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“The idea of direct invasion is the greatest threat to Saddam. It avoids the problems of securing local allies, inside and outside Iraq, which bedevil any indirect approach to get rid of him. But it has one immense disadvantage from the US point of view . . . if the US invades Iraq to install its own government it will be taking direct physical control of an area containing more than half the world’s oil reserves. It will look like the founding of a new American empire based on physical force and will be deeply resented . . . It would outrage the Arabs at a moment when the Israel-Palestine conflict is in a particularly bloody phase. America could find that it has overplayed its hand, just as Saddam did when he invaded Kuwait twelve years ago.” From the new Prologue
Saddam Hussein: An American Obsession makes chillingly clear just how terrible the price of the 1991 Gulf War has been for Iraqis. Eleven years ago Saddam was caught by surprise; his preparations since September 11 show that lessons have been learnt. In a substantial new prologue the authors analyse these preparations and the terrifying consequences of a military invasion of Iraq.
“The Cockburns’ book is a chilling tale of barbarity and betrayal. It documents the lethal mix of US cynicism and incompetence that established Saddam Hussein as the bully of the Gulf, encouraged him to invade Iran and Kuwait, and then allowed him to stay in power.” Irish Times
The picture of the last eight years that emerges is among the most coherent and accessible of any book on Iraq to date. New York Times Book Review
A seamless, cockpit-to-ground narrative written with pace and verve, researched with rigour, and telling in choice detail. Financial Times
Patrick Cockburn was one of the few journalists to remain in Baghdad during the Gulf War. He is currently based in Jerusalem for the Independent. Andrew Cockburn is the author of several books on defence and international affairs and has written about the Middle East for The New Yorker. He lives in Washington, D.C.
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Publication
Cloth: Sept. 2000
Paper: Sept. 2002
(new edition)
352 pages
Cloth
1 85984 799 4
£17 (UK only)
Paper
1 85984 422 7
£9 (UK only)

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