Marching Toward Hell: America and Islam After Iraq by:
Michael ScheuerWhen Michael Scheuer first questioned the goals of the Iraq War in his 2004 bestseller
Imperial Hubris,
policymakers and ordinary citizens alike stood up and took notice. Now,
Scheuer offers a scathing and frightening look at how the Iraq War has
been a huge setback to America's War on Terror, making our enemy
stronger and altering the geopolitical landscape in ways that are
profoundly harmful to U.S. interests and security concerns.
Marching Toward Hell
is not just another attack on the Bush administration. Rather, it
sounds a critical alarm that must be heard in order to preserve the
nation's security. Scheuer outlines the ways that America's foreign
policy since the end of the Cold War has undermined the very goals for
which we are fighting and played right into bin Laden's hands. The
ongoing instability in Iraq, for example, has provided al Qaeda and its
allies with the one thing they want most: a safe haven from which to
launch operations across borders into countries that were previously
difficult for them to reach. With U.S. forces and resources spread
thinner every day, the war has depleted our strength and brought al
Qaeda a kind of success that it could not have achieved on its own.
A
twenty-plus-year CIA veteran, Scheuer headed the agency's Osama bin
Laden unit, managed its covert-action operations, and authored its
rendition program. Scheuer spent his career developing strategies to
keep America safe, by any means deemed necessary by the presidents he
served. It was his job to take available intelligence and devise plans
to protect Americans, without considering bias, position, or even
existing alliances. In
Marching Toward Hell, Scheuer takes on
the questions of "What went wrong?" and "How can we fix this?" and
proposes a plan to cauterize the damage that has already been done and
get American strategy back on track. He lists a number of painful
recommendations for how we must shift our ideological, military, and
political views in order to survive, even if that means disagreeing
with Israeli policy or launching more brutal campaigns against
terrorists.
America holds its destiny in its hands, Scheuer
says, yet not nearly enough has been done to defend America and destroy
its Islamist enemies. This is an eye-opening, alarming, contentious,
and ultimately fascinating examination of how far off track the War on
Terror has gone, and a critical read in understanding what we must do
to save it.