Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror

by Richard Clarke
Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror  
published September 14th 2004 by Free Press
binding Paperback
isbn 0743260457   (isbn13: 9780743260459)
pages 352
description Few political memoirs have made such a dramatic entrance as that by Richard A. Clarke. During the week of the initial publication of Against All Enemies,...more
date added
03-19-07



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Does Richard Clarke provide any answers to the current Iraq dilemma? 1 03/31/2008 11:27AM




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Aaron Crossen
05/18/07

bookshelves: memoirs, politics
Read in May, 2007
I totally devoured this book. I wish I would have read it three years ago. Essentially, it's a stripped down memoir of former White House counterterrorism expert Dick Clarke's career as a civil servant. I say stripped down, because it focuses almost exclusively on the bureaucratic struggles and politiciking behind the hunt for al Qaeda before 9/11. No time for coffee or breakfast; this guy has four administrations to get through.

But is it ever riveting. While I had read stories in the paper...more
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John
08/07/07

Read in September, 2006
recommends it for: Political readers, people who'd like to know what they're talking about
One of the best-written (even if it was probably ghost written) memoirs to come out of Washington D.C. in quite some time, Richard Clarke takes us inside the anti-terrorism wards of four presidents - from Reagan to the W. Bush. His best gift is to illustrate the attitude of each regime, and where their interests lay. It's written very sharply, drawing some excellent scenes from real life, including the opening - 9/11 in the White House. It is critical of all administrations, but considerably mor...more
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Antigone
Read in January, 2005
Did you ever wonder, in retrospect, what was really happening in the old White House while we were all being led down the garden path into a war in Iraq? Oh, there are some great shows out there that will give you the scoop (Frontline recently did a multiple show synopsis that was head-spinning) but really, aren't they all just fronts for the liberal leftist media? For everyone who nodded in response to that last query, grab the most recent version of Against All Enemies. Richard Clarke, my f...more
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Bryan
12/09/07

Read in December, 2007
This book is similar in its presentation to another I read by another National Security Council staffer, David Rothkopf, entitled "Running the World."

I purposely chose to avoid reading this book for quite a time after it came out, as I generally dislike the "timely" political non-fiction. I find that the basic premise is:

I was right. Nobody listened to me. The government operated best when I was at the zenith of power during my career. It was bad before I got to t...more
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Nathan
09/17/07

bookshelves: biography, history, history-politics
Read in April, 2005
recommends it for: Calm down. Breathe. Think. Add it to the pile...
It's hard to describe how alarming this book is. Sadly, the events described inside it aren't too surprising. If the great surprise of the 9/11 Commission Report was that Monica Lewinsky kept us distracted from getting Bin Laden during Clinton's administration, the great surprise of this book is how an "anything but Clinton" attitude in the new Bush administration helped ensure there'd be no national security meetings on terrorism. No matter which party you blame the failures of 9/11 o...more
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Pamela
02/03/08

bookshelves: current-events
Read in January, 2004
recommends it for: Any concerned citizen
Essential (and often enraging) reading, even at this late date (I first read this book in 2004), about former counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke's determined but ultimately futile efforts to alert the Bush administration to the dangers terrorism posed to the U.S. Clarke is now a foreign policy advisor to Senator Barack Obama's presidential campaign. UPDATE: I accidentally linked to a German edition of this book, but will leave it up for German readers. Anglophones can get an English edi...more
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Robin
02/27/08

Read in January, 2008
this link is a great youtube clip from 60 minutes. http://youtube.com/watch?v=zte... they talk about how the bush administration was planning the invasion from the beginning. it confirms what you'll read in clarke's book. the only reason i don't give this book a 5 star is because it gets a bit redundant in the last chapter, but clark is brave for speaking out in what is clearly an administration with a selfish agenda. i think t...more
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Steve
09/14/07

Read in September, 2007
Clarke's book is an enlightening, sometimes scathing, look at how the last three presidential administrations have approached the threat of al Qaeda. Clarke would know since he worked for all three on counter-terrorism.

His book makes a convincing case that al Qaeda is currently the biggest threat to global security and that the current administration is busy playing Cowboy in Iraq, a country that was no threat to us, instead of trying to repair our relations with the peoples of Iran, Pakist...more
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Caroline
Part history, part memoir, part condemnation, part warning and part advice, this was very informative and very fascinating. It almost read like a political thriller. I learned so much about U.S. relations with the Mid East and about U.S. intelligence. I was struck by a sentence early in the book in which Clarke says that, in hindsight, the Cold War administrations were criticized for overestimating the threat of nuclear war. But, at the time, it was real. Now terrorism is real. The book wa...more
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Terri
04/15/08

Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: Anyone trying to understand what went wrong and led to 9/11
This was a GREAT book. Mr. Clarke was THE Counter-terrorism guy during the Reagan/Bush 1/Clinton and Bush 2 administrations. He clearly states the factors he believes led to 9/11 ultimately. From the Invasions of Afghanistan and Kuwait, The first Gulf War, The Fall of the USSR to lack of the Pentagon to consider Al Quaeda a priority. He tells the truth of what we did right, what we did wrong. What we should have done. And is probably the most factual and HONEST book I have read on the subje...more
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Pam
03/02/08

Read in March, 2008
I should have read this book when I first received it, in 2005 -- and before so many other writers commented on this subject. Now, in 2008, so much of the content seems "old" and even perhaps a bit superficial. A better book for truly understanding Al Queda, for instance, is The Looming Tower. (Clarke seems more preoccupied with documenting and covering his own tracks.) However, Clarke's book DID bring home strongly the warnings we had prior to Sept. 11 and the hard work that many put ...more
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Eddy
06/27/08

Read in June, 2008
Insightful inside information about the Bush administration's total ignorance of reality in pursuing their goal of going to war with Iraq. Beyond that though, a lot of complimenting the people he likes (Clinton, any White House staffer) and shit talking the FBI.
Also, this book is quite poorly written. Way too many commas and appearances of the word "feckless." House of Bush, House of Saud contains much of the same information and presents it in a clearer and more readable form.
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John
07/07/08

bookshelves: politics
This is probably an easy book to misread. It's excellent for information, references, and permitting a greater understanding of how America's War on Terror was waged prior to 9-11. I do not think this work bodes well for remedies though and it generally fails to address the foreign policy problems that have contributed to terrorism since Carter assumed office.

All in all, I think this is a must read but it should be read along with other materials and not simply by itself.
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Mike
02/15/08

bookshelves: nonfiction, own
Read in January, 2007
Read this in an effort to get up to speed on all the middle-east current events...or at least some of the reasons why we're there. It worked. I learned some basic history of the region and our involvement there. Also saw Clark's perspective of the whole mess as an old, long problem that needs a real solution. It isn't really a boogie man dreamed up to scare us, it's a real issue that has never been handled, including by the the ole war on terror.
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Jrobertus
Jrobertus rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/19/07

a must read for the limited number of intelligent americans. clarke relates his history as a presidential advisor from reagan to w bush. the pace is brisk and breezy, like a thriller, but crammed with fascinating facts about government operations. the payoff is that w appears as a gullible dimwit manipulated by fossilized cold-warriors unable to realize the dangers to a post soviet world posed by terrorists. i could go on at length.
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Patrick
Read it awhile ago, but it was the first book that disproved all the rumors that the US was doing nothing to stop Bin Laden. This guy is one smart cookie, hence his position as guarding the nation against terrorists. Quite entertaining, and a little frustrating too to learn that bureaucracy is such an integral part of decisions that have a direct effect on whether the US can use full force against terrorists, for whatever the reason.
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Jarratt
bookshelves: political
The existence of this book is depressing. The one guy working in government that knows the most about anti-terrorism policy was forced into retirement and is writing a memoir. Then, to watch as someone who has worked for every president since Reagan be accused of partisanship tortured my soul into a depression defined by self-mutilation.

Because of this depression, I can not say that I loved the book. Therefore, I liked it.
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BC
08/05/08

A truly fascinating book. Clarke's agenda is pretty darn clear and, despite what others have written here, he does not absolve himself of guilt for the 9/11 attacks. In fact, he was the only one who apologized directly to the victim's families for the government's failings in preventing the attack. He certainly doesn't suffer from a lack of ego either, but his voice is authoritative and feels true.
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Justin
06/25/08

It's a memoir, so its self-serving and shit. It's still a good read; Clarke may be a crappy fiction writer, but he has some good incite on the internal events that shaped the failures leading up to 9/11. Clarke's weakness is his tendency to deflect blame for the failures of his (CIA's) counter-terrorism's lack of success prior to 9/11 to other members (and branches) of the government.
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Rachel
02/14/07

bookshelves: politics
This book is out-of-date now but I have to ask, why didn't anyone listen to this man back in 2001 or even 2004!! He explains so clearly the Bush/Cheney agenda. I know he is, of course, putting some of his own spin on it and casting himself in a good light, but seriously, there is no way he just made all this shit up. He was the chief counter-terrorism advisor for Christ's sake!!
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.88 (422 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.04 (76 ratings)
number of reviews: 58






other editions

Against All Enemies (Paperback)
Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror (Hard)
Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror (Hardcover)