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Book cover of Defeat: Losing Iraq and the Future of the Middle East
General & Miscellaneous Religion, Islam, World Politics, Islamic Studies, Church & State, Diplomacy & International Relations, Middle Eastern Conflicts, Iraqi Politics, Middle Eastern Politics, Movements & Sects - Islamic, United States History - 21st Cen

Defeat: Losing Iraq and the Future of the Middle East

by Jonathan Steele
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Overview

As Barack Obama takes power, one question still dominates: Given all the resources ploughed into the Iraq War, why has it become impossible for the US to achieve its goals after toppling Saddam Hussein?

Synopsis

While much has been made of the faulty intelligence claim that Saddam had a secret arsenal of weapons of mass destruction that was used to justify the U.S. invasion, in reality the failures of political intelligence were equally serious.

Award-winning reporter Jonathan Steele reveals the disastrous mistake U.S. decision-makers made by not seeing that the post-Saddam vacuum would be filled by Shia Islamists with close ties to a resurgent Iran. They underestimated the complexity of Iraqi society and the deep well of proud nationalism that was bound to produce resistance if the U.S. did not make clear that it intended to withdraw quickly.

Steele shows, for the first time, how the invasion and occupation were perceived by ordinary Iraqis whose feelings and experiences were ignored by Western policymakers. The result of such arrogance, Steele demonstrates, was a failure that will forever resonate among the darkest chapters of American and British history. Blending vivid reportage, informed analysis, and powerful historical narrative Defeat is the definitive anatomy of this horrendous catastrophe.

The Washington Post - Daniel Benjamin

America's mistakes have been given an extensive airing in many excellent books…In Defeat, British journalist Jonathan Steele has managed something that might have been deemed beyond reach: He has asked the question in a new and interesting way. In short, he wonders: Could we have ever gotten this right?…It is an understated book, informed by Steele's wide reading in Iraqi history and his reporting over the course of eight stints of a month or more in Iraq between the invasion and 2007. What Steele has done is the important work of asking Iraqis how they felt when their loved ones were mistakenly killed at checkpoints or in crossfire, and what it was like to have a child mistakenly locked up for weeks. He has picked up on the small but vital things…

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Editorials

Daniel Benjamin

America's mistakes have been given an extensive airing in many excellent books…In Defeat, British journalist Jonathan Steele has managed something that might have been deemed beyond reach: He has asked the question in a new and interesting way. In short, he wonders: Could we have ever gotten this right?…It is an understated book, informed by Steele's wide reading in Iraqi history and his reporting over the course of eight stints of a month or more in Iraq between the invasion and 2007. What Steele has done is the important work of asking Iraqis how they felt when their loved ones were mistakenly killed at checkpoints or in crossfire, and what it was like to have a child mistakenly locked up for weeks. He has picked up on the small but vital things…
β€”The Washington Post

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2009
Publisher
Counterpoint
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781582434797

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