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War Journal: My Five Years in Iraq

War Journal: My Five Years in Iraq

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Author: Richard Engel
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Category: Book

List Price: $28.00
Buy New: $8.65
You Save: $19.35 (69%)



New (48) Used (33) Collectible (1) from $5.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 26 reviews
Sales Rank: 20727

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 400
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 9.7 x 6.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 1416563040
Dewey Decimal Number: 956.70443092
EAN: 9781416563044
ASIN: 1416563040

Publication Date: June 3, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In the most dramatic and intimate account of battle reporting since Michael Herr's classic Dispatches, NBC News's award-winning Middle East Bureau Chief, Richard Engel, offers an unvarnished and often emotional account of five years in Iraq.

Engel is the longest serving broadcaster in Iraq and the only American television reporter to cover the country continuously before, during, and after the 2003 U.S. invasion. Fluent in Arabic, he has had unrivaled access to U.S. military commanders, Sunni insurgents, Shiite militias, Iraqi families, and even President George W. Bush, who called him to the White House for a private briefing. He has witnessed nearly every major milestone in this long war.

War Journal describes what it was like to go into the hole where U.S. Special Operations Forces captured Saddam Hussein. Engel was there as the insurgency began and watched the spread of Iranian influence over Shiite religious cities and the Iraqi government. He watched as Iraqis voted in their first election. He was in the courtroom when Saddam was sentenced to death and interviewed General David Petraeus about the surge.

In vivid, sometimes painful detail, Engel tracks the successes and setbacks of the war. He describes searching, with U.S troops, for a missing soldier in the dangerous Sunni city of Ramadi; surviving kidnapping attempts, IED attacks, hotel bombings, and ambushes; and even the smell of cakes in a bakery attacked by sectarian gangs and strewn with bodies of the executed.

War Journal describes a sectarian war that American leaders were late to understand and struggled to contain. It is an account of the author's experiences, insights, bittersweet reflections, and moments from his private video diary -- itself the subject of a highly acclaimed documentary on MSNBC.

War Journal is the story of the transformation of a young journalist who moved to the Middle East with $2,000 and a belief that the region would be "the story" of his generation into a seasoned reporter who has at times believed that he would die covering the war. It is about American soldiers, ordinary Iraqis, and especially a few brave individuals on his team who continually risked their lives to make his own daring reporting possible.


Customer Reviews:   Read 21 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Want to know what happens in the Iraq war   November 10, 2008
Richard Engle War jurnal is a must read if you want to know what happens in Iraq


4 out of 5 stars Where's the maps, pics   September 23, 2008
A learning experience, on the ground in Iraq. My one and only beef is that there are no maps and no pictures.

Engels, on page 327, himself admits to having a thing for maps. "When ever I want to explain the situation in Iraq, I feel compelled to draw maps." "I am also convince maps are essential to understanding the war in Iraq, which has always been more about geography, religion, and power than democracy. If you know where the Shiites, Sunnis, and the Kurds live, it's easy to understand their struggles for dominance. If you see on paper how Iran is wedged between U.S. bases in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Persian Gulf, it helps explain why Tehran's foreign policy seems so aggressive. From where Iran sits, it looks like the country is being surrounded, which it is."

UPDATE
When Richard Engel asked Pres. Bushes how long we would be in Iraq, Bush shot back "This is the great war of our times. It is going to take forty years"
I was wondering how Bush arrived at that particular number. Well...

A week later while finishing up reading "Why Presidents Fail: White House Decision Making from Eisenhower to Bush II" by Richard M. Pious - I came across that FORTY YEARS. It explains where Bushs forty years comes from.

It's in Chapter 9, Parallel Governance: Bush and Iraqi Weapons of Mass Destruction, under Petropolitics on page 237 it says

"After the war the American government pressed Iraq to conclude "Production Service Agreements" with American oil companies, which would lock in the right to exploit the fields on favorable terms for up to FORTY YEARS (caps are mine) (73). The American government pressed the Iraqi parliament to pass an oil law (which as of late 2007it had not done yet) that would allow private companies to exploit 85 percent of the Iraqi fields, leaving only 15 percent to be developed by the Iraqi National Oil Company. The total value of the oil could be as much as 30 trillion (74). Control of this much oil would allow the United States to put downward pressure on the OPEC price cartel. The United States was building five superbases in Iraq, and after the "Surge" of 2007 was planning to leave perhaps as many as 35,000 troops in the region, including rapid reaction forces that could be used to protect the oil fields."

(73). Joshua Holland, "Bush's Petro-Cartel Almost Has Iraq's Oil," Alternet.org (Oct. 16, 2006)
(74) Jim Holt, "It's the Oil," London Review of Books (Oct. 18, 2007)
--------------------

With this book and others I'm slowly getting an idea of what's going on.

Other related books I've read and recommend;
*Nasr, Vali - The Shia Revival: How Conflicts within Islam Will Shape the Future
*Stewart, Rory - The Prince of the Marshes
*Bostom, Andrew G. - The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non- Muslims
*Heikal, Mohamed - Iran: The Untold Story
*Thesiger, Wilfred - The Last Nomad
*Arnove, Anthony - Iraq: the logic of withdrawal
*Galbraith. Peter W. - The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created a War Without End

Indirectly
*Pious, Richard M. - Why Presidents Fail: White House Decision Making from Eisenhower to Bush II
*Ansary, Tamin Mir - West of Kabul, East of New York:
*Horwitz, Tony -- Baghdad without a map, and other misadventures in Arabia.
*Yahia, Mona - When the Grey beetles took over Baghdad: Fiction, but give you some what of an idea of being jewish in Bagdad '60-70
*We're All Men Here by John Flanagan Fiction, but author taught for a decade in the Middle East (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and Iraq)



5 out of 5 stars Great Frightening Book   August 25, 2008
This book has graphic violence and can be hard to take but really gets into the war. At times I found myself thinking that this just can't possibly be true but then I thought, no one could possibly make this up. There are a lot of scary, crazy, violent people running around Iraq. And just when you think it can't possibly get any worse, it does. The author has great insights into what is going on there and he is a sympathetic character. The way he ended the book, I get the impression he thinks the current reduction in violence is just a temporary truce while all side eliminate al Queda. Then the Shiite/Sunni civil war will start up again, with the US on the side of the Shiites.


5 out of 5 stars Crystal Clear   August 19, 2008
Richard Engel makes the war in Iraq crystal clear from a number of perspectives that help the reader to understand why the war has taken the course it has over these past five years.

His commentary on the differences between the religious sects and their politics as well as their response to the regime change in Iraq and the power vacuum it created along with the subsequent attempts by all parties to fill it is most enlightening.

Want to know why the Iraq war has gone the way that it did, why it is changing, and what may lie in the future? Read this book!



5 out of 5 stars excellent journal   August 17, 2008
i thoroughly enjoyed reading War Journal. Some of the chapters are really gruesome, but this is the reality of not only the war, but of human nature. One feels the emotions with Richard Engel as the war progress. I congratulate him for being such a brave soul and enduring all that he has been through. I highly recommend this book as an account of what really is happening in Iraq and not of the bias one hears in the media.

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