The Most Dangerous Place: Pakistan's Lawless Frontier

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Average Rating
Publisher
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Publication Date
2010
Language
English

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"One word comes to mind: `indispensable.' To understand the mess we're getting into in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas, there's no better book out there."---Robert Baer, former CIA agent and author of See No Evil"Imtiaz Gul takes the reader into the lion's den---into Pakistan's tribal areas, the meanest, toughest region of the planet. He has a journalist's sharp eye for the personalities and conspiracy theories that are woven through this area. This is the best guide yet to understanding the fascinating, frightening place where Al Qaeda lives today."---David Ignatius, author of Body of Lies"Veteran Pakistani reporter Imtiaz Gul brings his deep knowledge and reporting to bear on one of the world's most opaque and underreported places, Pakistan's tribal areas, the headquarters of Al Qaeda and key elements of the Taliban. Gul delivers a balanced account of the evolving relations that the Pakistani military, government, and public have had with Pakistan's own militant groups. This book could not be more well timed as President Obama faces the most important foreign policy challenge of his presidency from the violent extremists who call this place their home."---Peter Bergen, author of Holy war, Inc. and The Osama bin Laden I Know"Imtiaz Gul has provided an invaluable service, drawing together reporting and research on Pakistan's tribal areas and adding his own firsthand experience. A timely and important work."---Jason Burke, author of Al-Qaeda and On the Road to KandabarEight years ago we chased the Taliban from Kabul and forced Al Qaeda to find a new home. One by one the militants crossed the border into Pakistan and settled in its tribal areas, terrorizing or bribing their way to power. This place---Pakistan's lawless frontier---is now the epicenter of global terrorism. It is, in President Obama's words, "the most dangerous place," a hornet's nest of violent extremists, many of whom have turned against their own state.Hugely authoritative and astonishing in its revelations, The Most Dangerous Place tells the gripping story of how Pakistan was set on fire, with suicide bombers, unknown before 2002, now striking at least once a week. It confirms what everyone knows though few will admit: there will be no peace in Afghanistan until the Pakistani Taliban is brought under control. Can it be done? Who are these people and what are their links to Al Qaeda and the ISI, Pakistan's all-powerful intelligence agency?For twenty-five years, Imtiaz Gul has been fearlessly reporting on these groups for local and international media. He knows the key players and has unparalleled access to military and intelligence sources. Based on exclusive interviews with high-ranking intelligence, government, and military officers and extensive firsthand reporting in villages where no American journalist would be safe, The Most Dangerous Place is a gripping and explosive expose of a region that we all fear and need urgently to understand

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Contributors
Foley, Kevin Narrator
Gul, Imtiaz Author
ISBN
9781400197972
9781101434765

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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

In this breathless play-by-play, Pakistani journalist Gul surveys the violent free-for-all along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. The kaleidoscope of armed religious and ethnic factions he follows includes Taliban groups that attack each other almost as readily as they do their enemies; Pakistani army and police forces, who fight pitched battles with the Taliban and also cut deals with them; tribal militias that sometimes support the Taliban and sometimes the government; competing Arab and Uzbek strains of al-Qaeda; and miscellaneous smugglers and bandits. Hovering above it all are CIA drones periodically lobbing Hellfire missiles into the fray. The author traces the turmoil to the Soviet and American invasions of Afghanistan, the Pakistani government's erstwhile support for Afghan jihadists, and Pakistan's authoritarian rule, but the fundamental problem is the absence of a functioning state, aside from the Taliban chieftains who try to stamp out crime, girls' schools, barber shops, and iodized salt. Gul's disorganized but readable account doesn't alter the conventional picture of the Pakistan-Afghanistan frontier, but he offers a useful scorecard for the struggle to bring order to the region-and shows how difficult and perhaps even unrealizable it is. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

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Kirkus Book Review

In his first U.S. publication, Pakistani journalist Gul tracks the Taliban and al-Qaeda insurgents into the mountainous tribal regions to investigate the tangle of perilous allegiances.The destabilized Afghanistan-Pakistan border region is constantly in the news as the Obama administration attempts to flush out the militants using the area as a base to train soldiers and launch terrorist attacks. In a dense, timely study, the author investigates the complicated makeup of these groups. The autonomous tribal areas were mostly ignored until they became "staging posts" for mujahideen attacks against the Russian invaders of Afghanistan in 1979 and the early '80s, organized by the CIA and Pakistan's military arm, the Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI). After the Russians pulled out in 1989, the United States lost interest in the area, leaving the smugglers to conduct "business as usual," until 9/11 sent the al-Qaeda militants from Afghanistan into areas of North and South Waziristan and Bajaur. (The two maps at the beginning of the book are helpful.) As American attacks increased in fury, the organization of the fighters similarly coalesced and allegiances grew even murkier, with Pakistan's leadership unable, or unwilling, to "plug the border to Al Qaeda and the Taliban," and U.S.-Pakistan relations becoming increasingly fraught with suspicion. Gul dissects the various terrorist "agencies" in these areas and their assaults, culminating in a rash of suicide bombings, finessed by al-Qaeda as a glorification of "violent martyrdom," that claimed thousands of lives, many innocent civilians. The chapter titled "Who Funds the Militants?" is a fascinating look at the incestuous financial networks that allow the terrorist organizations to operate, and "A Question of Justice" explores the tribal system of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and how each group agitates for policies more suitable to its own sense of law, rather than what's dictated from Islamabad.Informational rather than didactic, Gul's insider take will serve as an excellent resource. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

In this breathless play-by-play, Pakistani journalist Gul surveys the violent free-for-all along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. The kaleidoscope of armed religious and ethnic factions he follows includes Taliban groups that attack each other almost as readily as they do their enemies; Pakistani army and police forces, who fight pitched battles with the Taliban and also cut deals with them; tribal militias that sometimes support the Taliban and sometimes the government; competing Arab and Uzbek strains of al-Qaeda; and miscellaneous smugglers and bandits. Hovering above it all are CIA drones periodically lobbing Hellfire missiles into the fray. The author traces the turmoil to the Soviet and American invasions of Afghanistan, the Pakistani government's erstwhile support for Afghan jihadists, and Pakistan's authoritarian rule, but the fundamental problem is the absence of a functioning state, aside from the Taliban chieftains who try to stamp out crime, girls' schools, barber shops, and iodized salt. Gul's disorganized but readable account doesn't alter the conventional picture of the Pakistan-Afghanistan frontier, but he offers a useful scorecard for the struggle to bring order to the region--and shows how difficult and perhaps even unrealizable it is. (June)

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