Web of Deceit: The History of Western Complicity in Iraq, from Churchill to Kennedy to George W. Bush
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| Web of Deceit: The History of Western Complicity in Iraq, from Churchill to Kennedy to George W. Bush | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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An investigative history of Western complicity in Saddam Hussein's crimes reveals the story his trial never will.
In February 1991, the Shia of southern Iraq rose against Saddam Hussein. Barry M. Lando, a former investigative producer for 60 Minutes, argues compellingly that this ill-fated uprising represents one instance among many of Western complicity in Saddam Hussein's crimes against humanity. The Shia were responding to the call for rebellion from President George H.W. Bush that was broadcast repeatedly across Iraq by clandestine CIA stations. But, just as the revolution was on the brink of success, the United States and its allies turned their backs: U.S. troops destroyed huge weapons caches to prevent them from falling into rebel hands and blocked rebels trying to reach Baghdad. In the end, tens of thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands, were massacred. Because of restrictions imposed by the Special Tribunal prosecuting Saddam Hussein, the extensive role of the U.S. and its allies in his crimes will never be explored at his trial. But as Web of Deceit demonstrates, the nations that now denounce Saddam most prominently secretly backed the dictator from his rise to power in the 1960s and '70s to his offensives in Iran and, despite warnings, took no action to stop his invasion of Kuwait. They also turned their backs when he used chemical weapons against the Iraqi people and persisted in international sanctions long after they had proved ineffective and, for hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians, lethal. Web of Deceit draws on a wide range of journalism and scholarship to present a complete picture of what really happened in Iraq under Saddam, detailingfor the first timethe complicity of the West in its full and alarming extent. |
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| 04-05-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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For me it was a fascinating read. I learned not only a lot about Iraq and its past. I learned about how international politics work and I learned about the dynamics between the international policies of the US and its internal powers and opninions. It is astonishing how the United States likes to play the good cop of the world but is really just a government looking after its own interests and especially those of the active lobby groups.
It's a good read, sometimes though to get through and very detailed because complete and correct but if you care about the truth and you want to know what's happening in the world this book will amaze you and give you knowledge all people should have to make this world a place where justice rules and not deceit. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-31 03:28:05 EST)
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| 03-11-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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Barry Lando, an award-winning investigative producer with 60 Minutes, has written a most enlightening book. Most accounts of Iraq proceed as if there had never been any foreign intervention, and as if the tyrant Saddam just appeared from a cloudless blue sky. By contrast, Lando shows the dire effects of a century of foreign abuse.
For example, during the British occupation and counter-insurgency war of 1919-24, Winston Churchill successfully urged using gas bombs to punish Iraqis `without inflicting grave injury upon them', as he knowingly lied. The RAF bombed and machine-gunned at will. The CIA and MI6 both aided the bloody 1963 and 1968 coups in Iraq. In 1980, the US government gave Saddam Hussein the green light to attack Iran. Alexander Haig, Reagan's first Secretary of State, wrote in a confidential memo, "It was interesting to confirm that President Carter gave the Iraqis a green light to launch the war against Iran through Fahd [Prince Fahd of Saudi Arabia]." The USA, Britain and Israel all sold arms to both sides in the Iran-Iraq war, despite a UN Resolution banning sales to either. Before the 1990 Iraq war, US diplomats lured Hussein into attacking Kuwait, telling him that the USA would not intervene. In that war, USAF and RAF bombing of unparalleled intensity destroyed Iraq's civilian infrastructure. Thatcher and Bush, who had sold Saddam Hussein his chemical and biological weapons, then accused the war's opponents of supporting him! After the war, US-British sanctions throughout the 1990s killed a million Iraqi people, half of them children, making Iraq's child mortality the worst in the world. Bush, when asked if sanctions would cover food and medicine, replied, `everything, everything'. It is a war crime to starve a civilian population. The current US-British occupation of Iraq is a disaster. A 2003 US National Intelligence Estimate stated that the insurgency was fuelled by local conditions and drew its strength from real grievances, including the presence of US troops and bases. A century of outside interference has not brought peace, democracy or prosperity to Iraq, just one catastrophe after another. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-06 02:09:16 EST)
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| 01-29-08 | 5 | 3\3 |
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Lando begins by telling us that numerous world leaders have contributed to the mess in Iraq, beginning with its illogical formation after WWI. However, most "Web of Deceit" focuses on the actions of Bush I and Bush II, particularly the former. Readers sense that both Gulf War I and II, as well as the War on Terror could have been avoided through better decision-making.
Saddam (as a CIA "asset") and the U.S. joined forces first in the overthrow of a nationalistic Iraq government that had the audacity to threaten a Kuwait takeover (long-standing border dispute) and actually nationalized Iraqi oil production and marketing. This was followed by Saddam's involvement in the first of numerous mass executions implicitly sanctioned by the U.S. - this one because it was getting rid of pro-Soviet Iraqis. The U.S. then backed a Baath Party takeover in return for reversing sulfur-mining concessions Iraq had granted French companies. We also supported Kurds' anti-government actions. The French, West Germans, and Italians then provided Iraq with extensive and sophisticated arms, as well as two reactors and training. When Saddam invaded Iran, Presidents Carter and Reagan supported him with arms as a means of undermining Khomeini. These included cluster bomblets, some with delayed timing to maim and kill rescuers. The U.S. also ignored Saddam's use of chemical weapons vs. Iran's human wave attacks, and may have been involved in their production. Iraqi troops also received unconventional warfare training in the U.S. in case Iran overran Iraq, and considerable intelligence from U.S. spy satellites. (Iran also received arms, at least partly in an unsuccessful effort to obtain the release of hostages, and also because eg. Kissinger hoped both sides would destroy each other.) Bush I was down in the polls ("No new taxes" reversal) when Saddam grossly miscalculated reactions and invaded Kuwait. After initially responding with mixed messages, Bush decided this was an opportunity to take out Saddam - despite our earlier support. The U.S. mislead Saudi Arabia as to the extent and progress of Iraq's buildup on the Saudi's borders as a means of obtaining their approval to stage 15,000 troops, as well as obtaining a broad coalition of support. (Similarly, Kuwait's P.R. firm massively mislead Congress and U.S. citizens with untrue stories of abuse by Iraqi troops.) Tens of billions in aid and debt forgiveness was doled out to help convince those undecided, and in one case aid was cut to a non-supporter - Yemen. Bush then rebuffed Saddam's face-saving offers to withdraw - eg. in return for a U.S. supported conference on the Palestine issue. Bush then proceeded with his "altruistic" mission, though to some our charges of aggression rang hollow vs. Panama, and Israel vs. Lebanon; similarly, our mission to enforce a U.N. resolution on the issue seemed two-faced to many, in light of our non-support for U.N. resolutions vs. Israel. Lacking post-war plans (the U.S. was worried about fracturing the coalition) led to allowing Saddam use of his "civilian" helicopters to massacre Shiites in the South and Kurds in the North after Bush had urged them to revolt. Only after it became known that some of the helicopters were being used in chemical weapons attacks were the "No-Fly" zones established - much later. In Lando's opinion, the most lethal "WMD" to hit Iraq did not occur until the U.S./Britain sponsored U.N. Iraq trade embargo. Since the country imported 70% of its pre-war food, had had its electrical power generation largely destroyed by U.S. air attacks (intended to created civilian anti-Saddam pressure), as well as water-purification and sewage-treatment plants rendered inoperable, the result was a perverse type of biological warfare that killed 500,000- 1,000,000, mostly children. Exceptions were made to allow for medical and other emergency supplies, but these were mostly window-dressing as the bulk of resulting funds were directed to reparations to Kuwait and paying U.N. overhead. The embargo's intent was to topple Saddam - experts estimated he would only last six months. Later the focus shifted to finding and destroying Saddam's WMD programs. This effort, however, was undermined by the U.S. planting spies within the inspection group, and creating artificial crises from time to time. 9/11 ultimately led to the end of Saddam. Bush II had a hatred of Saddam ("He tried to kill my dad"), surrounded himself largely with neo-cons focused on deposing Saddam, and took advantage of the situation to manipulate information into an anti-Saddam frenzy. Lando's "Web of Deceit" is a great service to those interested in the truth. It reveals that most U.S. actions in the area were counterproductive - especially the long-term stationing of troops in Saudi Arabia that became a major irritant to Muslim extremists. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-16 19:46:01 EST)
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| 11-19-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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Barry M. Lando presents a thorough analysis of Western intervention within the Mesopotamian region. Not only does it study the current issues of Iraq but the very history of Western Imperialist goals through colonialism and governance by proxy starting with the British in World War I, giving stunning parallels to the current U.S. attempts.
This book is one giant, and necessary step to understanding the hatred emanating towards the West from the Middle East and the roots of "Islamic" fundamentalism. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-01 04:08:47 EST)
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| 11-02-07 | 4 | 1\1 |
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Over 85 years of deceitful policies and relationships spin us around and around into complicated webs of destruction. Lando is the devil charging every sinner with his or her full measure of sin. Across every page is stamped GUILTY. The final judgment is necessary: Iraq II --or is it III? or IV?-- was a repeat in so many ways. Let's learn something this time around; and not forget.
The history is presently succinctly by Lando. He never gets bogged down, maintaining a tone of objectivity throughout, leaving room for readers to reach their own conclusions, but never allowing for excuses or cover. My conclusions may differ from yours: All superpowers are essentially weak. We are pathetically dependent, driven, unaware, bumbly, and inadequate to the challenges of the world. The more power we think we have, the deeper the holes we dig. Believe it or not, I felt a bit sorry for the Western leaders, caught in the webs of their own half-conscious power plays. There is a sense of Karma to all the actions and failures to act. No one wins. This is primarily a story of relationship to a character (Saddam Hussein) who like the devil reveals the worst sides of all other characters. Did we create him? Or did he create us? And finally it's about our failure to relate to a country and its peoples. Barry Lando's "The Web of Deceit" along with "Fiasco: the American Military Adventure in Iraq" by Thomas Ricks are required reading about our "efforts" in Iraq. Ricks' focus is on how irresponsible use of money and resources ends in incompetence and failure. In some ways Ricks makes Lando look gentle and overly timid in his charges because he has information Lando doesn't about the occupation. Iraqis and Middle Easterners remember this history. It's theirs. We walk away and think we don't need to know it. But as Lando makes clear this is inextricably our history too. No escape. No denial. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-11-19 15:05:04 EST)
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| 09-16-07 | 4 | 1\1 |
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I suppose we will never see the end of the damage done by the old European colonial system. Even my hero, Churchill, was guilty of moving boundaries of countries to serve the empire. Very eye opening book and gives insight into some of the reasons "they hate us".
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-11-02 23:20:20 EST)
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| 06-26-07 | 4 | 1\1 |
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most excellent & informative. brings the hypocrisy of the western world out into the light. a must read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-09-17 10:36:23 EST)
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| 06-19-07 | 5 | 8\9 |
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This is one of two books that I have read together, both documenting the decades of deceit by both the US and UK governments, and to a much lesser degree, by France, Germany, and Russia, among others.
The two compelling facts that stay with me as I put the book down, are two: 1) From Churchill to Kennedy to Bush (Cheney), all of our Presidents in the US, but most especially Reagan, Bush, Clinton (Brzezinski), and the current and failed crew of neo conservatives that use Bush Junior as a talking doll, have been complicit--let me spell that again--complicit in the mass murders, the massacres, the torture that we first condoned and now practice ourselves. The US White House denizens are all long overdue for formal indictment, at least by a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The author documents, very ably, a long string of broken promises (e.g. to the Bedouin leader for a free Arab state in return for help in WWI, to the Kurds, etc.) and complicity in mass murder. In the author's views, the sanctions are a war crime against the children, women, and elderly of Iraq, a war crime that lasted thirteen years. 2) Salaam Hussein was a creature spawned in large part by the CIA. Although I have spent 30 years in the intelligence business, it was not until I embarked on my broad non-fiction reading program that I have been able to understand that the CIA specifically, but all the rest of the classified intelligence community, is complicit in mass murders, genocides, running cocaine into the US to wipe out poor communities now addicted to crack, made affordable by the CIA's drug runners, and made politically kosher because Wall Street demands drug money--laundered drug money--for its liquidity. I join Lee Iacocca in asking, "Where is the outrage?" There is not a candidate for President today, not even Ron Paul, who can outline in chapter and verse, as I now can on the shoulders of the 900+ authors whose hard-earned insights I have absorbed these past six years, the evil that Lionel Tiger and others show is inherent in industrialization and the centralization of power. We need to destroy the current corrupt elections process, implement electoral reform across the board, and start putting bright honorable people in office, instead of these nakedly immoral and profoundly evil creatures who will inflict any sacrifice, impose any burden, on We the People so that they may profit. A few of the many gems from this superb work: 1) All our Presidents in recent time have lied to us, and the most humiliating of all of these lies was not the weapons of mass destruction, but the abandonment of the Kurds and the refusal to listen when Iraqi generals approached Iraqi dissidents who in turn came to the Department of State only to be shunned away. Salaam Hussein promised to leave Kuwait, but US wanted to destroy his army, and refused to hold off on what proved to be 40 hours of pure slaughter. Gulf II was not only more lies, but the active suppression of facts and dissident views, not least of which were General Tony Zinni's views--he was called a traitor by Condolezza Rice, who appears to know nothing of honor, decency, and truthfulness. 2) CIA is creating more long-term havoc than it is worth. I am finally persuaded, with absolute certainty, that we need to get out of the covert action business. CIA should become the National Analysis Agency, and the small clandestine arm should be limited to multinational operations against transnational crime and terrorism, with an Inspector General in every Station. 3) Jimmy Carter, advised by Zbig Brzezinski, comes out of this book looking both more ignorant and more unscrupulous than Reagan or either of the Bushies. Brzezinski not only masterminded the tacit okay for Pakistani development of nuclear weapons in return for aid in Afghanistan, he also began the process of helping Salaam Hussein acquire, develop, and utilize weapons of mass destruction, and I hold Brzezinski directly accountable for the mass murder of Kurds, Iraqi Shiites, and Iranians. There are many other notes from this book that I have, but rather than lay them out here I am going to simply say that this book moves to the top of my list of books on evaluating the Iraq misadventure that has given us a $2 trillion debt and 75,000 amputees whose lives are forever shattered ***for no good reason*** The betrayal of the public trust by both the Executive and Congress, by both politicians and senior civil servants and military flag officers, has been outrageous. The author uses the words ignorance, arrogance, incompetence, amorality, illegality, hypocrisy, and cynicism sparingly. This is not a vendetta book. This is a reasons indictment and joins a host of other books that demand the immediate impeachment not only of the sitting President and Vice President, but also of the Republican ***and*** Democratic leadership in the Senate and the House of Representatives. I am ashamed of our Republic and what these amoral thieves have done "in our name." I am disheartened by the knowledge that all of our brave troops have died, been disabled, and suffered for ***no good reason.*** This makes me very angry. Angry enough to begin speaking out, pleading with America to wake up and find within itself the means for a non-violent restoration of the Constitution and We the People as individuals with liberty for all, lest America be disgraced, and our children's' futures sacrificed, forevermore. Shame, shame, shame. Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam (American Empire Project) (American Empire Project) Unintended Consequences: The United States at War The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic (The American Empire Project) Manufacture of Evil: Ethics, Evolution, and the Industrial System Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency Statecraft as Soulcraft Why the Rest Hates the West: Understanding the Roots of Global Rage The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People Breaking the Real Axis of Evil: How to Oust the World's Last Dictators by 2025 (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-11 04:07:45 EST)
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| 06-19-07 | 5 | (NA) |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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This is one of two books that I have read together, both documenting the decades of deceit by both the US and UK governments, and to a much lesser degree, by France, Germany, and Russia, among others.
The two compelling facts that stay with me as I put the book down, are two: 1) From Churchill to Kennedy to Bush (Cheney), all of our Presidents in the US, but most especially Reagan, Bush, Clinton (Brzezinski), and the current and failed crew of neo conservatives that use Bush Junior as a talking doll, have been complicit--let me spell that again--complicit in the mass murders, the massacres, the torture that we first condoned and now practice ourselves. The US White House denizens are all long overdue for formal indictment, at least by a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The author documents, very ably, a long string of broken promises (e.g. to the Bedouin leader for a free Arab state in return for help in WWI, to the Kurds, etc.) and complicity in mass murder. In the author's views, the sanctions are a war crime against the children, women, and elderly of Iraq, a war crime that lasted thirteen years. 2) Salaam Hussein was a creature spawned in large part by the CIA. Although I have spent 30 years in the intelligence business, it was not until I embarked on my broad non-fiction reading program that I have been to understand that the CIA specifically, but all the rest of the classified intelligence community, is complicit in mass murders, genocides, running cocaine into the US to wipe out poor communities now addicted to crack, made affordable by the CIA's drug runners, and made politically kosher because Wall Street demands drug money--laundered drug money--for its liquidity. I join Lee Iacocca in asking, "Where is the outrage?" There is not a candidate for President today, not even Ron Paul, who can outline in chapter and verse, as I now can on the shoulders of the 900+ authors whose hard-earned insights I have absorbed these past six years, the reality that Lionel Tiger, We need to destroy the current corrupt elections process, implement electoral reform across the board, and start putting bright honorable people in office, instead of these nakedly immoral and profoundly evil creatures who will inflict any sacrifice, impose any burden, on We the People so that they may profit. A few of the many gems from this superb work: 1) All our Presidents in recent time have lied to us, and the most humiliating of all of these lies was not the weapons of mass destruction, but the abandonment of the Kurds and the refusal to listen when Iraqi generals approached Iraqi dissidents who in turn came to the Department of State only to be shunned away. Salaam Hussein promised to leave Kuwait, but US wanted to destroy his army, and refused to hold off on what proved to be 40 hours of pure slaughter. Gulf II was not only more lies, but the active suppression of facts and dissident views, not least of which were General Tony Zinni's views--he was called a traitor by Condolezza Rice, who appears to know nothing of honor, decency, and truthfulness. 2) CIA is creating more long-term havoc than it is worth. I am finally persuaded, with absolute certainty, that we need to get out of the covert action business. CIA should become the National Analysis Agency, and the small clandestine arm should be limited to multinational operations against transnational crime and terrorism, with an Inspector General in every Station. 3) Jimmy Carter, advised by Zbig Brzezinski, comes out of this book looking both more ignorant and more unscrupulous than Reagan or either of the Bushies. Brzezinski not only masterminded the tacit okay for Pakistani development of nuclear weapons in return for aid in Afghanistan, he also began the process of helping Salaam Hussein acquire, develop, and utilize weapons of mass destruction, and I hold Brzezinski directly accountable for the mass murder of Kurds, Iraqi Shiites, and Iranians. There are many other notes from this book that I have, but rather than lay them out here I am going to simply say that this book moves to the top of my list of books on evaluating the Iraq misadventure that has given us a $2 trillion debt and 75,000 amputees whose lives are forever shattered ***for no good reason*** The betrayal of the public trust by both the Executive and Congress, by both politicians and senior civil servants and military flag officers, has been outrageous. The author uses the words ignorance, arrogance, incompetence, amorality, illegality, hypocrisy, and cynicism sparingly. This is not a vendetta book. This is a reasons indictment and joins a host of other books that demand the immediate impeachment not only of the sitting President and Vice President, but also of the Republican ***and*** Democratic leadership in the Senate and the House of Representatives. I am ashamed of our Republic and what these amoral thieves have done "in our name." I am disheartened by the knowledge that all of our brave troops have died, been disabled, and suffered for ***no good reason.*** This makes me very angry. Angry enough to begin speaking out, pleading with America to wake up and find within itself the means for a non-violent restoration of the Constitution and We the People as individuals with liberty for all, lest America be disgraced, and our children's' futures sacrificed, forevermore. Shame, shame, shame. Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam (American Empire Project) (American Empire Project) Unintended Consequences: The United States at War The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic (The American Empire Project) Manufacture of Evil: Ethics, Evolution, and the Industrial System Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency Statecraft as Soulcraft Why the Rest Hates the West: Understanding the Roots of Global Rage The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People Breaking the Real Axis of Evil: How to Oust the World's Last Dictators by 2025 (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-18 23:26:03 EST)
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| 05-24-07 | 3 | 2\4 |
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Barry M. Lando presents a virtual rogue's gallery of the good Christian boys and girl who the knuckleheads at my church pray for, apparently because they have put young men and women from our community at the point of the spear to "fight for our freedom." The author's revelations appear authentic, and are not as surpising as they should be. As a veteran, not a hero, of Desert Storm, I remember the TV interview of the young African American soldier from our fort who was raring to go to Kuwait to "restore democracy." Apparently, the poor sap did not realize Kuwait never had democracy and he himself, as a black in the south, did not either. It was about oil then and is about oil, and a rather dangerous vendetta mixed with bizarre religious tones now. How fascinating that we propped up both Iran and Iraq during a lengthy and bloody conflict that killed both civilain and soldier alike. Then, we merrily ran sanctions that killed perhaps half a million or more children in Iraq, while at the same time, praying, wailing and beating their chests in agony when a brain dead woman was taken off life support. This rather reminds me of the Kingston Trio's "Merry Minuet." Perhaps this is something more than irony, but I do not know what it is. Colon Powell and Tony Blair were added to the cast of villians. I had hoped Powell had been duped by the sock puppet, but he appeared to go along of his own volition. I should have figured Blair all along, considering the imperialistic horrors that have been inflicted upon the Southwest Asian Peninsula by his country for more than a century. The civilian and military deaths add up to quite a tidy total, but as Stalin would have agreed, this is merely a statistic and no one cares. So, this is why I gave the book a 3 star. It is a swell documentation of a murderous disaster, but it does not accomplish a darn thing. This book will not cause one policy change. America will still believe the president, inspired by Jesus, is fighting the war to protect us from terrorism, instead of actually fanning the fires of terrorism. Since the publication of this book, things have gotten from bad to worse. One voice on Christian radio denouncing gay marriage will get more attention than all the press run of this title. Folks who wish to read more books on this subject, which also have not changed a darn thing, might read "All the Shah's Men" by Stephen Kinzer and "Sleeping with the Devil" by Robert Baer.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-11 04:07:45 EST)
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| 04-03-07 | 5 | 5\5 |
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After reading this book, you'll discover that Bush isn't the only idiot when it comes to the current Iraq situation. In fact the idiocy of today goes way way back. It's a fasinating history and make you realize that our leaders don't read history because they foolishly repeat it. In the case of W, it makes you wonder what the hell he thought he was going to do once he got there. Makes you appreciate George W's policy of not going to Bagdad during the Gulf war, though he screwed up too. And Clinton! Don't even get me started... Buy the book, read the book, it's very very good.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-11 04:07:45 EST)
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| 03-27-07 | 5 | 3\3 |
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When Saddam Hussein's Iraq actually had weapons of mass destruction, the George Iran-Contra Bush administration denied it for political purposes. And years later when Hussein's Iraq rid itself of W.M.D., the George A.W.O.L. Bush administration denied it for political purposes. Such has been the plight of the people of Iraq, who have suffered as pawns of greater nations for 85 years, as author Barry Lando itemizes in his book WEB OF DECEIT.
WEB OF DECEIT traces the anguish of the Iraqis since that nation's inception under the thumb of Winston Churchill's England. As WEB OF DECEIT moves on through the bad Bush to the worse Bush, names such as Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Cheney come back like cancers you hoped would stay in remission. Read WEB OF DECEIT, which author Lando should have titled THE USUAL GANG OF IDIOTS. But when the idiots in question are people such as Dick Cheney, MAD magazine could object to borrowing the slogan. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-11 04:07:45 EST)
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| 03-26-07 | 5 | 1\1 |
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When Saddam Hussein's Iraq actually had weapons of mass destruction, the George Iran-Contra Bush administration denied it for political purposes. And years later when Hussein's Iraq rid itself of W.M.D., the George A.W.O.L. Bush administration denied it for political purposes. Such has been the plight of the people of Iraq, who have suffered as pawns of greater nations for 85 years, as author Barry Lando itemizes in his book WEB OF DECEIT.
WEB OF DECEIT traces the anguish of the Iraqis since that nation's inception under the thumb of Winston Churchill's England. As WEB OF DECEIT moves on through the bad Bush to the worse Bush, names such as Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Cheney come back like cancers you hoped would stay in remission. Read WEB OF DECEIT, which author Lando should have titled THE USUAL GANG OF IDIOTS. But when the idiots in question are people such as Dick Cheney, MAD magazine could object to borrowing the slogan. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-04-03 12:01:53 EST)
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| 03-26-07 | 3 | 3\12 |
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This account is typical of the modern era, branding all countries to be entirely tools of the west and therefore blaming the west for everything that goes on in them. FOr Iraq this seems superficially true in this account. It was supposedly created by Winston Churchill upon the ruins of the Ottoman empire and then America supported Saddam against Iran in the 1980s and then America invaded the country in 2003, as a scapegoat for terror. JFK is even accused of being duplicitous somehow, apparently by encouraging Iraq to be part of an anti-Soviet alliance.
But this is only an account on the surface and fails to show the great impact that Iraqis had on their own country. It is not true that the borders of Iraq were created entirely from nothing. Since time immemorial there have existed the divisions of Syria and Mesopotamia and the latter is mostly what is Iraq. Moreover Iraqs eastern border with Iran goes back more than 1,000 years. Only in the south and west, the desert regions, were border lines drawn as they were everywhere, recently. In addition, Iraqi leaders such as King Faisal, Nuri-al-Siad and Saddam Husien had a great impact on their own country irrespective of the west. They shaped their country and played tribes and ethnic groups off against one another, without any help or encoruagement from anyone. To insinuate that everything that took place in Iraq from 1920 to the present is due to the west is racist, it pretends that Iraqis are incapable of doing anything themselves, which is far from the truth. This book would be better if it included greater detail on the influence of Iraqi leaders in crafting an Iraqi identity. Also there is no mention of Soviet meddling. Seth J. Frantzman (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-11 04:07:45 EST)
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| 03-26-07 | 5 | (NA) |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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When Saddam Hussein's Iraq actually had weapons of mass destruction, the George Iran-Contra Bush administration denied it for political purposes. And years later although Hussein's Iraq had rid itself of W.M.D.s, the George A.W.O.L. Bush administration denied it for political purposes. Such is the curse of the people of Iraq, who have served and suffered as pawns of greater nations for 85 years, as author Barry Lando itemizes in his book WEB OF DECEIT.
For all the broadcast time and ink the corporate media has devoted to the current illegal, immoral war in Iraq, you have to tune in AIR AMERICA RADIO and read THE PROGRESSIVE POPULIST for information that goes beyond official sources - and isn't behind lead stories about Anna Nicole Smith. However, Barry Lando's WEB OF DECEIT traces the suffering of the Iraqis from that nation's inception under the thumb of Winston Churchill's England. As the book moves from the bad Bush to the worse Bush, names such as Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Cheney come back like cancers you hoped would stay in remission. Read WEB OF DECEIT, which author Lando should have titled THE USUAL GANG OF IDIOTS. But when the idiots in question are people such as Dick Cheney, MAD magazine could object to borrowing the slogan. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-27 11:19:57 EST)
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| 03-18-07 | 5 | 1\1 |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Pulling no punches, Barry effectively reconstructs the history of Iraq from the end of the Ottoman Empire, through the current shrub administration.
Like Osama Bin Laden, Saddam Hussein was a monster we help create in a very big way. When he was coerced into attacking Iran, he was useful. When he gassed the Kurds and the town of Halabja, he was inconvenient, but still an ally, and was removed from the list of terrorist states. When our government (in concert with the Iranians) removed military support for the Kurdish rebellion, our government watched as he brutally massacred and gassed them with weapons he procured from us and the Germans. When he became no longer useful, we did him in. We did not allow the court to name foreigners as co-defendants, which was lucky for many in our current administration. But what is more extraordinary, is the history of the Soviets, Israeli's and the U.S selling weapons to both Iraq and Iran during their war through the 1980's. We sold weapons to both sides (Iran - Contra Scandal), gave Saddam satellite and other intelligence, just enough to keep them both going so that, in the words of Henry Kissinger: "I hope they kill each other...". This book provides a wealth of information for those interested in understanding some of the history of U.S interference in Iraq, and a little of the same in Iran. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-26 19:52:11 EST)
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| 03-09-07 | 5 | (NA) |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Barry Lando's Web of Deceit opens with a detailed chronology of events concerning Iraq beginning in 1914. With an entry for nearly every year, there is but a handful of instances three gaps in time, Lando sets the factual and methodical tone and tenor of the book.
The book's ten chapters describes the creation and evolution of Iraq. In the first chapter, beginning in 1914 and spanning four and a half decades, Lando begins with a brief but useful look at pre-Twentieth Century history of the region. The real meat is the British and French actions and deals to divy up the region, which Lando uses to draw stark parallels to the current American involvement in Iraq. The rest of the book focuses Western and Soviet involvement in shaping Iraq through support, both explicit and implicit, whether accident or not. The book concludes in August 2006 in the appropriately titled chapter "Full Circle: The Occupation" that itself concludes by reminding the reader of history 80 years before when the British occupied Iraq. I found the book to be an exceptional and quick paced read. I also found myself constantly reading hit frequent endnotes. This book is an "investigative history" as the jacket describes, similar to Rajiv Chandrasekaran's Imperial Life in the Emerald City (a book Lando would have benefited from but was probably not released in time for his deadlines), but much broader and with greater reach-back in terms of both time and beyond the immediate superficial players. Lando peels back more layers while not getting analytical. He simply lays out the facts in an effective and accessible chronological manner creating what is essentially a compendum of the essential material analyzing (and criticizing) of Iraq, notably the Iraq War media and texts, through 2006. I gave Web of Deceit five stars on Amazon because while it doesn't break any new ground in the 21st Century not already documented in other books like Fiasco, Imperial Life, or Plan of Attack, Web of Deceit does, provide a strong 20th Century history, including recent history, overview absent from the above three. Overall, I found this book to be a very good overview of what really is "Western complicity in Iraq" through nine decades of history motivated by short term strategies. However, the book does not feel as neutral as Fiasco or Imperial Life. It felt emotional as if it was trying to convince through facts and not just laying out the facts. Regardless, Web of Deceit should be reading lists (or syllabus) where understanding Iraq or understanding external involvement in creating despicable regimes is required. Lando's book is an strong collection of facts providing a broad overview without sacrificing detail. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-18 08:29:01 EST)
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| 03-09-07 | 5 | (NA) |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Barry Lando's Web of Deceit opens with a detailed chronology of events concerning Iraq beginning in 1914. With an entry for nearly every year, there is but a handful of instances three gaps in time, Lando sets the factual and methodical tone and tenor of the book.
The book's ten chapters describes the creation and evolution of Iraq. In the first chapter, beginning in 1914 and spanning four and a half decades, Lando begins with a brief but useful look at pre-Twentieth Century history of the region. The real meat is the British and French actions and deals to divy up the region, which Lando uses to draw stark parallels to the current American involvement in Iraq. The rest of the book focuses Western and Soviet involvement in shaping Iraq through support, both explicit and implicit, whether accident or not. The book concludes in August 2006 in the appropriately titled chapter "Full Circle: The Occupation" that itself concludes by reminding the reader of history 80 years before when the British occupied Iraq. I found the book to be an exceptional and quick paced read. I also found myself constantly reading hit frequent endnotes. This book is an "investigative history" as the jacket describes, similar to Rajiv Chandrasekaran's Imperial Life in the Emerald City (a book Lando would have benefited from but was probably not released in time for his deadlines), but much broader and with greater reach-back in terms of both time and beyond the immediate superficial players. Lando peels back more layers while not getting analytical. He simply lays out the facts in an effective and accessible chronological manner creating what is essentially a compendum of the essential material analyzing (and criticizing) of Iraq, notably the Iraq War media and texts, through 2006. I gave Web of Deceit five stars on Amazon because while it doesn't break any new ground in the 21st Century not already documented in other books like Fiasco, Imperial Life, or Plan of Attack, Web of Deceit does, provide a strong 20th Century history, including recent history, overview absent from the above three. Overall, I found this book to be a very good overview of what really is "Western complicity in Iraq" through nine decades of history motivated by short term strategies. Web of Deceit should be on any reading list (or syllabus) where understanding Iraq or understanding external involvement in creating despicable regimes is required. Lando's book is an strong collection of facts providing a broad overview without sacrificing detail. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-10 01:04:08 EST)
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| 03-08-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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This is an interesting book. Anyone who is interested in an alternative to the right wing talk radio and tv news should seriously consider checking out the Thom Hartmann radio show opposite Rush Limbaugh weekdays at: thomhartmann dot com / showlisten.shtml
Whether democrat, republican, or indepedent, so many of the facts out there are completely ignored by the mainstream media and talk shows. This show is one strong example of an examination of the facts regardless of your political affiliation. I am not affiliated with the show in any way, just struck by the facts so many seem to ignore. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-18 08:29:01 EST)
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| 03-08-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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An easy to read history of foreign criminal misuse of Iraq, and support for installing, supporting, and deposing their despotic leaders according to changing foreign interests. US is the latest rapist of Iraq. We need to just leave.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-18 08:29:01 EST)
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| 03-08-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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This book really opened my eyes to the true reasons of the conflict in Iraq. An excellent history lesson of how the western world has intervened since the early 20th century and caused the majority of the problems the country has faced, and is facing now. While reading this book, I couldn't help but feel apalled at the atrocities our country has commited against the people of Iraq. I think this book is a must read so that people can begin to understand the greedy mistakes that the western world has made in Iraq.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-18 08:29:01 EST)
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| 03-08-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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Excellent easy to follow history of the complex gerrymandering of the cradle of civilization.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-18 08:29:01 EST)
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| 02-20-07 | 5 | 7\8 |
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This is one of the best books on Anglo-American policy towards Iraq. Its key virtue is placing the current disaster in the context of a long pattern of war crimes and lies, going back to Winston Churchill and World War I. It was Churchill, not Saddam, who initiated the use of poison gas against civilians as a means of control. In the 1980's American satellites helped direct Saddam in the use of massive amounts of poison gas, including nerve gas, against Iranian troops. In 1991 America called on the Shiites to rise up and then did nothing while Saddam slaughtered them. I could go to list even more dishonest and criminal acts by England and America but I suggest you just read the book. If you are skeptical about any assertions in this review, just go read the book. It speaks for itself and is very well-documented.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-08 09:03:51 EST)
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| 02-20-07 | 5 | 1\1 |
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This is one of the best books on Anglo-American policy towards Iraq. Its key virtue is placing the current disaster in the context of a long pattern of war crimes and lies, going back to Winston Churchill and World War I. This book should be read in conjunction with a book called "[...]", which highlights the actions of the neoconservatives' great hero. It was Churchill, not Saddam, who initiated the use of poison gas against civilians as a means of control. In the 1980's American satellites helped direct Saddam in the use of massive amounts of poison gas, including nerve gas, against Iranian troops. In 1991 America called on the Shiites to rise up and then did nothing while Saddam slaughtered them. I could go to list even more dishonest and criminal acts by England and America but I suggest you just read the book. If you skeptical about any assertions in this review, just go read the book. It speaks for itself.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-02-20 19:41:35 EST)
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| 02-05-07 | 4 | 9\14 |
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The subtle beauty of NeoCon hypocrisy is that it always creates self-fulfilling prophecies which cost the American taxpayer dearly, in dollars and in blood.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-02-20 19:41:35 EST)
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| 02-03-07 | 5 | 6\6 |
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This book is masterful. Big-time Bush cheerleaders like Andrew Sullivan who championed us into this tragic war, will have to reconcile their own consciences with the books revelations. The hypocrisy of the neocons and Bush worshipers is astonishing.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-02-05 20:09:28 EST)
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