 7 Mar 2008 by Mr. J. W. Holt
Comprehensive, nuanced, readable - glittering
This book is the al-Qaeda bible, comprehensive and nuanced enough for academic audiences, while never becoming turgid or unreadable. Read more
Published on 31 Mar 2007 by S. O'Dwyer
Perhaps the best insight into Al-Qaeda there is
Jason Burke's book is an illuminating guide to Al Qaeda, perhaps the single best study there is on the subject (Burke can also be seen interviewed in the superb BBC documentary... Read more
Published on 4 Jan 2007 by Mr. Tristan Martin
A welcome antidote to oversimplification
Jason Burke provides a wide-ranging and coherent description of the rise of radical Islam, and a persuasive analysis of how the conditions which the world is now facing have come... Read more
Published on 23 July 2006 by lmhh
The truth behind the headlines
Al-Qaeda: The True Story of Radical Islam is a superb work of investigation and historical analysis into the shadowy world of Islamic terrorism. Read more
Published on 15 July 2005 by Armourer
review Al-Qaeda: The True Story
A interesting look at al-qaeda from a out-sider he may of met bin laden, but i would think it was a controled meeting and he would be able to know what bin laden was thinking and... Read more
Published on 27 April 2005 by "glenjenvey2"
Al Qaeda fact or myth
I've just finished reading this excellent book by Jason Burke who unlike many journalists who claimed to be experts on the subject matter, actually did his homework and approached... Read more
Published on 13 April 2005 by Issam Ikirmawi
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
The nearest thing to al-Qaeda, as popularly understood, existed for a short period, between 1996 and 2001. &quote;
Highlighted by 5 Kindle users
&quote;
It is often said that bin Laden was funded by the CIA. This is not true and, indeed, would have been impossible given the structure of funding that General Zia ul-Haq, who had taken power in Pakistan in 1977, had set up. A condition of Zias cooperation with the American plan to turn Afghanistan into the Soviets Vietnam was that all American funding to the Afghan resistance had to be channelled through the Pakistani government, which in effect meant the Afghan bureau of the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), the military spy agency. &quote;
Highlighted by 5 Kindle users
&quote;
In 1979, the year bin Laden left university, several massive events shook the Muslim world: a peace deal between Israel and Egypt, the Islamic Revolution in Iran, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the occupation of the grand mosque at Mecca by a radical Wahhabi group. &quote;
Highlighted by 5 Kindle users

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