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Nine Lives

My Time As MI6's Top Spy Inside al-Qaeda

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
As one of al-Qaeda's most respected bomb-makers, Aimen Dean rubbed shoulders with the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks and swore allegiance to Osama bin Laden.

As a double agent at the heart of al-Qaeda's chemical weapons programme, he foiled attacks on civilians and saved countless lives, brushing with death so often that his handlers began to call him their spy with nine lives.

This is the story of how a young Muslim, determined to defend his faith, found himself fighting on the wrong side – and his fateful decision to work undercover for his sworn enemy. From the killing fields of Bosnia to the training camps of Afghanistan, from running money and equipment in Britain to dodging barrel bombs in Syria, we discover what life is like inside the global jihad, and what it will take to stop it once and for all.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 11, 2018
      Dean (a pseudonym), a founder of al-Qaeda, tells his story of becoming disgusted with the terrorist group and becoming an agent for British intelligence agency MI6 in a memoir that reads like a John le Carré novel. Dean writes of being drawn into jihadism to defend Muslim lives in Bosnia, how the destruction he witnessed “made me so angry that I wanted to fight those responsible for such horrors until my dying breath.” Ably assisted by Lister and Cruickshank, Dean exposes fascinating details of life on the front lines (“celebratory gunfire... had a pattern unlike hostile fire”), from Chechnya to the Philippines to Afghanistan, as well as within extremist circles in the Gulf and in Europe. Increasingly alienated by his “bloodthirsty” al-Qaeda comrades (who relished testing chemical weapons on rabbits) and the group’s casual acceptance of civilian casualties, in 1999 Dean concocted a medical excuse to slip away from the group to Qatar, whose government brought him in for questioning. He immediately flipped and was offered the chance to work as a double agent for the British. Though British intelligence is far from perfect, Dean contrasts his employers favorably with the hapless Americans—he was first imprisoned and, in 2006, outed as a double agent due to errors made by vice president Dick Cheney’s office. After he was “burned,” he was hired by the Chinese, who paid much better, but he found this a “small reward for the intensity of demands.” Fast-paced and sometimes stretching the bounds of credulity, Dean’s tale will be a welcome diversion for those missing the recently ended espionage television show The Americans.

    • Kirkus

      Insider account, by a well-placed double agent, of the world and worldview of al-Qaida.Osama bin Laden's organization is not much in the news these days, overshadowed and "almost forgotten during the subliminal explosion of ISIS." So writes Dean, with the assistance of CNN and BBC producer Lister and CNN terrorism analyst Cruickshank. Yet it is still there, biding its time and playing a long game. Dean knows this well: Growing up as a conservative Sunni, he was inspired by Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait to wage jihad. Time spent on the front line in Bosnia and near death due to a Serbian booby trap solidified his position--yet not so much that he was ideologically immune to being recruited by British (and, later, Chinese) intelligence. Dean recounts several brushes with destiny, including meeting key figures in the 9/11 attacks, and more than a few close calls, as when a keen-eyed Pakistani border guard correctly pegged him as a bin Laden associate. Of considerable interest to students of international terrorism is the author's view of the politics within al-Qaida and its relations with other groups, leading to such things as the initiative not to attack the Sydney Olympic Games--which would have been easy enough to engineer given the "gangster jihadism" prevalent among young Lebanese-Australians. Any presumed alliances, however, collapsed in Syria; remarked one comrade of Dean's, "it's like Bosnia, but it's going to last a lot longer....It will end only when the last man is left standing." The author closes with an assessment of the current political scene in the Middle East, with al-Qaida and IS competing to lead, echoing the larger rivalry between Shia and Sunni Islam. If peace is ever going to arrive in the region, then "we as Muslims have to begin to build some middle ground that allows rapprochement, coexistence at least, between Sunni and Shia."As sinuous and engrossing as a John le Carré story but all true--a welcome addition to the literature surrounding the war on terror.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

    • Kirkus

      Insider account, by a well-placed double agent, of the world and worldview of al-Qaida.Osama bin Laden's organization is not much in the news these days, overshadowed and "almost forgotten during the subliminal explosion of ISIS." So writes Dean, with the assistance of CNN and BBC producer Lister and CNN terrorism analyst Cruickshank. Yet it is still there, biding its time and playing a long game. Dean knows this well: Growing up as a conservative Sunni, he was inspired by Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait to wage jihad. Time spent on the front line in Bosnia and near death due to a Serbian booby trap solidified his position--yet not so much that he was ideologically immune to being recruited by British (and, later, Chinese) intelligence. Dean recounts several brushes with destiny, including meeting key figures in the 9/11 attacks, and more than a few close calls, as when a keen-eyed Pakistani border guard correctly pegged him as a bin Laden associate. Of considerable interest to students of international terrorism is the author's view of the politics within al-Qaida and its relations with other groups, leading to such things as the initiative not to attack the Sydney Olympic Games--which would have been easy enough to engineer given the "gangster jihadism" prevalent among young Lebanese-Australians. Any presumed alliances, however, collapsed in Syria; remarked one comrade of Dean's, "it's like Bosnia, but it's going to last a lot longer....It will end only when the last man is left standing." The author closes with an assessment of the current political scene in the Middle East, with al-Qaida and IS competing to lead, echoing the larger rivalry between Shia and Sunni Islam. If peace is ever going to arrive in the region, then "we as Muslims have to begin to build some middle ground that allows rapprochement, coexistence at least, between Sunni and Shia."As sinuous and engrossing as a John le Carr� story but all true--a welcome addition to the literature surrounding the war on terror.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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