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Jihadi John: The Making of a Terrorist Paperback – 28 Jan 2016

4.3 out of 5 stars 11 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Oneworld Publications (28 Jan. 2016)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1780749430
  • ISBN-13: 978-1780749433
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.7 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 227,604 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Review

'The chief strength of this book lies in its exploration of the radical subculture in parts of west London…The web of influences is complex but Verkaik skilfully unpicks I, while losing none of the atmosphere that makes his book so readable and engaging'.

(New Statesman)

'Verkaik gives a fascinating if frightening picture of the jihadists in our mist'.

(Mail on Sunday)

‘No detail is too small in Verkaik's quest to work out how a "misfit schoolboy" turned into a "psychopathic mass murderer".’

(Independent)

‘An exemplary account… The book’s most important contribution is to highlight the difficulties faced by the intelligence services… a first-class primer on Muslim extremism in Britain.’

(Max Hastings, Sunday Times)

‘An outstanding pulling together of the fractured career of one of the most notorious terrorist psychopathic killers of this or any other age. The book is exceptional because its author makes no false claims for what he doesn’t know and never confuses explanation with explaining away... [an] excellent and thought-provoking book.’

(Evening Standard)

‘A riveting and compelling portrait of Mohammed Emwazi on his journey to the heart of darkness.’

(Andrew Hosken, author of Empire of Fear: Inside the Islamic State)

‘Detailed and absorbing... Drawing on a wealth of primary conversations with security officials and targets alike, Verkaik explores the difficult balance that has to be struck between freedom and liberty and those who find themselves in its crosshairs.’

(Raffaello Pantucci, author of ‘We Love Death as You Love Life’: Britain's Suburban Mujahedeen)

This book is more than just the story of Mohammed Emwazi. Verkaik delves into the broader issues of marginality and the fluid identity of young people such as Emwazi to provide an enthralling account of the rootlessness of many second-generation European immigrants.

(Library Journal)

About the Author

Robert Verkaik is a freelance security editor who writes for the Sunday TelegraphSunday TimesMail on SundayIndependent and Independent on Sunday. He lives in Surrey.


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Format: Paperback
Robert Verkaik has written a very interesting and excellent researched book about the development of Mohamed Emwazi, a.k.a Jihadi John, from a quite normal kid and youth in West London to the most wanted and hated terrorist in younger history.

Verkaik describes the personal background and history an the long way from a beginning radicalization in 2007, the presumed attempt to join al-Shabaab in 2009, the way to Syria where he joined Daesh, that resulted in the cruel killings of innocent and defenceless civilians by Emwazi.

The book delivers also an interesting insight of the work of the British intelligence services and the dynamics of a very active Jihadi scene in London. Verkaik doubts, that an counterterrorism strategy only based on repression will work in the long term and he emphasizes the importance of cooperation and dialogue between the security authorities and the Muslim communties and in my opinion he's absolutely right. Investigations and pressure on terror suspects are important tools, but they should not be the only ones in the long fight against Islamist terrorism we will face in the next decade(s).

The book is based on many interviews the author lead with familiy members of Emwazi, friends, Islamists and also an personal meeting with Emwazi in 2010. Further sources are court documents and assessments of the security services, experts and politicians.

In my opinion this book is a must-read for everyone who wants to understand the process of radicalization, the work of the intelligence community and the way of Mohamed Emwazi to the most wanted terrorist in the world in younger history.
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Format: Kindle Edition
As someone who has always enjoyed reading biographies of controversial political and international figures I came to this work hoping that my assumptions would be wrong. Before the the invasion of Iraq I read a number of biographies of Saddam Hussein and while some titles were mature studies of how such a vicious dictator seized and kept hold of power for so long, others were no more than tabloid hatchet jobs. Mohammed Emwazi, aka Jihadi John is such a controversial figure (for obvious reasons) that I worried that this would be little more than salacious gossip, a raking over of every horrific little detail for the titillation of the reader.

I’m happy to say that these concerns all proved unfounded. Don’t get me wrong, Robert Verkaik has written no apologia for Jihadi John. What he has done is place Mohammed Emwazi, who he had met and corresponded with while working for the Independent, within the wider milieu of disenfranchised Muslim youth. The author met Emwazi while working on articles about young Muslim men who felt that they were being harassed by MI5 and the Met’s anti-terrorism branch. He charts how Emwazi travelled from dabbling in drugs and gangs to falling in with a group of young men who were interested, to a greater or lesser degree, in the conflict in Somalia. The Security Service had, and almost certainly still has, a policy of aggressively cultivating sources in the Muslim community. MI5 will mix inducements with threats and should the target resist, the pressure is amplified. With Emwazi this led to him losing not one, but two marriage proposals, and being barred from entering Kuwait where he wished to start a new life.

The author is very even handed in his analysis of these events.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Possibly the finest case study I have read. Written by a journalist, it is as well researched, referenced and written as a Doctorate. This is also a very, very important book. It accurately looks as what causes radicalisation, fairly, intelligently and without bias, and then explores what we might do about it. I did not agree with all of the authors views but as a Research Leader in this field myself, I can honestly say that this book changed my views on how we should respond to young men drawn to I.S. The writing is superb, the delivery well paced and the narrative excellent: truly fine journalism.
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By F Henwood TOP 1000 REVIEWER on 2 Feb. 2017
Format: Paperback
In this riveting and absorbing book, Jihadi John - aka Mohammed Emwazi - speaks from beyond the grave. The author had met and interviewed John before his self-imposed exile to Syria. He had no idea at that time they met how the story would end. John was just one of the disaffected young Muslim men the author had met, complaining of harassment from the security services.

The book pulls together those interviews, and tells the story of a young man from a mixed Kuwait-Yemeni background, starting afresh in the UK, falling into some bad company, and attracting the attention of the security services. According to John, the spooks then made his life a misery, thwarting his efforts to marry and start a new life in Kuwait. The author tells the story how John saw it, without endorsing it. That said, the book lends some credence to the claim made by the advocacy group, Cageprisoners, that harassment at the hands of MI5 drove John over the edge, to Syria, transformed into a killer.

The problem is with Cageprisoner’s claim is its attempt not just to exculpate from John from his actions but – implicitly - the value system for which he stood (and remember the treatment he meted out to his victims was nothing like the worst allegations against the spooks). True, the author does not go as far as Cageprisoners seemed to have done but he does show that there is a wider background story. In the wake of the 7/7 bombings, which exposed MI5's deficiencies in human intelligence that might have allowed it to prevent them, the spies tried to make up for the shortfall by harassing young Muslim in becoming snoops on the ground. Because MI5 cannot find volunteers, it uses strong arm tactics. The book documents several such alleged cases.

So why were MI5 so interested in him?
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