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To: Valin

BTW,have you read "American Jihad" by Steven Emerson or "Bin Laden" by Yossef Bodansky? Very informative books.


27 posted on 05/14/2005 9:10:01 AM PDT by thombo
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To: thombo

yes/ no
I have read (parts) of Yossef Bodansky's "the secret History of the Iraq War" I found it...interesting. The MAJOR problem I had with it was NO FOOTNOTE. He make a lot of statement and doesn't back them up with any sources.

I must admit I obsess on this subject more than is probably healthful. (I REALLY need a life :-))

I'm now in the middle of Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam
by Gilles Kepel

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0674010906/qid=1116087905/sr=2-2/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_2/103-7990942-7680624

In this history of fundamentalist Islam, Kepel stands conventional wisdom on its head, asserting that the spate of Islamist violence during the last few years is a result not of the movement's success, but of its failure. A professor at Paris's Institute for Political Studies, Kepel clearly traces the rise of the contemporary Islamist movement from its origins in the mid-20th century through its later appearance in countries such as Malaysia, Algeria and Turkey, as well as in Western Europe. Its apogee, he argues cogently, was the 1979 revolution in Iran that brought about the defeat of the Shah and the rise of a fundamentalist Islamic regime. But while ideologies that fused Islam with political power gained adherents throughout the world in the ensuing 20 years, says Kepel, in no other country were Islamists able to seize and hold power for more than a few years, a factor that he attributes to the ideology's inability to attract both the middle class and the poor. "Muslims no longer view Islamism as the source of utopia, and this more pragmatic vision augurs well for the future," he writes. Despite some outpourings of support, he believes, Osama bin Laden and his followers squandered much of the movement's political capital with its attacks on American institutions, most notably the World Trade Center. Kepel's approach is not without weaknesses in many places around the globe, fundamentalist political Islam has transformed society and politics, even if Islamists have not been able to attain political rule. But amid the plethora of books on Islam released since September 11, this work stands out, both for its erudition and its provocative thesis.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Highly recomendeed, a good history of the modern Jihadist movement.


28 posted on 05/14/2005 9:28:52 AM PDT by Valin (The glass is 1/32 full! - The incredible optimist)
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