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Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia

by Ahmed Rashid

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348374,708 (3.73)1
The terrorist attacks of September 11 have turned the world's attention to areas of the globe about which we know very little. Ahmed Rashid, who masterfully explained Afghanistan's Taliban regime in his previous book, here turns his skills as an investigative journalist to the five Central Asian republics adjacent to Afghanistan. Central Asia is coming to play a vital strategic role in the war on terrorism, but the region also poses new threats to global security. The five Central Asian republics--Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan--were part of the Soviet Union until its collapse in 1991. Under Soviet rule, Islam was brutally suppressed, and that intolerance has continued under the post-Soviet regimes. Religious repression, political corruption, and the region's extreme poverty (unemployment rates exceed 80 percent in some areas) have created a fertile climate for militant Islamic fundamentalism. Often funded and trained by such organizations as Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda and the Taliban, guerrilla movements like the IMU (Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan) have recruited a staggering number of members across the region and threaten to topple the governments of all five nations. Based on groundbreaking research and numerous interviews, Jihad explains the roots of militant rage in Central Asia, describes the goals and activities of these militant organizations, and suggests ways in which this threat could be neutralized by diplomatic and economic intervention. Rich in both cultural heritage and natural resources--including massive oil reservoirs--Central Asia remains desperately poor and frighteningly volatile. In tracing the history of Central Asia and explaining the current political climate, Rashid demonstrates that it is a region we ignore at our peril.… (more)
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Este livro do jornalista paquistanês Ahmed Rashid (autor do célebre "Os Talibãs - o Islão, o Petróleo e o Novo Grande Jogo na Ásia Central") é de grande utilidade para perceber a evolução política na zona mais quente do mundo, e o fenómeno de expansão da doutrina wahabita (fomentada pela Arábia Saudita) nos países da Ásia Central que faziam parte da extinta União Soviética: Cazaquistão, Usbequistão, Tajiquistão, Quirguizistão e Turcomenistão. Por um lado a falta de tradição democrática de décadas, por outro o crescimento dos grupos financiados pelos fundamentalistas wahabitas (à semelhança do que se passou no Afeganistão, e levou à instalação dos talibãs no poder), e ainda os problemas com as minorias, a debilidade económica (apesar da riqueza energética), a fuga de quadros, fazem crescer a incerteza sobre o futuro da região.

"Rashid oferece-nos no seu livro não só uma exaustiva análise das organizações islamitas centro-asiáticas (a mais forte das quais o Movimento Islâmico do Usbequistão), como também um actualizado resumo da história de cada um desses países situados numa região riquíssima em recursos energéticos."
Leonídio Paulo Ferreira, Diário de Notícias, 25/4/03
  filinto_m | Jun 20, 2018 |
Antes del 11 de septiembre de 2001, los fundamentalismos islámicos se conocían poco en Occidente. Los acontecimientos de ese día cambiaron el mundo para siempre y fijaron nuestro interés en lugares como Afganistán, personajes como Bin Laden u organizaciones como Al Qaeda, de los que, hasta esa fecha, poco o nada habíamos querido saber. De golpe y porrazo, el mundo "civilizado" había descubierto que la lucha contra el terrorismo podía marcar el siglo XXI, y que la comprensión de una zona tan convulsa como Asia central era imprescindible para la estabilidad internacional. Ahmed Rashid explora en este libro el complejo significado y las malinterpretaciones de la yihad; y bucea, asimismo, en la historia de Asia central, incidiendo en sus conflictos étnicos, su enrevesada geopolítica y el desarrollo del islam radical en Asia central.
  swiltsesa | Feb 2, 2016 |
Kapitalna książka, którą czyta się jak sensacyjną powieść. Autor, sprawiający swoim tekstem wrażenie zamerykanizowanego Araba, na codzień mieszkający w Lahore w Pakistanie, przedstawia sytuację polityczną krajów Azji Środkowej z perspektywy nie statystyki, jak robi to Capisani, ale z perspektywy zwykłych ludzi. Także przywódców poszczególnych krajów oraz ruchów fundamentalistycznych przedstawia jak zwykłych ludzi. Okraszone to jest wieloma anegdotami, które częściej zamiast uśmiechu, wywołują na twarzy grymas przerażenia beznajdziejnością i zawikłaniem narosłych w tym rejonie problemów. Skomplikowane gry interesów i układ sił, wybiegający daleko poza granice Azji Środkowej, aż do Pakistanu czy Dubaju, przedstawione są w sposób bardzo uporządkowany i pozwalający w końcu zrozumieć, co to za wojna toczy się w tym dalekim Afganistanie.

Tłumacz i wydawca nie ustrzegł się wielu pomyłek i literówek, ale tutaj nie przeszkadzają one aż tak bardzo. Raczej zaangażowanie autora jest na tyle duże, że aż czasem wywołuje uśmiech, gdy pisze o niesprawiedliwości i podłości okazywanej przez tego lub innego władcę azjatyckiego kraju.

Naprawdę wiele zrozumiałem po tej lekturze, wiele się dowiedziałem i zasiane zostało ziarno niepewności czy na pewno chcę jechać w ten rejon. Później jednak przyszła refleksja, że wcale nie musi tam być bardziej niebezpiecznie niż w londyńskim metrze, gdzie można zostać wysadzonym w powietrze przez terrorystów lub omyłkowo zastrzelonym przez policjantów. Także spoko, skoro autor kontaktował się osobiście z Talibami, skoro Radek Sikorski także z Talibami mieszkał jakiś czas temu, to zwykłym turystom chyba raczej tym bardziej nie powinno się nic stać?

tekst z odsyłaczami:
http://blog.czajka.art.pl/2008/05/ahmed-rashid-dzihad.html ( )
  czajki | Jan 8, 2011 |
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The terrorist attacks of September 11 have turned the world's attention to areas of the globe about which we know very little. Ahmed Rashid, who masterfully explained Afghanistan's Taliban regime in his previous book, here turns his skills as an investigative journalist to the five Central Asian republics adjacent to Afghanistan. Central Asia is coming to play a vital strategic role in the war on terrorism, but the region also poses new threats to global security. The five Central Asian republics--Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan--were part of the Soviet Union until its collapse in 1991. Under Soviet rule, Islam was brutally suppressed, and that intolerance has continued under the post-Soviet regimes. Religious repression, political corruption, and the region's extreme poverty (unemployment rates exceed 80 percent in some areas) have created a fertile climate for militant Islamic fundamentalism. Often funded and trained by such organizations as Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda and the Taliban, guerrilla movements like the IMU (Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan) have recruited a staggering number of members across the region and threaten to topple the governments of all five nations. Based on groundbreaking research and numerous interviews, Jihad explains the roots of militant rage in Central Asia, describes the goals and activities of these militant organizations, and suggests ways in which this threat could be neutralized by diplomatic and economic intervention. Rich in both cultural heritage and natural resources--including massive oil reservoirs--Central Asia remains desperately poor and frighteningly volatile. In tracing the history of Central Asia and explaining the current political climate, Rashid demonstrates that it is a region we ignore at our peril.

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