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1 Burnside Middle East- General History

More copies of this ISBN:

The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East

by Robert Fisk

The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East Cover

ISBN13: 9781400041510
ISBN10: 1400041511
Condition: Standard
Dustjacket: Standard
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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

During the thirty years that award-winning journalist Robert Fisk has been reporting on the Middle East, he has covered every major event in the region, from the Algerian Civil War to the Iranian Revolution, from the American hostage crisis in Beirut (as one of only two Western journalists in the city at the time) to the Iran-Iraq War, from the Russian invasion of Afghanistan to Israel’s invasions of Lebanon, from the Gulf War to the invasion and ongoing war in Iraq. Now he brings his knowledge, his firsthand experience and his intimate understanding of the Middle East to a book that addresses the full complexity of its political history and its current state of affairs.

Passionate in his concerns about the region and relentless in his pursuit of the truth, Fisk has been able to enter the world of the Middle East and the lives of its people as few other journalists have. The result is a work of stunning reportage. His unblinking eyewitness testimony to the horrors of war places him squarely in the tradition of the great frontline reporters of the Second World War. His searing descriptions of lives mangled in the chaos of battle and of the battles themselves are at once dreadful and heartrending.

This is also a book of lucid, incisive analysis. Reaching back into the long history of invasion, occupation and colonization in the region, Fisk sets forth this information in a way that makes clear how a history of injustice “has condemned the Middle East to war.” He lays open the role of the West in the seemingly endless strife and warfare in the region, traces the growth of the West’s involvement and influence there over the past one hundred years, and outlines the West’s record of support for some of the most ruthless leaders in the Middle East. He chronicles the ever-more-powerful military presence of the United States and tracks the consequent, increasingly virulent anti-Western–and particularly anti-American–sentiment among the region’s Muslim populations.

Fisk interweaves this history with his own vividly rendered experiences in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Algeria, Israel, Palestine and Lebanon–on the front lines; behind the scenes; in the streets of cities and villages; and inside military headquarters, the hideouts of guerrillas, the homes of ordinary citizens. Here, too, are indelible portraits of Osama bin Laden, Ayatollah Khomeini and Yassir Arafat, among others–all of whom he has met face-to-face–revelatory in their apprehension of the individuals and the ideologies they represent.

Finally, The Great War for Civilisation is the story of journalists in war: of their attempts to report the first, impartial drafts of history, to monitor the centers of power, to challenge authority (“especially . . . when governments and politicians take us to war”) and to battle an increasingly partisan worldwide media in their determination to report the truth.

Unflinching, provocative, brilliantly written–a work of major importance for today’s world.

Review:

"Combining a novelist's talent for atmosphere with a scholar's grasp of historical sweep, foreign correspondent Fisk (Pity the Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon) has written one of the most dense and compelling accounts of recent Middle Eastern history yet. The book opens with a deftly juxtaposed account of Fisk's two interviews with Osama bin Laden. In the first, held in Sudan in 1993, bin Laden declared himself "a construction engineer and an agriculturist." He had no time to train mujahideen, he said; he was busy constructing a highway. In the second, held four years later in Afghanistan, he declared war on the Saudi royal family and America.Fisk, who has lived in and reported on the Middle East since 1976, first for the (London) Times and now for the Independent, possesses deep knowledge of the broader history of the region, which allows him to discuss the Armenian genocide 90 years ago, the 2002 destruction of Jenin, and the battlefields of Iraq with equal aplomb. But it is his stunning capacity for visceral description" he has seen, or tracked down firsthand accounts of, all the major events of the past 25 years" that makes this volume unique. Some of the chapters contain detailed accounts of torture and murder, which more squeamish readers may be inclined to skip, but such scenes are not gratuitous. They are designed to drive home Fisk's belief that "war is primarily not about victory or defeat but about death and the infliction of death." Though Fisk's political stances may sometimes be controversial, no one can deny that this volume is a stunning achievement. "

Review:

"This is first of all a book about war — in particular, the wars that have scarred the Middle East, from Afghanistan to Algeria, throughout the author's long career as a correspondent for the London Times and then the Independent. It switches back and forth across the 20th century in a way that seems driven more by stream of consciousness than by any linear design, and, as befits its topic, it is... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review)

Review:

“An epic account . . . a rich tapestry of the contemporary Middle East [and an] engagingly thorough tour of the region’s turmoil.”

Newsweek International

Review:

“Notable for [its] depth of observation and insight and for the vividness of [its] descriptions of particular events and people. [Fisk has] a strong affection and respect for the suffering majority of Palestinians and Israelis inexorably caught up in the storm of violence, fear, mythology, and hatred that the former territory of Palestine has become . . . His extraordinarily readable book depicts a vast historical landscape . . . For all his erudition and his passion for the subject, Fisk is primarily a journalist, and his book, among many other things, is an important account of what a journalist actually does or tries to do, especially during wars . . . Fisk’s powers of observation make his war reporting particularly vivid [and he] has developed a network of friends and acquaintances throughout the region who provide background and depth for his stories . . . Shocking . . . Deeply moving.”

Brian Urquhart, New York Review of Books

Review:

“A magisterial report from the shifting front lines of the Middle East. It deserves to be read by all those who are concerned with what is happening in Iraq today.”

Boston Sunday Globe

Review:

“The book seals Robert Fisk’s place as a venerable, indispensable contributor to informed debate in and about the Middle East.”

The Nation

Synopsis:

Unflinching, provocative, and brilliantly written, this work of stunning reportage addresses the full complexity of recent history and political events in the Middle East.

About the Author

Best-selling author and journalist Robert Fisk, based in Beirut as Middle East Correspondent of The Independent, has lived in the Middle East for almost three decades and holds more British and international journalism awards than any other foreign correspondent. His last book, Pity the Nation, a history of the Lebanon war, was published to great critical acclaim.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

List of Maps

Preface

1. “One of Our Brothers Had a Dream . . .”

2. “They Shoot Russians”

3. The Choirs of Kandahar

4. The Carpet-Weavers

5. The Path to War

6. “The Whirlwind War”

7. “War against War” and the Fast Train to Paradise

8. Drinking the Poisoned Chalice

9. “Sentenced to Suffer Death”

10. The First Holocaust

11. Fifty Thousand Miles from Palestine

12. The Last Colonial War

13. The Girl and the Child and Love

14. “Anything to Wipe Out a Devil . . .”

15. Planet Damnation

16. Betrayal

17. The Land of Graves

18. The Plague

19. Now Thrive the Armourers . . .

20. Even to Kings, He Comes . . .

21. Why?

22. The Die Is Cast

23. Atomic Dog, Annihilator, Arsonist, Anthrax, Anguish and Agamemnon

24. Into the Wilderness

Notes

Select Bibliography

Chronology

Index

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:
Daniel Raphael, April 17, 2006 (view all comments by Daniel Raphael)
I read this book over a period of 3-4 weeks, late last year. It took that long because the type is small, the book is large, and the subject matter is, for those not yet deadened by the world's predictable procession of horrors, heartbreaking. The author has spent 30 years in the area about which he reports, and lives in Beirut. He knows whereof he speaks and has done things one might expect of a real journalist (not the faux kind we have in abundance): repeatedly risking his life, almost having been beaten to death by a mob in Afghanistan; reporting under fire during the Iraq/Iran war (remember that one, when Saddam was Our Boy?), from both sides of the line; looking firsthand at the casualties of American-made missiles in Baghdad, Palestine, and wherever else someone's collateral ran out.

That said, his great value is not that he writes from an "anti-American" perspective, but that he is equally unsparing of any and all who have lied, manipulated, and terrorized common people into graves, hospitals, or cowering submission. No one gets a free pass from Robert Fisk, and his outrage at human inhumanity is a precious natural resource. A bit of the book is autobiographical, but needfully so rather than self-indulgent; knowing that Fisk's dad was both an archetypal racist of the British colonial mentality as well as the guide to his son's early awareness of what battlefields and war represented, helps the reader understand the author's concern. Similarly, knowing that the first book his mother gave him about the world was Anne Frank's Diary, explains much both about maternal influence and Robert's head start in grasping the lessons of Injustice 101.

This book covers many wars, the original holocaust (the one against the Armenians) on which the later persecution of the Nazis' victims was patterned, and the background to much of what we now read in every day's news. If you can bear to read this book from cover to cover, do so and then keep it as an unrivalled resource about the stories that corporate news media either never report, or only distort.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9781400041510
Subtitle:
The Conquest of the Middle East
Author:
Fisk, Robert
Publisher:
Alfred A. Knopf
Subject:
Military - General
Subject:
United states
Subject:
Middle East - General
Subject:
War and society
Subject:
International Relations - General
Subject:
United States Relations Middle East.
Subject:
Middle East Relations United States.
Copyright:
Publication Date:
November 2005
Binding:
Hardcover
Language:
English
Pages:
1107
Dimensions:
9.44x6.64x2.25 in. 3.38 lbs.

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