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Accept
Iran For What It Is
IGHT from the beginning, even before you
open
Going To Tehran you know where the authors are
taking you. The subtitle tells it all:
Why the United States Must Come to Terms with the Islamic
Republic of Iran. This from a couple of Iran’s most
vigorous apologetic supporters in the west..
It appears that Flynt
Leverett, who served in the CIA, the State Department’s
National Security Council and is now professor of
international affairs at Penn State, and Hillary Mann
Leverett, who served at the National Security Council and
negotiated for the U.S. with Iranian officials and is now
lecturing at American University, believe that the U.S. must
change its policy radically, stop acting like a global
bully, and seek to engage with the Islamic Republic of Iran
on an equal basis.
Remember when Nixon
(and Kissinger) trekked to China and reconciled with the
world’s greatest communist power? "It is time for an
American president to go to Tehran," the authors insist.
Obama, in all humility, must journey to Tehran to end 30
years of enmity and "come to terms with the Islamic
Republic" as an equal partner in the family of
nations—whether Supreme Leader Khamenei continues to develop
a nuclear bomb or not. Don’t wait for Iran to transform
itself through a "reformation," into a western style liberal
democracy with a clear separation of religion and state.
The authors have
produced a powerful book that seamlessly presents the cause
of Iran as a legitimate stable nation grounded not in
western values but shari’a fundamentalism. It is Iran’s
right, as a sovereign state, to reject the idea of
separating religion and politics, to reject liberalism and
secularism. For shari’a religious law encompasses every
single aspect of life.
The book warns: If we
don’t accept a postrevolutionary Iran and its political
Islamism, "the United States is courting strategic
disaster."
So what prevents
Washington from seeking an accommodation with Tehran? Blame
Israel. Seems that everything bad in that region is Israel’s
fault. The authors depict the influential "Israel lobby,"
comprising an estimated 75-90 organization—among the most
prominent being the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC), the Conference of Presidents of Major American
Jewish Organizations, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)—as
spearheading "efforts to impose ever tougher sanctions" on
Iran to blunt its nuclear enrichment program. Iran has every
right in the world, the authors maintain, to fulfill its
nuclear goals no matter the consequences.
All in all a
well-researched, highly intelligent and very readable
exhortation of the Islamic Republic’s right to pursue its
national destiny even if that includes support of terrorist
organizations. Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt, 479 pages,
$32.00
Amazon.com Price: $21.69)
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The
Lesson Of Afghanistan
HE main lesson you will learn from
Return of a King: The Battle for Afghanistan 1839-42
is that history will repeat itself. It will come back and
bite you in the ass. The British expanded their India empire
in the Punjab, the Himalayas and the Hindu Kush. The first
battle for Afghanistan in 1839. Some 20,000 troops poured in
from India to re-establish the Shah Shuja on the throne as
their puppet. The natives rose in jihad and in two years the
lightly equipped tribesmen demolished the Brits to bits—just
one soldier survived the slaughter. This was the First
Anglo-Afghan War. Two more wars followed until the British
were decisively defeated.
Moscow, in an attempt
to broaden their Soviet empire, invaded Afghanistan in the
1980s and installed their own communist puppet. The
Mujehedin, with clandestine western support, drove the
Soviet tanks out of the country, inflicting a humiliating
defeat which some claim led ultimately to the collapse of
the Soviet empire.
You’d think the west
would think twice before invading Afghanistan again in the
late 20th century. Western troops (the U.S. and
allies) are now engaged in another jihad, this time by
Taliban foot soldiers and again it doesn’t look so good.
Heavily western armed troops are being whacked by lightly
equipped native foot soldiers.
William Dalrymple, a
contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Review of
Books, who’s written seven works on history and travel, has
produced an exhaustive account of Britain’s futile first
attempt at conquering Afghanistan in 1839. The lesson to be
learned: No people—especially Afghans—want to be ruled by a
foreign invader. Alfred A. Knopf, 515 pages,
$30.00
Amazon.com Price: $20.49)
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Page
Turners
HE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD If
you want to understand the tumult in Egypt, you must get
Carrie Rosefsky Wickham intimate volume. This incisive
portrayal of the Egyptian political scene — she did 20 years
of research during multiple visits in the region — reveals
the fascinating background of this tightly organized radical
Islamist movement founded in 1928 in Egypt and spreading its
gripping tentacles over Jordan, Kuwait and Morocco. As these
Islamist groups have grasped the public consciousness in the
wake of the Arab Spring, it is too soon to tell how far they
will veer from democratic liberal modernizing principles of
governance. Expect a sequel to this book, as it was
published a few months before the people (represented by the
military) rose to depose Egypt’s first democratically
elected president for swerving extremely Islamist.
(Princeton University Press, hard
cover, 384 pages,
$29.95
Amazon.com Price: $22.76)
EGYPT:
A SHORT HISTORY Robert L. Tignor, professor of
modern and contemporary history, emeritus, at Princeton, has
produced the best, well-written, erudite account of the
history of a country that’s been blazing on the front page
for the past three years. Written for the general reader,
the book is packed with minute detail and expansive
descriptions covering seven millennia of a country and its
people always in the news. Tignor’s style is readable and
enjoyable. (Princeton University Press, soft cover, 371
pages, 24 color illustrations,
$19.95
Amazon.com Price: $17.35)
PHOTOGRAPHIC
VISIONS: INSPIRING IMAGES AND HOW THEY WERE MADE
This is the book you want if you want to learn how to create
superb pictures. All the photos are published on
www.1x.com,
known as the world’s biggest curated photo website, where
photography is promoted as a work of art. Indeed every photo
in the book—ranging from nature, portrait, landscape, night,
street, architecture, conceptual and children—is sliced and
diced, which each photographer explaining what he saw, what
he tried to convey, and what equipment he used to achieve
his end. This book will help you learn the art of image
capture. (Rocky Nook, soft cover, 231 pages,
$39.95
Amazon.com Price: $22.82)
FOR
DUMMIES These instructional books from John Wiley & Sons
are a great help, even for those of us in the genius class.
This giant publishing house has been inspiring us in every
intellectual pursuit you can imagine. I just acquired the
latest iPhone and iPad, and first thing I did was order
iPad for Seniors for Dummies and
iPhone 5 for Seniors for Dummies, (each soft
cover, about 400 pages,
$24.99
Amazon.com Price: $17.05
for iPad, $16.49 for iPhone).
I figured these seniors editions would be a snap to digest
with its basic language. Unlike Apple’s online user guides,
which seem targeted at geniuses, these two books are written
for the rest of us, with colorful illustrations. While
you’re at it, look for
Social Media Engagement for Dummies (soft cover,
382 pages,
$24.99
Amazon.com Price: $17.93)
to help you use your iPhone and iPad to master the
techniques and principals of social networks, including
Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, Twitter, Pinterest. These
guidebooks are more than boring manuals; they’re easy to
understand and exciting to follow. Love ‘em.
THE
SLEEPWALKERS Subtitled
How Europe Went To War in 1914, Christopher Clark’s
expansive volume is hard to put down, as we follow along
with Europe’s players as they walk like zombies down the
lonely one-way road to inevitable disaster. You begin to see
how stupid, narrow-minded and egotistic those great men of
World War 1 were. Indeed Clark, a professor of modern
European history at the University of Cambridge, UK, ends
his exhaustive study on the origins of the Great War: "…the
protagonists of 1914 were sleepwalkers, watchful but
unseeing, hunted by dreams, yet blind to the reality of the
horror they were about to bring into the world." (Harper,
697 pages,
$29.99
Amazon.com Price: $20.48)
FLIP
After guiding us through the heights (and lows) of Flip
Wilson’s career, when he soared to stardom on NBC in the
early ‘70s as TV’s first black superstar—opening up network
sitcom to other African American performers such as Bill
Cosby and Redd Foxx—author Kevin Cook deftly escorts us
through the long painful days of the comic’s demise in 1998
in heart stirring moments. Fully detailed and exhaustive,
the story takes us on a rollercoaster ride of Hollywood
life, fueled with drugs and liquor and sex. An intense read.
(Viking, 242 pages,
$26.95
Amazon.com Price: $18.16)
THE
MODERN MENU "A
thoughtfully prepared dish is far more interesting than a
perfectly prepared one." With that thought in mind, Kim
Kushner has prepared recipes that are far more than just
interesting; judging from the photographs that pop out of
the pages, her culinary creations are truly amazing. I can’t
wait for my Nina to replicate these savory meals. You can
learn lots just by watching Kim’s kitchen on the publisher’s
website. (Gefen, soft cover 152 pages,
$39.95
Amazon.com Price: $25.96)
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