The Secret War with Iran
The 30-Year Clandestine Struggle Against the World's Most Dangerous Terrorist Power
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
For twenty-six years, Iran has waged an international terrorist war while the intelligence services of the West, led by Mossad and the CIA, have waged a relentless, mostly clandestine counter-jihad in return. Though Iran has become a quietly looming threat, little has been revealed about this intelligence-based war.
Now, Ronen Bergman, Israel’s leading reporter and analyst of intelligence affairs, has written a full account of this secret war. He connected the dots of the long history of Iranian backed terrorist attacks, and revealed for the first time many classified operations against the Iranian terrorist network, including details about collaborations between Israel’s Mossad and the CIA and FBI; thrilling Mossad operations, the successful recruitment of top insiders of Iranian intelligence, who have disclosed a wealth of information about Iran’s nuclear program as well as it’s terrorist activities; and the use of ultra-sophisticated surveillance equipment to penetrate and damage Iranian targets. From the Iranian proxy Hizbollah’s planning of terrorists attacks from apartments in New York City, to Iran’s training of an army of work Iraqi insurgents in the techniques of suicide bombing and the making of improvised explosive devises, he showed Iran has steadily waged war against the West.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Drawing on an astonishing amount of research, Israeli journalist Bergman describes in fascinating detail the three-decade "intelligence struggle" between Iran and the West. It is a grim history dominated by "a series of failures," including the rise of Iranian proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon, Iran's alliance with Syria and the regime's success in shielding its nuclear program from international scrutiny. Despite some recent Iranian setbacks e.g., the 2007 Israeli "Ghost Raid" against a suspected Syrian nuclear reactor Bergman concludes that Middle Eastern skies "have not looked so gloomy for a long time." Among the revelations certain to resonate in the U.S. is Bergman's contention that a secret file exists that "proves unequivocally that George H.W. Bush surely knew about all the illegal goings-on" in the Iran-Contra scandal something Bush has always denied. Bergman stops short of recommending a course of action, but he makes a convincing case that Iran is not only a terrorist state but also the "greatest security challenge the U.S. is facing." Thoroughly researched and persuasively argued, Bergman's brief against Iran adds a powerful voice to a contentious debate.