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Chatting with notorious war criminal Charles Taylor on the lawn of
his presidential mansion as ostriches and armed teenagers strut in
the background. Landing in snow-covered Afghanistan weeks after the
fall of the Taliban and trying to make sense of a country shattered
by years of war. Being held at gunpoint by young soldiers amid the
tragedy of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. Standing in the middle of a
violent riot in the streets of Kathmandu. Having hushed
conversations with the widows of Europe's largest massacre since
World War II. These are all scenes from The Disaster Gypsies, a
compelling personal memoir by a relief worker and conflict
specialist who has worked on the ground in a host of war-torn
countries. Initially deployed as part of a humanitarian relief team
in Rwanda almost by accident, Norris has experienced the tragedies
of Rwanda, Bosnia, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, and Liberia over a span
of ten years. Rich with poignant human stories, The Disaster
Gypsies captures the reality of modern war with an immediacy and
compassion that puts the reader in the front seat for some of the
most wrenching events of our times. Norris approaches his story
with a unique and dynamic perspective, having worked both in the
upper echelons of the U.S. government and in some of the world's
most dangerous places. Moving from face-to-face encounters with
powerful warlords to quiet moments with the victims of horrific
violence, Norris gives readers a behind-the-scenes tour of a world
most of them can barely imagine. He makes a compelling argument
that these nasty civil wars were often dismissed as tribal, ethnic,
or regional disputes by most Americans, when in reality such
violence is fundamentallypart of the human condition. That may
sound simple or even self-evident, but Norris contends that most
people in the United States and Europe continue to view war as
something that is outside of themselves and profoundly foreign in
its nature, even as their own troops continue to fight in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
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Harriman (Hardcover)
John Norris Brown
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R781
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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If Europe, Russia, and international bodies such as the U.N. and
NATO end up playing a more prominent role in Iraq's immediate
future, all parties, including the United States, would do well to
revisit the lessons learned during the U.S.-led war in Kosovo in
1999. As a confrontation over Kosovo's final push for independence
looms, this book offers seminal insight into the negotiations that
took place between the United States and Russia in an effort to set
the terms for ending the conflict. This study in brinksmanship and
deception is an essential background for anyone trying to
understand Russia's uneasy relations with the West. America's
relationship with Russia has become increasingly important as
Washington has engaged Moscow as a critical, but often prickly,
ally in the war on terror. From smoky late-night sessions at dachas
outside of Moscow to meetings in the White House Situation Room,
Norris captures the feel of a war that repeatedly threatened to
spin out of control. He offers a vivid portrait of some of the
larger-than-life characters involved in the conflict, including
U.S. president Bill Clinton, General Wesley Clark, Yugoslav
president Slobodan Milosevic, and Russian president Boris Yeltsin.
New information includes backstage efforts to open a direct
negotiating channel between Milosevic and Washington at the height
of the conflict. The book reaches a dramatic crescendo against the
backdrop of the war's final days, when Russia unleashed a secret
plan to push its forces into Kosovo, ahead of NATO peacekeepers.
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