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The One Percent Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11
The One Percent Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11
The One Percent Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11
Audiobook (abridged)6 hours

The One Percent Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11

Written by Ron Suskind

Narrated by Edward Herrmann

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

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About this audiobook

2007 Audie Award Finalist for the Judges’ Award: Politics

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author Ron Suskind takes you deep inside America's real battles with violent, unrelenting terrorists—a game of kill-or-be-killed, from the Oval Office to the streets of Karachi.

Ron Suskind takes readers inside the defining conflict of our era: the war between the West and a growing, shadowy army of terrorists, armed with weapons of alarming power.

Relying on unique access to former and current government officials, this book will reveal for the first time how the US government—from President Bush on down—is frantically improvising to fight a new kind of war. Where is the enemy? What have been the real victories and defeats since 9/11? How are we actually fighting this war and how can it possibly be won?

Filled with astonishing disclosures, Suskind's book shows readers what he calls "the invisible battlefield"— a global matrix where US spies race to catch soldiers of jihad before they strike. It is a real-life spy thriller with the world's future at stake. It also reveals the shocking and secret philosophy underpinning the war on terror. Gripping and alarming in equal measure, it will reframe the debate about a war that, each day, redefines America and its place in the world.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 20, 2006
ISBN9780743561730
Author

Ron Suskind

Ron Suskind is the author of the # 1 New York Times bestseller The Price of Loyalty: George W. Bush, the White House, and the Education of Paul O'Neill. He is also the author of the critically acclaimed A Hope in the Unseen. He has been senior national affairs reporter for The Wall Street Journal, where he won the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing. Visit the author's website at www.ronsuskind.com.

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book is on the bestsellers list. It's a great look into the methods that the U.S. used to snag terrorists and get information from them to catch more. You may remember various terror alerts throughout the years, like the one issued for the New York subway system. This book gives you the behind-the-scenes of why those alerts were issued and what information they were based on.

    The "one percent doctrine" was crafted by Dick Cheney. Essentially, if there's a 1% chance that something will happen then the White House treats it as an absolute certainty. This has led the U.S. on many wild goose chases, and a 1% chance that maybe someone in Iraq met with someone in Al Qaeda helped lead us into our Iraq war.

    This book is definitely to be watched with The Dark Side. That show gives you names and faces of the CIA operatives in this book who have since left the agency disgruntled. It also shows you how Cheney and others really beat the drum of Iraq long before 9/11. I also recommend reading it with Bush at War by Bob Woodward. Suskind leaves out much of the details of war in Afghanistan since Woodward had already covered them so well.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book is not so much an eye opener, as for most of the world it was always clear that the 11th September attacks were just used as a pretext to prosecute a war against Iraq that was never justified by the events. However it was a clear vindication of all that many many people were saying, based on testimony from some very well placed sources. As such this was a good piece of journalism in book form.From the opening pages it was clear that Suskind was going to take no prisoners. He tells us that Bush was never much of a reader (despite the efforts to project an image that he was), and that he based his decisions on gut reactions based on face to face meetings.The genius of Suskind is that he writes in a way that shows he is not just twisting a knife in the dying corpse of a discredited administration. In fact he makes a good case for Bush's strengths in his use of gut feeling - something that served him well over the years. Yes, the author is fairly clear that Cheney was really pulling the strings in the US administration (with the help of Rumsfeld et al.), but we see Bush fighting to assert his own authority, and his strengths and weaknesses laid bare.The result is, of course, a fairly damning indictment on men who followed an obsession against the evidence, leading America into what we can all now see to be the biggest American foreign policy disaster ever. Nevertheless it is written in a way that is not anti American. It is well informed, compassionate and articulately written.My biggest problem with the book though was the slight;y piecemeal way it is laid out. The timeline jumps forward and back a little. As this is essentially a narrative history based on primary sources, I would have liked it to be laid out in a slightly more logical and chronological order. But that is not a reason not to read this book. In fact this book or something like it should be used in all future courses on American history!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I listened to the audio version, abridged (all that was available in my library). One of the best political books I've ever read/heard. Frightening, re the takeover of our government by fanatics who are incompetent at execution.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Journalist Ron Suskind?s book is half a decade old but is still quite pertinent today especially teetering toward 9/11 anniversary. He presents fairly much the same material and interviews similar personalities that we have read in Bob Woodward?s series like Bush at War, Plan of Attack, or State of Denial. Covering events from roughly 2000 to 2004, however, Suskind?s focus centers on a slender yet viral topic: the intrigues of Machiavellian puppet master Dick Cheney.According to Suskind, as Vice President to the 43rd U.S. President, Cheney was master designer and chief enforcer of what became known from the White House inner circles as the Cheney Doctrine. In its simplest form the tenet launched preventive acts that were based on suspicion. The ?One Percent? notion lay in his edict that even if there was a one-percent chance of the unimaginable happening, the country needed to act as if the event was a certainty. America didn?t need to have 99% surety or accuracy of information before trouncing any source.Suskind paints George W. Bush as a global diplomacy neophyte, a visceral fighter prone to bullying, and a faith-based fear monger who leans on Cheney as a funnel that allowed Bush Presidential deniability if any project went sour. With the President?s ear, Cheney and his minions unleashed CIA operations into 80 countries; prompted the impetus for the creation of Homeland Security and the enactment of the U.S. Patriot Act; made Geneva Conventions obsolete for imprisoned enemy combatants in the ?War on Terror?; and basically enlarged the Administration?s powers beyond those constitutionally recognized.Cheney?s credo lay in response, not analysis. Without substantial evidence or any measure of probable cause, the Administration?s agencies were permitted to pursue, prosecute?if not persecute?those suspected of potential harm. The Cheney Doctrine tried to salve the horrors of 9/11 when the defenses of the United States were weakest. Through White House agency directives much of al Qaeda, Taliban, or other conceived terrorist units were wrecked if not destroyed. Nevertheless and after five years, the Bush quick-step stanching of worldwide terrorism through electronic targeting and armed forces deployments merely had driven the fanatic networks underground while providing those extremists ample recruitment material, such as pictures of Abu Ghraib, videos of wounded civilians, and the remains of destroyed institutions.This book continues to be a harrowing glimpse of Presidential endorsement in the unaccustomed and unfettered use of global power.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The eponymous one percent doctrine of the title was Dick Cheney's concept brought into effect after U. S. intelligence discovered that Osama bin Laden had a conversation with Kahn [the "father of Pakistan's atomic weapons program] concerning obtaining a nuclear weapon. The intelligence source reported that Bin Laden had said he had some nuclear material; however, he needed help to build and deliver a bomb. Cheney then formulated the doctrine that if there were only a one percent chance that a threat is real, it had to be treated as a certainty. Suskind details some of the early successes of intelligence gathering before the bad guys caught on to the fact that we could hear their telephone conversations and read their e-mail. Western Union was very helpful in tracing monetary transfers. Since the jihadis discovered our technological expertise, they have used more primitive means to communicate. It may take them longer to plan, but that hasn't diminished their determination. The combination of nuclear threats and fanatical Muslims makes Cheney's doctrine seem to me to be a sensible approach. Suskind's book, however, shows the dark side of the doctrine. He shows how, over time, the doctrine allowed the U.S. to stop verifying leads and react even where there was little or no reason to suspect a threat was real. It also lead to manufacturing evidence [Iraqi purchase of yellow cake uranium from Niger] to justify the goal of further action--the invasion of Iraq.Suskind tells a good story of bureaucratic in-fighting as the C.I.A., N.S.A., and F.B.I. battled each other as rivals. The author feels that some of the best men in the intelligence agencies have left because of the administration's use of intelligence to justify pre-ordained plans rather than as a guide for setting policy. That may in part because most of his sources seem to be disgruntled former intelligence professionals.Suskind concludes that the Doctrine has damaged morale and is contrary to America's national ideals. He fails to give Cheney credit where credit was due in two respects: (1) recognizing the enormity of the threat and changing a mind set from criminal law enforcement to aggressive war fighting and (2) compelling rival agencies to co-operate.Whatever the validity of Suskind's conclusions, this is an important book in providing hair-raising details of the resourcefulness and viciousness of America's enemies, including some in the current administration.(JAB)