Bruce Riedel
Author of The Search for al Qaeda: Its Leadership, Ideology, and Future
About the Author
Bruce Riedel is senior fellow and director of the Brookings Intelligence Project. Riedel joined Brookings following a thirty-year career at the Central Intelligence Agency. He served as a senior adviser to four U.S. presidents on South Asia and the Middle East, working as a senior member of the show more National Security Council. in 2009 President Obama made him chairman of a strategic review of American policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan. He is author of the Brookings best seller the Search for al Qaeda: Its Leadership, Ideology, and Future. show less
Works by Bruce Riedel
Associated Works
Becoming Enemies: U.S.-Iran Relations and the Iran-Iraq War, 1979-1988 (2012) — Foreword — 13 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1953
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Queens, New York, USA
- Education
- Harvard University (MA|History|1977)
Brown University (BA|History|1975) - Organizations
- Central Intelligence Agency
Brookings Institution
National Securitiy Council - Awards and honors
- Distinguished Intelligence Career Medal
Members
Reviews
Lists
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 262
- Popularity
- #87,814
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 37
After an excellent short summary of the history of relations between the US and Pakistan, Riedel turns to his major theme: concerns over the rise of the jihadist state in Pakistan and the escalation of global violence. The last chapter contains his experienced and realistic (but bound-to-be-unpopular-with-some) recommendations of how to begin to get US-Pakistani relations back on track by building dialogue and trust.
Much of Pakistan's situation today is the result of its focus on its neighbour (India)--the rise of its military establishment, the ISI, the appeal of military dictatorships, the ambivalent attitude towards its MANY political and jihadist factions. His recommendations, which after reading the preceding chapters, have the sound of pragmatism to them include resolving border disputes (Afghanistan, Kashmir) which necessitate a strong army and nuclear arms; helping Pakistan with its infrastructure (water, education) problems without the strings of past imposed "foreign aid" restrictions; engaging in strengthening Pakistan's civilian-elected leaders starting with the freely elected prime ministers (and NOT focusing on single individuals who may be rogue leaders in the end (e.g. Reagen's support of Zia, GW Bush's support of Musharraf) but in supporting all those fighting for democracy and free elections); providing them with the helicopters needed to fight highly mobile guerilla insurgent groups in the field; and in working with both India and Pakistan in ways that are supportive of peaceful relations between the two. As Riedel writes, "Pakistan is a complex and combustible society undergoing a severe crisis, which American helped create over the years" (p. 118). Yet he remains confident that Pakistanis and Americans can "transform what has long been a deadly embrace into a union of minds with a common purpose: to defeat the jihad monster" (p. 144).
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