Seeds of Terror
An Eyewitness Account of Al-Qaeda's Newest Center of Operations in Southeast Asia
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- £8.49
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- £8.49
Publisher Description
For anyone wishing to understand the next, post-9/11 generation of al-Qaeda planning, leadership, and tactics, there is only one place to begin: Southeast Asia. In fact, such countries as the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia have been crucial nodes in the al-Qaeda network since long before the strikes on the Pentagon and World Trade Center, but when the allies overran Afghanistan, the new camps in Southeast Asia became the key training grounds for the future. It is in the Muslim strongholds in the Philippines and Indonesia that the next generation of al-Qaeda can be found. In this powerful, eye-opening work, Maria Ressa casts the most illuminating light ever on this fascinating but little-known "terrorist HQ."
Every major al-Qaeda attack since 1993 has had a connection to the Philippines, and Maria Ressa, CNN's lead investigative reporter for Asia and a Filipino-American who has lived in the region since 1986, has broken story after story about them. From the early, failed attempts to assassinate Pope John Paul II and Bill Clinton to the planning of the 9/11 strikes and the "48 Hours of Terror," in which eleven American jetliners were to be blown up over the Pacific, she has interviewed the terrorists, their neighbors and families, and the investigators from six different countries who have tracked them down. After the Bali bombing, al-Qaeda's worst strike since 9/11, which killed more than two hundred, Ressa broke major revelations about how it was planned, why it was a Plan B substitute for an even more ambitious scheme aimed at Singapore, and why the suicide bomber recruited to deliver the explosives almost caused the whole plan to fall apart when he admitted he could barely drive a car.
Above all, Ressa has seen how al-Qaeda's tactics are shifting under the pressures of the war on terror. Rather than depending upon its own core membership (estimated at three to four thousand at its peak), the network is now enmeshing itself in local conflicts, co-opting Muslim independence movements wherever they can be found, and helping local "revolutionaries" to fund, plan, and execute sinister attacks against their neighbors and the West.
If history is any guide, al-Qaeda revisits its plans over and over until they can succeed -- and many of those plans have already been discovered and are here revealed, thanks to classified investigative documents uncovered by Ressa.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Ressa, CNN's Jakarta bureau chief since 1995, offers a firsthand account of the recent terrorist attacks throughout Southeast Asia, as well as an overview of how local Muslims were groomed to be terrorists by al-Qaida and other extremist groups. Her position as one of the most prominent reporters in the region offers her access to documents and people not afforded to the average journalist. She is especially good at explaining the shadowy links among the various organizations and demonstrates how al-Qaida operates in Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia and Singapore as a loose network of groups some rural and poor, others urban and wealthy each with its own agenda, but all linked by the principle "if one Muslim hurts, we all hurt." The main group is Jemaah Islamiyah, headed by Abu Bakar Ba'asyir, whom Ressa dubs "the Asian Osama bin Laden." She thoroughly documents al-Qaida's failed plan A, to attack U.S. soldiers in Singapore, and successful plan B, the bombing of the Kuta nightclub on Bali. What emerges is a picture of a volatile region where terrorists work with impunity, assured that unstable governments are unable to intervene. Ressa also indicts the U.S. and its allies for exacerbating the region's problems through ignorance, insensitivity and an unwillingness to cooperate. The picture should serve as a warning to our government to pay close attention to a part of the world that only seems remote and is serving as the second most important hotbed of Islamic terrorism outside the Middle East. Ressa's book makes for one of the best primers on the issues and people involved.