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Leaves the reader more than a little disturbed.
The 95 small pages are really four lengthy, discordant magazine articles.
Klein's article, 'Baghdad Year Zero', is an enthralling look at how the Iraq War was ultimately a neocon economic experiment. Klein details how the neocon attempt at transforming Iraq into essentially a special economic zone devoid of any government control turned what was meant to be the best place to do business in the world into what the Economist soon ranked as the worst.
The last article, No Terrorism by Walter Laqueur, is a realistic portrait about Islamic terrorism in the world today. Laquer elucidates how traditional rationalisations for the causes of terrorism, namely poverty, dispowerment, disenfranchisement, racism etc., which are formed from left-wing terrorist in the 1960's, are outdated and erroneous in today's world. Other red herrings like the Palestinian-Israeli conflict are another red herring he dismisses, as religious terrorists will simply focus their attention on a new justification for their madness.
He muses on the implications of terrorists acessing nuclear wepons. His closing sentences sums his treasise well, with 'Terrorism, therefore, will conntinue- not perhaps with the same intensity at all times, and some parts of the globe may be spared altogether. But there can be no victory, only an uphill struggle, at times successful, at other times not.'
The 95 small pages are really four lengthy, discordant magazine articles.
Klein's article, 'Baghdad Year Zero', is an enthralling look at how the Iraq War was ultimately a neocon economic experiment. Klein details how the neocon attempt at transforming Iraq into essentially a special economic zone devoid of any government control turned what was meant to be the best place to do business in the world into what the Economist soon ranked as the worst.
The last article, No Terrorism by Walter Laqueur, is a realistic portrait about Islamic terrorism in the world today. Laquer elucidates how traditional rationalisations for the causes of terrorism, namely poverty, dispowerment, disenfranchisement, racism etc., which are formed from left-wing terrorist in the 1960's, are outdated and erroneous in today's world. Other red herrings like the Palestinian-Israeli conflict are another red herring he dismisses, as religious terrorists will simply focus their attention on a new justification for their madness.
He muses on the implications of terrorists acessing nuclear wepons. His closing sentences sums his treasise well, with 'Terrorism, therefore, will conntinue- not perhaps with the same intensity at all times, and some parts of the globe may be spared altogether. But there can be no victory, only an uphill struggle, at times successful, at other times not.'