America's Secret Jihad
By Stuart Wexler
By Stuart Wexler
By Stuart Wexler
By Stuart Wexler
Category: Religion | World Politics
Category: Religion | World Politics
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$18.95
Jun 14, 2016 | ISBN 9781619027411
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Jul 19, 2015 | ISBN 9781619026896
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Praise
Praise for America’s Secret Jihad
“[T]his book is a fascinating attempt to see beyond conventional narratives and reveal an overlooked facet of religious terrorism.”—Library Journal
“An impassioned investigative report…With urgency and zeal…Wexler carefully differentiates the religiously motivated extremists from the merely white supremacists…compelling study.”—Kirkus
“Wexler (The Awful Grace of God) convincingly makes the case that America has been victimized by significant domestic terrorism for over half a century…Most readers will be surprised…Wexler’s deliberate and critical review of the evidence is also likely to prompt reconsideration of the possibility of wider conspiracies behind Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination and the Atlanta child murders of 1979–1981.”—Publishers Weekly Starred Review
Praise for The Awful Grace of God (with Larry Hancock)
“A timely study.” —Kirkus
“A step in the [right] direction of a better understanding of a national tragedy.” —Booklist
Praise for Shadow Warfare (with Larry Hancock):
“All American presidents since Franklin Roosevelt have ordered clandestine military actions. Hancock and Wexler investigate why commanders–in–chief find secrecy appealing. The U.S. sponsorship of the operations detailed in this tome was concealed in most cases to avoid political controversy within the U.S. or within a country hosting the covert program. The authors cite FDR’s authorization to create an American air force in China—the Flying Tigers—as a template; the president decided the action was necessary but impolitic to reveal to the public. So it went with secret Cold War military operations in Tibet, Indochina, Guatemala, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Afghanistan. So it continues in the conflict with radical Islam. Deniability as a feature of covert warfare parallels the authors’ attention to tactical methods, such as the use of front companies, which may interest readers of intelligence history, while those concerned with the constitutionality of this subject will be sated with discussion of its legal aspects. Because their extensive research is wrapped in politically neutral prose, Hancock and Wexler can engage a range of readers with a controversial topic.” ––Gilbert Taylor, Booklist
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