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Saddam Hussein

Saddam Hussein

List Price: $14.99
Your Price: $14.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Balanced view
Review: Aburish exceeds his own high standards in research and thorough analysis of the rise and reasons for the lack of a fall of Saddam Hussien. I couldn't put this book down.

It's easy to read, even handed in its portrayal of the dictator, and comprehensive in explaining this product of brutal Iraqi history.

Thanks to this book, I have a better understanding of Middle Eastern politics, the gulf war and the wests' continued involvement in the region.

I throroughly recommend this book to anyone interested in knowing the whole story of the Gulf War and Iraq.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Well documentet biography of Saddam Hussein
Review: Aburish has written a solid, in-dept and interesting book about Saddam Hussein. It is both a biography of Saddam Hussein's life as well as an analyze of the political situation in the Golf in the 20th century. The book starts out with Saddam's childhood in Tikriti and continues with his way to power in both the Baath party and in Iraq. The reader get a pretty good insight in Saddam's mind and work. The Iran-Iraq war and the invasion of Kuwait is well described and analyzed both historically and politically. Aburish give the reader insight information on how and why Saddam got non-conventional weapons. The relationship with the USA and the west is also discussed. Almost every assertion and statement is well documented with a great note apparatus together with a long list of bibliography and sources. It is a trustworthy and reliable book about a man and a part of the Middle East unknown for many in the west. The book has a lot of information and sometimes a difficult language. It is therefore an advantage if the reader has some knowledge of Middle East politics in general and Iraqi politics in special.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Highly readable biography of Saddam
Review: Aburish's biography of Saddam Hussein is a refreshing retelling of a story that's been muddled by a decade or more of half-truths and lies. The strengths are that he himself took part to a large extent in dealings with the Iraqi regime during the decade of the Iraq/Iran war. Aburish's insights and commentary are invaluable. The weaknesses in the book become readily apparent. Said has some duplicity in the regimes attempted acquisition of a nuclear [device] and other weapons of mass destruction. Said is also anti American and anti British. When he addresses US involvement in the Gulf War his arguments become tirades against Saddam , the US and Britain. It's his very ant-US and British attitude that make Aburish's recommendation for dealing with the Iraqi regime nothing but a mechanism for the continuation of oppression by Saddam and the so called Ba'athists.

Aburish's own involvement in the regime and view of the US aside, I highly recommend this biography of Saddam Hussein. He sets right many misconceptions about the Iraqi dictator. His mother was not a prostitute and Saddam didn't commit [destruction] at the age of 15. These myths and other myths are dispelled. What Aburish does is to emphasize the tribalness of Saddam by setting it in the context of Arab culture. Saddam becomes less a madman than a ruthless tribal leader for whom you are either with the tribe or against it. Opposition to the regime is treated like a blood feud. Even Saddam's affinity for Stalin makes sense. Both were the sons of poor peasants widowers in semi-tribal societies (Stalin was ethnically Georgian not Russian) and both used control of the bureaucracy to help in gaining control of power.

In spite of its weaknesses The Politics of Revenge is a highly readable and informative.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A SAVVY, ENJOYABLE PAGE-TURNER
Review: Breezy but informative bio that attempts to explain Hussein's stature as the most popular dictator in recent memory. Nice photos, too!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A SAVVY, ENJOYABLE PAGE-TURNER
Review: Breezy but informative bio that attempts to explain Hussein's stature as the most popular dictator in recent memory. Nice photos, too!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Required reading to understand the current situation
Review: Now, perhaps more than when Saddam was in power, this book is required reading in understanding the current situation in Iraq.

As Aburish so clearly illustrates, for decades the US supported Baath Party and Saddam Hussein. In the process they back stabbed on more than one occasion the Kurds, the Shia and other groups who opposed Saddam. This betrayal has certainly been a contributing factor to the situation as it exists now (2004) with various insurgent groups attacking US forces. While it's true that some of these groups are coming from external influences (e.g. Syria and Iran), it's also true that some are just people who view the US as a hostile occupying force. Part of the distrust came from the history Aburish describes here.

The notion that Aburish is somehow "anti-US" misses the point entirely. The US policy toward Saddam post Gulf War I was one of of "positive containment." As explained by a member of the National Security Council in 1991: "Our goal [was] to remove Saddam Hussein, not his regime." This meant that we actively prevented other groups from overthrowing the regime. Indeed, as reported by the major media, Kurdish and Shia rebel leaders were told during a coup attempt orchestrated by the CIA that they should "not get in the way of our operation."

How could we have dealt with Saddam? This is perhaps a weakness of Aburish's book, but it's one created in part by a totally warped US policy. At one point can we go back in time and stop supporting his brutal regime? Since we can't go back in time, how can we change our actions so that they represent true American ideals? In this manner of thinking, Aburish's analysis actually wasn't that far off. In the long haul we might have gotten rid of Saddam by a policy that supported the Iraqi people instead of one that resigned them to victims of both their own government and the US dominiated UN policy of genocidal sanctions - a policy that ultimately strengthened Saddam domestically.

With Saddam now gone from power this book is perhaps a little dated. However, it is necessary reading if you want a better understanding of the current quagmire created by the US invasion.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good Fresh Perspective Needing an Editor
Review: Said Aburish's biography of Saddam Hussein is not so much a biography as it is a narrative of the author's interaction with the Hussein regime. The core of this very readable work is based on Aburish's business relationship with the Saddam Hussein regime in the 1970s and early 1980s, when he tried to procure arms and other material for Iraq.

Around this core comes the rest of the book in which we are treated to a history of Iraq since the 1958 revolution, the origins of the "Beast of Baghdad," the Iran-Iraq War, and the Persian Gulf War and its aftermath. Aburish's work is very much needed; he locates Hussein within the context of modern Arab history, which is a breathe of fresh air for American readers.

However, the book is in need of an editor. The farther Aburish gets from his real expertise-the story of his own relationship with the regime-the more details of other events become muddied. For example, he mistakes the ground offensive in the Persian Gulf War as beginning on February 22, 1991, when it actually occured on February 24. In addition he miscredits some of his sources. An example of this is the recent "Out of the Ashes: The Resurrection of Saddam Hussein." This latter work is by Andrew and Patrick Cockburn, not Andrew and Leslie Cockburn. Lastly, Aburish is given to painting his portrait of Saddam in overly broad strokes; Saddam will certainly be remembered by history, but Saddam won't change the study of history as Aburish claims.

These criticisms aside, Aburish's book is still quite good and represents a fresh perspective on the problem of one of America's thorniest foreign policy issues.


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