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Willful Blindness

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  • 368 pages
  • 13 hours of reading

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Just weeks before a presidential election in which Iraq is the hottest issue, one of America's sharpest foreign affairs commentators lays out how the Bush team marched into a quagmire. This collection of columns from July 2002 - June 2004 vividly portrays how the administration misconceived the Iraq war and mishandled the postwar. The book draws on her three lengthy trips to Iraq since the fall of Baghdad, and her close contacts with members of the new Iraqi government, Iraqi clerics, and a broad range of ordinary Iraqis. Rubin is one of the few foreign policy commentators who knows this story from both the Iraqi and American angles. As the situation worsens daily, and Washington belatedly tries to adopt many of the strategies she advocated from the start of the occupation, Rubin looks at what must be done to prevent Iraq from deteriorating into a terrorist haven and to enable the United States to draw down its troops. At a critical time when Americans need to make an informed decision about their country's political future and its role in Iraq, Rubin simplifies a complex story in a way that lets the readers understand what is really going on behind the headlines.

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Willful Blindness, Trudy Rubin

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Released
2004
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Title
Willful Blindness
Language
English
Released
2004
Format
Paperback
Pages
368
ISBN10
1588220176
ISBN13
9781588220172
Series
Rating
3 out of 5
Description
Just weeks before a presidential election in which Iraq is the hottest issue, one of America's sharpest foreign affairs commentators lays out how the Bush team marched into a quagmire. This collection of columns from July 2002 - June 2004 vividly portrays how the administration misconceived the Iraq war and mishandled the postwar. The book draws on her three lengthy trips to Iraq since the fall of Baghdad, and her close contacts with members of the new Iraqi government, Iraqi clerics, and a broad range of ordinary Iraqis. Rubin is one of the few foreign policy commentators who knows this story from both the Iraqi and American angles. As the situation worsens daily, and Washington belatedly tries to adopt many of the strategies she advocated from the start of the occupation, Rubin looks at what must be done to prevent Iraq from deteriorating into a terrorist haven and to enable the United States to draw down its troops. At a critical time when Americans need to make an informed decision about their country's political future and its role in Iraq, Rubin simplifies a complex story in a way that lets the readers understand what is really going on behind the headlines.