Acknowledgments; Glossary; Preface; Introduction: the road to September 11 and after; 1. Religious nationalists and the near enemy; 2. The Afghan war: sowing the seeds of transnational Jihad; 3. The rise of transnationalist Jihadis and the far enemy; 4. Splitting up of Jihadis; 5. The aftermath: the war within; 6. The Iraq war: planting the seeds of Al Qaeda's second generation?; Notes; Index.
Analyses the rift in the jihadist movement that led to the events of 9/11.
Fawaz A. Gerges holds the Christian A. Johnson Chair in International Affairs and Middle Eastern Studies at Sarah Lawrence College. He was educated at Oxford University and the London School of Economics and has previously been a Research Fellow at Harvard and Princeton universities. He is also a senior analyst and regular commentator for ABC television news. His books include America and Political Islam: Clash of Interests or Clash of Cultures? (Cambridge, 1999) and The Journey of the Jihadis: A Biography of a State of Mind (Harcourt Press, 2006). He has written extensively on Arab and Muslim politics, Islamist movements, American foreign policy, and relations between the world of Islam and the West. His articles have appeared in several of the most prestigious journals and newspapers in the United States, Europe, and the Middle East.
'In this well-grounded and … gripping account of militant Islamist
activism, Gerges gives the most persuasive explanation yet for the
direction taken by those jihadis who have set their sights on
nothing less than a shift in the global balance of power. Taking
these ruthless idealists of the new century seriously, through
their writings and through interviews, he brings an immediacy to
the story which shows up their limitations, but also underlines the
ferocity of their desire to eliminate those who stand against
them.' Charles Tripp, School of Oriental and African Studies,
University of London
'Fawaz Gerges has written an authoritative, deeply-researched
account of jihadist movements around the Middle East, and shows
that these movements, far from monolithic, are rife with
ideological and strategic debates. This stimulating and
well-written book will be of great interest to the general reader
and the specialist alike.' Peter Bergen, CNN Terrorism Analyst and
author of Holy War, Inc.: Inside the Secret World of Osama bin
Laden
'No previous author has gone as far as Fawaz Gerges in explaining
and illustrating the politics of Al Qaeda. On the basis of many
interviews with jihadi militants, a close reading of the voluminous
Arab literature thrown by its members, and, not least, the author's
astute and historically informed judgment, he has produced a rich
and most informative portrait of this movement. Identifying the
political costs to the Arab world of this extreme, if very much
minoritarian tendency, he also shows how repeated miscalculations
by the West, from Afghanistan in the 1980s to Iraq after 2003, have
given a new lease of life to the anger and fantasies of bin Laden
and his followers.' Fred Halliday, London School of Economics and
author of Two Hours that Shook the World and 100 Myths About
Islam
'Those interested in jihadist thought should consider Fawaz A.
Gerges's The Far Enemy: Why Jihad Went Global, a well-researched
account of how the Islamist movement is riven by ideological
disputes and petty feuds.' Peter Bergen, author of The Osama Bin
Laden I Know, Washington Post
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