2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
not convincing, August 10, 2002
This review is from: The Lessons of Terror: The History of Warfare Against Civilians: Why it has Always Failed and Why It Will Fail Again (Audio Cassette)
This book is elequent and occasionally hits a nerve. But basically it's message is simply: Terrorism (or war against civilians to achieve a political effect) is a self-destructive method of warfare, because the reaction to terror is more often than not outrage rather than capitulation.
Carr goes beyond this to suggest that there are no exceptions to this rule, when some obvious exceptions come to mind (eg., Hiroshima, the extermination of the American Indians, and the frequent mass killings of any inconvenient population by various nations throughout history). So even the central message of the book is muddied by inconsistencies.
And beyond that message, this book has little to offer, and is badly flawed by its single-mindedness, its rush to judgement about complex events, its deliberate ignorance of obvious counter arguments, and a tendency to patronize the audience by asserting that events be interpretted his way, even when more familiar interpretations are more convincing.
On the plus side, I see no political bias or propaganda. Whatever biases the author has, they appear to be personal.
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