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214 ratings, 3.99 average rating, 32 reviews
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published
July 2003
by Crown Publishers
binding
Hardcover, 226 pages
isbn
1400050219
(isbn13: 9781400050215)
description
According to Robert Baer, the center of the global economy is a "kingdom built on thievery, one that nurtures terrorism, destroys any possibility...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 287)
bookshelves:
2008,
nonfiction,
please-dont-launder-money,
terrorist-financing
Read in August, 2008
recommends it for:
just about anyone--even people who normally find non-fiction boring
I’m a fiction person so I’ve never read non-fiction because I *wanted* to. If I’m reading non-fiction, it’s because I have to. When I was younger, I read non-fiction because it was part of an assignment for school. Nowadays, I find myself reading for work. We’re encouraged to read one industry-appropriate book per quarter—I usually try to fit one work book a month into my reading schedule. When it comes to reading, I tend to be a bit of an over-achiever. I admit it.
I work...more
I work...more
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Incredible back door insight into the business of politics, particularly foreign policy, and the lengths to which our government will extend itself in order to make a buck...Baer, who is a former CIA operative, reveals in this recollection of events how deals were made and relationships forged at the behest of US officials with too much power for personal gain and prominence while this country was being sold piece by piece to the highest bidder...
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bookshelves:
current-events
Read in October, 2007
If you feel like getting righteously irritated at the shenanigans of politicians and the state of our sick symbiosis with Saudi Arabia, this is the book for you.
It's a succinct history of how messed up and untenable the situation in Saudi Arabia really is, from Wahabis, to the royal family two generations removed from the desert nomads from which they are descended, to the staggering corruption which is "business as usual" when dealing with the Saudis, this book makes you want to f...more
It's a succinct history of how messed up and untenable the situation in Saudi Arabia really is, from Wahabis, to the royal family two generations removed from the desert nomads from which they are descended, to the staggering corruption which is "business as usual" when dealing with the Saudis, this book makes you want to f...more
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bookshelves:
non-fiction
Read in September, 2004
The focus here is Saudi Arabia, and it is a very chilling account with considerable new information (new to me anyway) providing a basis for a very dark look into the future. It is only a matter of time before the unimaginable thievery of the Al Sa’ud (the Saudi royal family) is crushed by the Wahabbi extremists that the royalty has been buying off for decades. In the author’s opinion, the likelihood is strong that when Islamic fundamentalists control the nation, they will show no mercy in u...more
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bookshelves:
middle-east,
politics
Read in October, 2008
There wasn't a whole lot that was news to me in this book, but I knew quite a bit about our money-oil-arms relationship with the Saudis already (don't call me a "low-information voter"!). Most Americans don't, though, and I wish they did, so I'm tempted to rate it higher to encourage more people to read it.
On the other hand, it reads like an extended op-ed and Baer's occasionally sneering tone annoyed me. He was at least an equal-opportunity sneerer -- critical of every ad...more
On the other hand, it reads like an extended op-ed and Baer's occasionally sneering tone annoyed me. He was at least an equal-opportunity sneerer -- critical of every ad...more
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Read in October, 2006
recommends it for:
Everyone
If you saw the Movie Syriana and were a little confused, this book will explain much of what goes on in the film. Syriana was actually based on a previous book of Baer's (a former CIA agent who specialized in the Middle East). This is a very interesting book given these times in which we find ourselves. This is not a novel, but a nonfiction piece with some speculation in it--such as, what it would take to cripple Saudi oil production. The book lays out the "big picture" for our inv...more
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3 comments
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
curious about middle east
"Syriana" character Clooney is based on the author, Bob Baer. They're both disgruntled with the CIA. The CIA didn't put agents on the ground in key areas of the Middle East and central Asia because of Saudi relationships with elements in these areas. To irritate the Saudis would strain an oil resource and huge defense contracts, i.e. through Boeing. The CIA, therefore, was beholden to oil, and let critical intelligence slip away.
Read along with "Confessions of an Economic Hi
Read along with "Confessions of an Economic Hi
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Read in May, 2005
An interesting assessment of the relationship between the United States and the Oil producing countries of the middle east. As a former CIA officer, he presents a prescription for Middle Eastern policy that is interesting, and perhap a recipe for diaster.
Assuming his factual account is accurate, he paints a pretty hopeless picture of the extent to which Saudi Oil money has successfully taken over Washington, D.C. across the political and social spectrum.
Assuming his factual account is accurate, he paints a pretty hopeless picture of the extent to which Saudi Oil money has successfully taken over Washington, D.C. across the political and social spectrum.
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A frightening look at just how dirty politics in Washington actually are and how fragile the economic success and security of the U.S. really is. His analysis that it would take no more than a handful of committed terrorists destroying one refiner in Saudi Arabia to bring economic ruin on the world seems a bit alarmist (and an inviting temptation for some). However, overall, like the other Baer books, Sleeping with the Devil is a gripping read.
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bookshelves:
fiber
Read in December, 2006
Nobody in Washington is clean...no one. Following that depressing thought, enjoy this book and get a frank (peut-etre harsh?) look at US-Saudi policies. Caution: you feel relentlessly uninformed for months following reading this book, but you'll consume newspapers like never before. I need to put this book on my "to read" list as well, as it bears re-reading--very dense in terms of information.
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Read in September, 2007
Baer and his ego, both legends of the CIA, expose the nasty underbelly of the oil relationship, money, wahabbism and the birth of modern islamo-fascism. Takes a mind such as his to spin this web, particularly interesting is the undercurrents in Saudi Arabia and it's crazy royal politics. This book is more than a little scary; thankfully I guess, the CIA is as wrong as they are right...
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bookshelves:
cia,
history
Read in July, 2005
recommends it for:
Checkist rebels.
Bob Baer may be one of the smartest men ever to work for the government. Likewise, they ignore him, then try to block half his book. Or was that the Saudis? Hm. Anyone who votes should read this book. Then consider that this year, several years after this book was published, we agreed to give the Saudis $20 Billion in military aid, and here we go in a circle...
NC
NC
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Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
anyone who hasn't gotten mad lately
This book is for conspiracy theorists who need a second opinion. Baer establishes credibility in his first book, See No Evil. In this book, he goes on to expose America's intimate relationship with the Saudis and simultaneously helps the reader to lose all hope for humanity. Get ready to throw something through a window.
bookshelves:
history
Read in January, 2006
You will be disgusted once you read about the back-room, back-handed deals that former administrations (and current) undertook in order to establish a global oil oligarchy.
If you like this book, read the other's by Baer. You should also watch the movie Syriana to build more of a complete picture in your mind.
If you like this book, read the other's by Baer. You should also watch the movie Syriana to build more of a complete picture in your mind.
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Immediately after reading "See No Evil" by Robert Baer, I read this. This book focuses less on the author's CIA experience, but more on the political relationship between the US and Saudi Arabia. Again great (and sometimes frightening) insight from a true insider.
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Read in November, 2004
More from the front lines of a CIA agent's attempt to battle terrorism. Follow up of Baer's See No Evil. Deals more specifically with the political and business relations between the Saudi Royal Family and American interests and some of the inherent problems this creates.
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Had to read more of his stuff after See No Evil... In this one, he tells of his first hand experiences as they relate to the US and their relationship with the Middle East, specifically the Saudi Royal Family.
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Rather enlightening explanation of the internal conflicts of the House of Saud and how it came to be this way. Extremes of wealth and poverty, freedom and oppression, modernity and primitives. Great read.
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Read in January, 2005
the follow-up to his first effort on which the movie syriana was based. he offers a good insight into the life of a spy in the middle east and the complicity of our government in the oil trade.
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Read in January, 2006
I picked this up after seeing Syriana - wanted to know more insider details on Mideast oil. Well, just didn't finish it - maybe someday - I just wasn't enjoying the pace and flow of the book.
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