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The Next Front: Southeast Asia and the Road to Global Peace with Islam
 
 
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The Next Front: Southeast Asia and the Road to Global Peace with Islam [Hardcover]

Christopher S. Bond (Author), Lewis M. Simons (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0470503904 978-0470503904 September 15, 2009 1
A U.S. senator and Pulitzer Prizewinner, both experts on Southeast Asia, offer a bold new approach to address radical Islam and fight global terror

The next front in the war on terror is in Southeast Asia, warn Senator Christopher Bond (R-MO) and Lewis Simons, both leading experts on the region. The U.S. has bankrupted its policies in dealing with the Islamic world. As Fundamentalist Islam gains traction in Southeast Asia, backed by Saudi money, the U.S. must act swiftly to re-establish its credibility there and help defuse global terrorism. Bond and Simons present a bold plan to accomplish this key goal by substituting smart power (civilians in sneakers and sandals) for force (soldiers in combat boots) in Indonesia and the other nations of Southeast Asia, home to the world's greatest concentration of Muslims.

  • Introduces a critical new "smart power" approach to combat global terror
  • Written by two experts on Southeast Asia with extensive contacts in Washington and overseas
  • Tackles a crucial challenge to U.S. foreign policy and President Obama's administration
  • Examines a wide range of views and people, from Osama bin Laden-trained armed terrorists to radical clerics to western-trained officials who plead for Americans to come to their countries to teach, start small businesses, and improve health care

The Next Front offers exactly the kind of fresh, out-of-the-box thinking the United States needs to rebuild its credibility and transcend its foreign policy failures.


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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with The Second Front: Inside Jemaah Islamiyah, Asia's Most Dangerous Terrorist Network $19.95

The Next Front: Southeast Asia and the Road to Global Peace with Islam + The Second Front: Inside Jemaah Islamiyah, Asia's Most Dangerous Terrorist Network


Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

If you think the next front in the fight against global terrorism is in Pakistan or Afghanistan, this book will startle you. Four-term U.S. Senator Christopher "Kit" Bond and veteran foreign correspondent Lewis M. Simons reveal that the next front is taking shape right now in a part of the world most Americans haven't thought about since the Vietnam war: Southeast Asia.

Bond and Simons demonstrate compellingly that by beginning in Southeast Asia the Obama administration can reverse the devastating effects of failed policies throughout the Islamic community. The key is a new "smart power" approach, one that combines the "soft" tools of diplomatic, economic, and personal outreach with the fallback "hard" option of military force.

Southeast Asia is home to one of the greatest concentrations of Muslims on Earth. More Muslims live in Indonesia alone than in the entire Middle East. Historically, they have been religious moderates. But today, Islamic fundamentalism and anti-Americanism are on the rise, fueled by the United States' intimate alliance with Israel, its invasion of Iraq, the Abu Ghraib torture scandal, and the Guantanamo Bay imprisonments. These have provoked outrage and provided seemingly irrefutable evidence of America's universal disregard for Muslims.

While this picture is bleak, the central theme of The Next Front is that it is not too late for the United States to turn the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism in Southeast Asia.

Americans rarely pay serious attention to other nations until they suddenly perceive them to be a threat. Then they find themselves woefully lacking in information and understanding. Hoping to avoid that recurring flaw, Bond and Simons invite readers to travel with them through Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand, meeting people at all levels of society. Drawing on their decades of experience, they speak with—and, more importantly, listen to—presidents and prime ministers, soldiers and policemen, teachers, mothers, lawyers, clergymen, and terrorists. Their stories provide exceptional insights into the politics and economies of their countries as well as their personal concerns, motivations, hopes, and fears. With unremitting candor, they reveal complex and often conflicting feelings about America that range from admiration and affection to resentment and hostility. If the United States is to regain respect around the world and stem the tide of religious extremism in Southeast Asia, it must listen to these people and weigh the value of what they seek from us. Americans in sandals and sneakers today will eliminate the need for Americans in combat boots tomorrow.

From the Back Cover

Advance praise for the next front

"The Next Front is an eye-opener. Senator Kit Bond and Lew Simons reawaken us to Southeast Asia. Here's the way to mutual respect between America and Islam."
—Chris Matthews, host of MSNBC's Hardball and NBC's The Chris Matthews Show

"The Next Front is important reading for anyone interested in America's relations with the world's Muslims. Bond and Simons demonstrate that a piece of the solution lies with the huge Islamic population of Southeast Asia, a vital region we have largely ignored since the end of the Vietnam War."
—Sen. John McCain

"Kit Bond and Lew Simons masterfully articulate the importance of incorporating Southeast Asia and its Islamic majority into a new twenty-first-century style of diplomatic engagement. Required reading for today's policymakers and anyone who is concerned about the spread of religious extremism."
—Sen. John Kerry, Chairman, Senate Foreign Relations Committee

"Rare insights that could only be offered by these two individuals—one a United States senator and the other a Pulitzer Prize winner, both of whom have fastidiously worked to build bridges between the people of Southeast Asia and the United States."
—Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), ranking member, Senate Foreign Relations Committee

"Bond and Simons have cornered the elusive enemy we all face. It is mutual ignorance. . . . The Next Front presents a bold, new, outside-the-box way of thinking for Americans to achieve understanding and peace with Muslims throughout the world."
—Greg Mortenson, author of the No. 1 New York Times bestseller, Three Cups of Tea


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (September 15, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470503904
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470503904
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.1 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #356,785 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the definitive book on the future of Islam, October 11, 2009
By 
cooke (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Next Front: Southeast Asia and the Road to Global Peace with Islam (Hardcover)
This is the best book on Islam or terrorism in the last ten years. The extraordinary circumstances under which it was written, as a collaboration between Sen. Bond and Simons, sets it apart from an ocean of one-sided post-9/11 tomes. As a narrative, The Next Front is as exhilarating as Looming Tower or Three Cups of Tea, weaving together 30 characters across 6 countries--and yet it is intellectually satisfying in a way that far exceeds those books. The authors state their ambition in the introduction: "Americans need to penetrate the thinking of the region." Despite this enormous scope, The Next Front is a quick and easy read, unweighed by historical digressions or tedious statistics. In light of their political differences, Bond and Simons skip policy altogether and drill right to the people themselves and their stories. It is not, I should add, yet another overblown neo-orientalist travelogue, presuming to explain everything from Mohammed to global warming via a handful of windswept anecdotes on the way to the Dubai airport. The Next Front is an authoritative masterwork, grounded in decades of lived experience. I couldn't begin to summarize the "takeaways." The cover flap says it's about smart power vs Bush-era hard power, but of course all policies are "smart" by their own account. Unlike 99% of current affairs books, this simply must be read, cover to cover. It is "minimally redundant." The authors do offer some general policy proposals, scattered here and there, but there's no 14-point plan, few explicit answers nor implicit stereotypes, nor do they fall back on open-ended anecdotes. Rather, the authors bypass all prior pitfalls and convey the reality of Islam by way of an ingenious device--personas, personal stories representing complex demographics via authoritative storytellers (c.f. Edward Said's "exilic" perspective). This is of course magnified by the remarkable circumstances of Bond and Simons' collaboration, each masters of storytelling in their own far-flung spheres (Simons is the epitome of Said's "general secular intellectual"). Islamic scholarship has never produced such an enlightening work of art. In the wake of Orientalism, academics continue to crank out tomes that claim to reveal the essence of Islam by "unveiling" contemporary literature, and unveiling their unveiling, ad infinitum--yielding unreadable and useless Leviathans that crush people to sleep each night. Bond and Simons skip over the Islamic scholars and ethnographers into a realm of communications science. I have no idea if their technique was informed by communications science (i.e. personas in usability and marketing research), but The Next Front is the best example I have yet seen of the future of authorship in the post-print era. Not that the authors lack bias (in one case, extreme biases, in my very biased opinion), nor do they disguise it with squirrely historical or academic digressions. Criticism is irrelevant. There is real blood flowing through every page of this book, laser-like intelligence into the most complex problem in the most complex part of the world--literally, Vietnam times Iraq. Every page is bursting with the promise of globalization as well as impending horror. The Next Front is a literary IED--shocking, gripping, radically altering one's conception of Islamic and Asian culture, empowering the reader to effect geopolitical change immediately, whether as a senator or, as the authors put it, a global citizen "in sneakers and sandals." What is the longterm significance of Barack Hussein Obama? The Cairo speech? The Peace Prize? The Next Front solves these well-flogged riddles and countless others, intertwined with the "mother riddle" of Asian Islam. Personally I doubt that The Next Front will top any mainstream bestseller lists as it doesn't reinforce any political or scholarly biases, but as far as revealing the future of Islam and the War on Terror, it is a lamp of knowledge. An overwhelming, transformative experience for anyone with the slightest curiosity about foreign affairs.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Opportune time, October 12, 2009
By 
Steven Raymond (East Hampton, NY) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Next Front: Southeast Asia and the Road to Global Peace with Islam (Hardcover)
The Next Front is being published at an opportune time because our Nobel Peace Prize-winning President Barak Obama needs Americans to better understand the Muslim ummah. Bond and Simons tell us how to achieve this vital goal: by putting Americans in "sandals and sneakers" on the ground in Southeast Asia. This important book should be on the "must-read" list of every American, including President Obama.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A wake-up call..., October 26, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Next Front: Southeast Asia and the Road to Global Peace with Islam (Hardcover)
In The Next Front, Simons puts his Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist's skills to work and draws the reader into a complex subject: Islam in Southeast Asia. Countries, towns and villages come alive through details and interpretations. But it is the introduction to "real people" that makes the issues frighteningly clear, that America is "asleep at the switch" and needs to begin building relationships with Muslims in the "jungles, rice fields and emerging economic centers of Southeast Asia." This should be a wake-up call to policy makers and ordinary citizens. I wanted to say "I loved this book," but that might demean its gravitas.
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