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War Without End

War Without End

HIRO DILIP

Analysing historical and political contexts to explain Islamic terrorism in three countries, describing the Al Qaeda menace and the implications of Bush’s doctrine.

Hardback | 140 x 216mm (5.5 x 8.5") | 513 pp

ISBN 8174362444


About this book

‘The first war of the twenty-first century.’ That is how President George W. Bush described the start of a war against terror signalled by the catastrophic terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., on September 11. In reality, though, this conflict began during the presidency of Bill Clinton in August 1998 when the US responded to the Islamist terrorists’ bombing of American embassies in Nairobi and Dar as Salaam. This book provides the historical and political context to explain these acts of terror and the West’s response to them. After providing a brief history of Islam as a religion and as a socio-political ideology, Dilip Hiro outlines the Islamist movements that have thrived in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan, and their changing relationship with America. It is within this framework that he describes the rising menace of Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda network. Hiro examines the Pentagon’s amazingly swift victory over the Taliban in Afghanistan. He then discusses the implications of the Bush Doctrine, encapsulated in his declaration, ‘So long as anybody is terrorising established governments, there needs to be a war’—a recipe for war without end.

About the author

Dilip Hiro is a specialist on the Middle East, Islam, Central Asia and South Asia, and the author of more than twenty books, including Neighbors not Friends: Iraq and Iran after the Gulf Wars. A frequent commentator on the above subjects on CNN, BBC Television, Sky Television, and various American and British radio channels, he has published articles in most of the major newspapers in the US and the UK.

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