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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Wakeup Call for Canada
Stewart Bell, a seasoned journalist who has written on terrorism for a dozen years, has been criticized for allegedly targeting minority ethnic groups. But this is no hysterical racist on a crusade; the author is a calm, dispassionate observer who has done his research and analysis in a painstaking and objective manner. His targets are the tiny but terrifying minorities...
Published on April 23, 2004 by D. Gordon Longmuir

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1.0 out of 5 stars Ridiculous Attempt to Scare a Peaceful Nation
This is a funny book. Concern is that the GREAT Canada is the only Western country that has people from every ethnic background, religion, race, culture and nationality living with peace. Fact that the US and UK have a huge history of racism, violence and discrimination makes Canada unique. This is hard for people like Frum and Bell to accept. Whether supporting the...
Published on January 9, 2009 by READER


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Wakeup Call for Canada, April 23, 2004
By 
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
Stewart Bell, a seasoned journalist who has written on terrorism for a dozen years, has been criticized for allegedly targeting minority ethnic groups. But this is no hysterical racist on a crusade; the author is a calm, dispassionate observer who has done his research and analysis in a painstaking and objective manner. His targets are the tiny but terrifying minorities within minorities, and the politicians who tolerate and thus encourage them.

Even if one believes, as so many Canadians seem to, that Canada is an unlikely target for terrorism, it is certainly not in our interests to continue harbouring terrorism aimed not only at faraway "enemies", but at our nearest neighbour and chief trading partner. Cold Terror is a serious treatment of a vital problem for which Canadians should demand swift and decisive action.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bell Exposes Canada as Haven for Terror, April 8, 2004
By 
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
Still reeling from 9/11, Americans will be shocked to read Stewart Bell's account of how the Canadian Government has allowed Sihk, Tamil and Islamic terrorists to come into our home and turn it into a safe house for international terror.

Bell, who writes for the National Post and is Canada's leading reporter on national security and terrorism, has taken on the courageous task of warning Canadians about the terrorists living amongst us. This has stirred up a real hornets' nest. For his troubles, he has been threatened by many who don't like his message and has been branded as anti-Islamic by the Canadian Islamic Congress.

Bell's litany of terrorist incidents around the world involving Canadian terrorists is long enough to qualify Canada for membership in the Axis of Evil. The most infamous are: the 1985 Air India bombing; the 1991 assassination of Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi; the 1993 World Trade Centre bombing in New York; the 1993 assassination of Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa; the 1995 blast at the Egyptian embassy in Islamabad; the murder of 58 tourists in Egypt in 1997; the 1997 truck explosion in Sri Lanka that killed 100; the bloody Bali night club bombings in 2002; and the 2003 attack on the housing compound in Riyadh.

Americans need to read this thoroughly-researched and well-documented book to learn about the threat they face from Canadian-based terrorists.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cold Terror, April 19, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
Canadians need to read this book. We have been sanguine for too long, letting our government continue to its ostrich mentality.
Bell writes a comprehensive and coherant book on terrorist activies in Canada going on under the radar. My dismay is that it has recieved such little attention until now.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A powerful indictment of complacency, August 23, 2004
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
Stewart Bell's book is a vital contribution to the growing awareness that terrorists have penetrated and used Western societies to advance their goals. Complacency and a false understanding of tolerance in Canada has perpetuated, and continues to perpetuate, not only the political leadership's blindness to the problem, but a public discourse that can't comprehend the distinction between Islamist terrorism and Islam, allowing terrorists and their sympathizers to plead victim-hood when held to account.

I recently read an article dutifully relaying as factual the irresponsible comments of a Toronto human rights lawyer synonymizing Islamist terrorism to Mandela's ANC. This analogy is not only false--the ANC's violence was reluctant, rare, and assidiuously avoided civilian casualties while the entire object of Islamist terrorism is to maximize civilian casualties--but serves to demonize the emasculated Canadian counter-terror agencies and inhibit their ability to protect Canadian society.

The incomprehension of Canada's public, legal, and political circles of the relationship between terrorism and the networks that support them are troubling, and even more troubling after after September 11 made such issues so vitally immediate. The Canadian legal community's lack of conscience over their responsibility to civilians targeted in other countries is especially baffling. Given Canada's cultural past-time of condescending to Americans, it seems that the habit is so ingrained that it is hard to devote attention to anything else.

Bell's book details a range of failures in Canada's establishment towards terrorism, focusing on Sikh terrorism, the Sri Lankan Tamil Tigers, Hezbollah and Hamas, and lastly al-Qaeda. Complacency, appeasement, and denial are the main themes that run through the book, written in a journalist's narrative style. What is most troubling is the lack of awareness, let alone the absence of a sense of responsibility, to victims of terrorism in other countries.

This is not a uniquely Canadian phenomenon, by any means. Successive American administrations failed to treat terrorism seriously, and as anything other than a series of particular, isolated crisis management problems. Western societies in general are, by their very nature, given to infiltration and penetration by terrorist organizations.

But it is important to come to terms with this history, acknowledge failure, and move on. For Canada, this will require a different cultural attitude than what is now popular. The idea that, as Bell puts it, terrorism is a problem solved by "smothering them with niceness" can only be termed oblivious. With a Labour Party that treats terrorism as a public relations/media issue, rather than as a fundamental security threat not only to historical allies but to themselves, is frustrating to others.

As more and more terrorists--whether Tamil, Hezbollah, of al-Qaeda--are caught with Canadian passports, linked to support networks in Canada that are perceived in the world as tolerated by Canadian society, Canadian citizens must be prepared to be perceived very differently in the rest of the world.

Bell's book is more a theme with a narrative built around it, rather than a comprehensive scholarly account of this problem, but he makes the case well and in a way that is very accessible to readers.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Canada in Denial: A Wakeup Call, April 19, 2004
By 
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
Stewart Bell, a seasoned journalist who has written on terrorism for several years, has been criticized for allegedly targeting minority ethnic groups. But this is no hysterical racist on a crusade; the author is a calm, dispassionate observer who has done his research and analysis in a painstaking and objective manner. His targets are the tiny but terrifying minorities within minorities, and the politicians who tolerate and thus encourage them.

Even if one believes, as so many Canadians seem to, that Canada is an unlikely target for terrorism, it is clearly not in our interests to continue harbouring terrorism aimed not only at faraway conflicts "of which we know little", but at our nearest neighbour and chief trading partner. Cold Terror is a serious treatment of a vital problem for which Canadians should demand swift and decisive action.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Ridiculous Attempt to Scare a Peaceful Nation, January 9, 2009
By 
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
This is a funny book. Concern is that the GREAT Canada is the only Western country that has people from every ethnic background, religion, race, culture and nationality living with peace. Fact that the US and UK have a huge history of racism, violence and discrimination makes Canada unique. This is hard for people like Frum and Bell to accept. Whether supporting the neocon agenda or "preserving the purity of white race" (which most European Canadians do not believe in), Bell has made an unsuccessful attempt to begin the process of poisoning Canadian politicians against growing diversity in Canada.

Fact is that whatever Canada is today, it is because of the immigrants who have brought with them unique set of skills and culture and have readily accepted the culture of others. Of course, there are hardly any natives left in the country but Bell does not mention how European Immigrants used all sorts of terror and torture tactics to take over the land that belonged to the Indians. This is evident in every organization of the country where you will only see immigrants, some who came from Europe 200 years ago, some 50 years ago or some who came from other parts of the world 25 years ago.

Canada is a country that has not only tolerated but readily and happily accepted all cultures. Perhaps this is why it remains the only major country in the World that has no problem with any other country. It has people representing minority groups (not minority for long) in Parliament, govenment organizations and private sector. This goes against the agenda of Bell and people who fund him who, with their imperialist beliefs, continue the silent propaganda of divide and rule and would like to inflict this wound to Canada as well. Unfortunately, Bell has failed in his fist attempt. Better luck next time!!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An important look at the fight against terrorism, May 6, 2005
By 
Jill Malter (jillmalter@aol.com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World (Hardcover)
There aren't all that many terrorists. But they can do plenty of damage. The author points out that some folks are opposed to anti-terror measures, no matter what they may be. But that policy is no good. As the author reminds us, "the state's primary function is the protection of its citizens, and there is no rational defense for the kind of random violence directed at noncombatants that is the essence of terror."

That's true. And if the state refuses to defend its citizens against violence, vigilantes will try their hand at it and the society will fall further apart. Something has to be done to oppose terror if we want to have a productive society.

Well, perhaps one can appease the terrorists. But the author points out that many, if not most, terrorists are unappeasable. Instead, they relish the freedoms they enjoy in Canada as they go about trying to destroy them. Yes, Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien did, in a speech at the United Nations, "propose ending terror through foreign aid." But Bell explains that this is not going to work. I agree. In many cases, such money winds up being given to terrorists, which generally leads to more terror.

This book shows how poorly Canada has fared in dealing with the problem of terrorists within its borders. And it shows dramatically just what some of the results have been. I highly recommend it.
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