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Against Us

The New Face of America's Enemies in the Muslim World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In 2002 Jim Sciutto began filing in-depth reports on the Middle East for ABC News. Now, after nearly 100 assignments in Muslim countries, Sciutto brings back this disturbing truth: the Al-Qaeda–inspired view of an evil America bent on destroying Islam has moved from the fringes to the mainstream. Today, a surprising number of America’s enemies are not wild-eyed fanatics, but moderates—often middle-class and well educated, frequently young, many motivated by political convictions more than religious belief.
Sciutto profiles a cross-section of people in the Arab world, including a former Al-Qaeda jihadi turned electrician in Saudi Arabia, a Jordanian college student willing to risk his life by killing Americans in Baghdad, a Christian woman who supports Hezbollah in Lebanon, bitter pro-democracy advocates in Egypt who feel betrayed by the United States, and British-born Muslim terrorists living in London. The result is an alarming portrait of the depth and scope of anti-American sentiment.
Opposing America has become the unifying rallying cry for a rapidly growing pan-Arab nationalist movement. Conspiracy theories abound as Muslims begin to feel they are targeted by America, their political autonomy sabotaged. The Iraq war has become one of the most powerful recruiting tools for enemies of the United States.
Yet there is hope for America to turn the tide of hate. Sciutto talks with a young female student in Afghanistan who is cautiously optimistic that the United States will not fail her country in the rebuilding effort—and with a reformed jihadi in London who is finding ways to counsel young British Muslims away from their hatred of America. Democratic ideals are still held in high esteem, even as America’s perceived actions against Muslims are not.
Against Us is an urgent wake-up call for all Americans—and in particular those charged with formulating U.S. foreign policy—to rebuild relations with the Arab world and restore confidence in American values.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 30, 2008
      A foreign correspondent for ABC News, Sciutto examines and explains the increasingly negative attitudes toward the United States among citizens of Muslim and Arab countries in this deeply insightful book. Structured around interviews conducted in the Middle East and the U.K., the book offers ample anecdotal evidence to suggest that anti-American sentiment—once the province of fringe groups—has gone mainstream, becoming in effect, a form of Middle Eastern nationalism, uniting moderates and radicals, Muslims and Christians for whom “freedom implies the freedom from American interference.” Sciutto weaves together interviews with historical background, poll data and personal experience in this consistently informative and captivating account. In the strongest interviews, including one with a young, reform-minded Iranian activist and another with an Iraqi doctor, the book sets intense, sometimes horrifying experiences against a complicated and changing political backdrop. The author makes a few amorphous foreign policy recommendations on the basis of his research, but the book is less interesting for what it reveals about American policy than for its empathetic and candid depiction of its subjects and their lives.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2008
      Sciutto long shared with other Americans the comforting belief that hatred of the U.S. festered only within a radical fringe of Islam. But after traveling through the Muslim world, interviewing a wide range of individual Muslims, Sciutto has concluded that antipathy toward his country now runs deep even among mainstream and moderate Muslims. Although not all of the interviewees speak with the same voice, those Sciutto regards as Americas natural allies (idealistic students and pro-democracy activists) bristle with anti-U.S. feelings all too similar to those of al-Qaedas jihadists. As Sciutto probes for the sources of this anger, he unearths irrational conspiracy theories (the CIA gets blamed even for earthquakes) seamlessly fused to entirely comprehensible logic (the U.S. hurts ordinary Arabs by propping up authoritarian regimes in the Middle East). Although he paints a sobering picture, Sciutto offers hope for Americans seeking amicable relationships with Muslims. U.S. officials, he suggests, could take the first steps by simply acknowledgingand apologizing forpast blunders. Much-needed light on dark geopolitical realities.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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