The War Within: A Secret White House History 2006-2008 by Bob Woodward

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  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: September 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9781416558972
  • Sales Rank: 413
  • 512pp
 
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Synopsis

Bob Woodward's fourth book about the Bush presidency at war declassifies the secrets of America's political and military involvement in Iraq. It will be essential reading for all citizens -- and candidates -- in this election year.

The New York Times - Jill Abramson

Certainly, Woodward's conclusions about President Bush's certitude, intolerance of dissent and poor management of Iraq policy, including the legal overreaching of his antiterror campaign, have been explored more deeply in earlier fine books by Thomas Ricks, Michael Gordon, Ron Suskind, Robert Draper, George Packer and Jane Mayer, among others. But, on balance, it is impossible not to be impressed by Woodward's reporting, which provides a vivid week-by-week chronology, from the post-9/11 attack on Afghanistan to the Iraq surge, of how the president's war policy unspooled and of its consequences. His unadorned factual accounts have supplied many other authors and reporters with an invaluable record of what happened and what was said at pivotal junctures during this presidency.

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Biography

A rookie reporter at The Washington Post when he got the call about a break-in at the Watergate in 1972, Bob Woodward has become synonymous with the term "investigative reporter."

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Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 4Reviews: 2

The Last Installmentby Anonymous

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September 24, 2008: The most important discovery in this book may be the interfighting between the DoD, generals in Iraq (against the surge), the CIA (by now, reduced in importance), Iraq's prime minister and the generals for the surge (ultimately correct). It was amazing how unimportant the word of Rumsfeld was by the time of the surge and how awesomely intellectual Petraeus was (unlike continued portraits by Democrats). It is clear from this book, however, how unreliable our so-called Arab 'allies' are such as Nouri al-Maliki is--a killer sectarian leader at best, an agent of Iran at worst. It was an amazing revelation that the DIA (notoriously wrong on the frontline intelligence) was correct in their assumptions of Mr. Maliki and the violence in Iraq, not the overly-hyped CIA. It was also disconcerting that another so-called ally, Egypt, was urging the coup of Maliki by the formidable Mukhbatkar intelligence man Oman Suleiman. Indeed, it was an effort against their regional enemy of the Sunni Muslims and ethnic Arabs--the Persian Iranians and skeptical of both Zionist Israel and shady Syria.

An insider's viewby Anonymous

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September 21, 2008: First, the book is long and tedious, but Woodward's details are thorough and intense, which is important considering the historical significance of this book. Some might disagree with his representation of the material, but it's virtually indisputable that there was conflict in the oval office about how to proceed in Iraq and it's certainly important to understand in light of what came of the ongoing conflict. I'm a student of leadership and since finishing 'The War Within' I've moved on to an outstanding leadership fable called 'Squawk! - How to Stop Making Noise and Start Getting Results.' It's been a big boon to me both at work and with my family.