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Unholy Terror: Bosnia, Al-Qa'ida, and the Rise of Global Jihad
 
 
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Unholy Terror: Bosnia, Al-Qa'ida, and the Rise of Global Jihad (Hardcover)

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Key Phrases: federation army, mujahidin units, arms pipeline, Bosnian Muslims, Bosnian Serbs, Bosnian Army (more...)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

Al-Qa’ida: in the 80s they were in Afghanistan, supported by America and fighting the Russians.  In the new century they have metastasized throughout the world’s geopolitical body. Where were they in the 90s? Unholy Terror provides the answer, with all its terrifying implications for our world today.

 

This book provides the missing piece in the puzzle of al-Qa’ida’s transformation from an isolated fighting force into a lethal global threat:  the Bosnian war of 1992 to 1995.  John R. Schindler reveals the unexamined role that radical Islam played in that terrible conflict--and the ill-considered contributions of American policy to al-Qa’ida’s growth.  His book explores a truth long hidden from view:  that, like Afghanistan in the 1980s, Bosnia in the 1990s became a training ground for the mujahidin.  Unholy Terror at last exposes the shocking story of how bin Laden successfully exploited the Bosnian conflict for his own ends--and of how the U. S. Government gave substantial support to his unholy warriors, leading to blowback of epic proportions.



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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Zenith Press; 1st edition (July 15, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0760330034
  • ISBN-13: 978-0760330036
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #275,867 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #22 in  Books > History > Europe > Bosnia and Herzegovina

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20 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable Book In All Aspects, December 13, 2007
Recently several books came out shedding a different light on the Bosnian War of 1992-1995. Most authors are people with mentality and the perception of reality based on the morality of the modern Western society. It looks like they don't have an axe to grind and the only reason urged them to write the books running counter to the mass media presentation, the official political course and the widespread academic interpretation of the Bosnian War was objectivity built on the whole of the facts, not just on a "convenient" part of them. As a Latin maxim says - Non Nova, Sed Nove. I chose the book "Unholy Terror" to read first because of the phrase the author mentioned in Introduction namely, "...spend time in muddy boots in war zone" - what he just did. The second reason was that he is a researcher who was trained to be a spy. This means that the author has acquired and developed the strong ability to gather, analyze, classify facts establishing logical connections between them and deduce the corresponding conclusions. The third reason was the long list of sources he used which penmen range from Bosnian Christians and Muslims to Western writers. So the thorough unbiased research was conducted. And the last reason was that it seems the author doesn't have any Bosnian family roots and thus he is a neutral observer.

To my eye the book is the very comprehensive research on the subject encompassing the period of time from the Ottoman Empire to the modern era. The material is presented in a consistent and intelligible as for experts so for laypersons way and accompanied by numerous quotations and references to the sources. The author doesn't arbitrary pick some facts from the conflict. He begins his account from the 14th century when in fact the conflict originated alternating active phases with dormant spans. (Being a teenager I visited the Tito's Yugoslavia of 1970th many times and already then I learnt that the tranquil and prosperous life is nested in a seething volcano.) As a result due to the rigorously logic chain of historical causes and consequences constructed by the author the entire picture of the clash of the civilizations and religions over centuries is more than convincing.

Why did I decide to review the book? Honestly speaking as I understand it now I have been indirectly and involuntarily involved in this matter from my birth, because my father was a Bosnian Serb. Being 16 years old he joined the Tito's army during the 2nd World War and took part in several great battles including the liberation of Belgrade. Later he went through many controversial events of that turbulent epoch.

Now I am already aware that in our hi-tech times it still matters very much who are or were your parents implying their religion, race and ethnicity. I was born and raised in Russia, received my education in Russia and France. The only one thing I have been devoted to all my life is mathematics. I hold a PhD in it. And I naively thought that in our civilized society people are, first of all, judged by their personal and professional qualities. But it was a schoolboy blunder. If in our modern world, we are so proud of, some nation is defamed and you have any relation to it be sure that in the overwhelming number of cases this will reflect on your destiny negatively disregarding your personal and professional attributes. Embrace yourself at least for discrimination or even worse for dirty tricks and hounding. Unfortunately the contemporary social and political machine of our society works just this way despite all official statements. In reality this is neither more nor less but the smoke-and-mirrors world where we try to defend the human rights of individuals and trample on the ones of the entire nation at the same time. Watching movies on TV soaked through with violence, murders and graphic scenes I often wonder whether America is still capable of having such basic feelings as compassion, pity and understanding for the tears of other peoples or just guided by mere calculation and some primordial instincts.

In a conclusion I would like to thank the author for his excellent book and audacious act.
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24 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars If we knew then what we know now!, November 16, 2007
The U.S. attacks a sovereign nation, whose leaders are not threatening them, in an effort to export democracy to yet another foreign nation and protect its people from genocide. No, we're not talking about Iraq! This time we go after the Serbs. Specifically, Serbs living in the former Yugoslavian republic of Bosnia referred to as 'Bosnian Serbs'. Surprisingly, there is no anti-war movement here in America. The 11 member NATO alliance lead by the U.S. mercilessly bombs the Bosnian Serbs into submission. Where are the war protesters that we hear so much of these days?

The time frame is the early to mid 90's. 9/11 has yet to assault our senses. Bill Clinton is president. Islamic Bosnia is hailed as a bastion of multiculturalism. Darlings of the western media mercilessly preyed upon by the evil ethnic-cleansing Serbs whose obvious motives of protecting their own in a country splintering itself from the Yugoslav Republic seems to go unnoticed. Did anyone question why the Serbs would've acted so heavy-handedly? Could there have been any provocation?

Schindler draws the picture thusly: Bosnian leader, Alija Izetbegovic, a man determined to bring an Islamic state into Balkan Bosnia, decides to secede from the Yugoslav Republic. He recruits Mujahidin fighters from Al-Qa'ida, fresh from the skirmish with the Russians in Afghanistan, and begins an ethnic cleansing of his own to drive out the infidel Serbs and create a 'pure Islamic culture'. We see the typical Muslim atrocities: executions, beheadings, munitions trafficking, corruption, using charitable organizations as fronts for financing the war. All the while, Izetbegovic maintains that he is fighting for a multi-cultural Bosnia. And just as the Serbs respond to these atrocities, here comes the western media. Just in time to get footage of the Serbs 'getting even'. The slaughter at Srebrenica, seen by many as proof of Serbia's culpability for war crimes, is presented as a 'set up'. Izetbegovic pulls his military protection from the city just as the Serbian response is anticipated. The Muslim citizens are set up for slaughter in order to justify a U.S. lead NATO response as promised by President Clinton.

Given the events that have transpired since then, Schindler's view is not hard to believe. In fact, it is difficult not to believe it these days with what we now know of Al-Qa'ida and their operations. Yes there will always be die-hard Clinton supporters who will continue to support the 'Bosnia-as-good-guys' view. But it is beginning to look more and more like we may have made a mistake in the Balkans. The Dayton accords, while partitioning Bosnia into Bosnian, Croat, and Serb zones, has given Izetbegovic what he wanted: An Islamic state. And Al-Qa'ida now has a base in the middle of Europe from which it can launch operations. I think you get the picture.

The author's material is well researched and not particularly anti-Muslim. Muslim citizens are often portrayed as much as victims as the Serbs in some cases. Islamic leaders often question and even oppose Izetbegovic's policies and his courting of Al-Qa'ida. He even occasionally debunks myth's about Muslim behavior at various points. All in all it is an interesting read though somewhat voluminous. Keeping track of the number of characters and organizations and such can be quite maddening. Still it is a worthwhile read: Four stars.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A very important book to understand the disintegration of Yugoslavia, September 19, 2008
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Unholy Terror, Review by Peter Staric, PhD, Ljubljana, Slovenia

Important Advice! In Order to avoid any confusion in quotation of names with specific diacritical fonts, this review should be open with Times New Roman CE Fonts, where æ (e.g. Izetbegoviæ) is pronounced in English as tj;, è (e.g. Èengiæ) as ch; dj or ð (e.g. Karadjiæ or Karaðiæ) as j, and z (e.g. zivalj) as zh. For doing otherwise, let me quote only a single very confusing example: Gojko Šusak was the former Croatian defense minister. In the book his name is written as Susak, which is actually the name of an island in northern Adriatic. If some would guess Susak, this is the part of the Port Rijeka (just some 100 km north from the island Susak), while Šusak means nothing. The consistent misspelling of the names in the book caused much confusion even for us, the former citizens of Yugoslavia, in cases when less known names were being quoted. Since the book is extremely important to understand the recent history of (former) Yugoslavia, these misspellings should be corrected in the second printing.

So far almost the whole world is convinced that in the Bosnian conflict of 1992-1995 the Serbs were bad guys, while the Bosnians were the good ones. Even we, the citizens of Slovenia - who were living in the common State Yugoslavia before 1991 - being close enough, share this opinion, which was created by the world press and told by numerous Bosnian refugees, who received asylum in Slovenia

In order to fully understand and believe the narrative of John R. Schindler, Professor of U.S. naval War College, we must reach back in time from 1945-1991, when Yugoslavia was still the common state of Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Macedonians, Bosnians (calling themselves Muslims) plus two strong national minorities of Vojvodina (a Hungarian minority) and Kosovars (speaking the Albanian language). Since the Serbs were the relative majority, they kept enforcing the arrangement, which would be optimum for them, while all other nations wanted a compromise. E.g. similar to Switzerland, where German, French and Italian nations have equal rights. Already after 1920, when the state, named "Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes" (where the Serb Alexander Karadjordjeviæ was the King) had been established, the Serbs were considering a common state (which was renamed Yugoslavia after 1929) as an extended Serbia. Their attitude did not change after WWII, where the communist Yugoslavia was created. The foreign correspondents and diplomats, who prefer their cozy stay in Belgrade, were not aware of the strains, which were simmering for increasing Serbian attempts to rule the State as some sort of "Serboslavia". Since they were listening only to the Serbian version of the story, they needed much time to recognize the proper reason why Yugoslavia started falling apart. Thus the precious time, to prevent the large scale carnage was lost before UN, NATO and EU had resorted to more powerful actions.

When the Bosnian conflict started in April 1992 the population of (the former Yugoslav Republic) Bosnia was composed by 47.3% Muslims (1,905,829) vs. 31,4 % Orthodox Serbs (1,369,258), 17,3% Catholic Croats (775,892) and 5,5% of Yugoslavs (238,854, meaning citizens often the offspring of mixed marriages, who refused to identify with a particular ethno-religious group). Similar to the Serbs in the former Yugoslavia, the Musmlims in Bosnia wanted to create a state to be optimal for them, overruling the Catholic Croats and Orthodox Serbs, who both were expecting a secular arrangement. The ultimate objective for the Bosnian President Alija Izetbegoviæ was to establish a strict sharia Muslim State according to the Iranian or Saudi Arabia model, from where he got substantial aid in arms, money and fighters. (The Croats got their arms and aid from Croatia and the Serbs from Serbia in order to carry on the war, which had already started.) On the domestic front Izetbegovi's backbone was the Party of Democratic Action (Stranka demokratske akcije, SDA), which was by far the strongest. Since a strict Islamic State in the middle of Europe was something the western diplomats would not accept, Izetbegoviæ had shown his innocent and secular face to the West while at the same time working hard to achieve his religious objectives. The West failed to see the ample evidence of Izetbegoviæ's double game. This was more clearly shown in the country than in the besieged Sarajevo, where most foreign correspondent were being accommodated. They were not eager to report from abroad, where shooting was frequent and the terrain was planted by numerous land mines...

In short, the Bosnian war, which could be avoided, had begun mainly (but not only) for this Muslim-Catholic-Orthodox incompatibility. After three years of war, full of small and some large scale atrocities, committed by all sides - many of them well described and documented in Schindler's book - the (Croatian) president Tudjman,(Bosnian) Izetbegoviæ and (Serbian) Miloseviæ were ultimately forced to sign the Dayton agreement in December 1995. The guns ceased shooting, but the hatred, deepened by numerous atrocities, which happened during the war, has remained. People, who sometimes lived together in peace, had moved to their Serbian, Muslim and Croatian enclaves, mourning and burying their victims which exceeded 100,000, not to mention many times more refugees. After Dayton the former mixed parts of Bosnia became almost mono-ethnic. Those refugees who dared to return to their homes had found their houses either destroyed or inhabited by members of another nationality, who refused to withdraw.

On top of all this, Central Bosnia became a hotbed and training center for Mujahideen warriors, who were imported en masse during the war, from Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and from other Islamic States. Many of them had married local women. Since these Muslims can not return to the countries of their origin, they spread their "art of killing the unbelievers" through Europe and beyond, while their terrorist training centers remained active in Bosnia. Evidence for this was that way too many captured or dead Muslim terrorists had Bosnian passports.

Besides a short description of Bosnian history since the Otomans started intruding the Balkans in Midle Ages, plus the war if 1992-1995, the writer has devoted the core of his narrative to the Bosnian nest of international "holy war", from which the warriors are now spread the world around. The fact that the majority of author's quoted sources are in the Serbo-Crotatian language, gives the impression that he knows this language, which is an important pre-requisite for unbiased reporting. However, by using the original material, the author's narrative was occasionally based either on a single source, or on only circumstantial evidence, whih might be based on propaganda rather than on true events. To quote a single ecample: On page 155 a long paragraph is devoted to smuggling of arms via Slovenia, where the Bosnian Hasan Èengiæ and - then the Defense Minister, now the Premier of Slovenia - Janez Jansa were involved by cashing substantial amounts of money. The writer quotes three newspaper's article as the evidence: Naprijed (Zagreb), 13 August 2002, Globus (Zagreb), 22 May 2003 and Kurier (Vienna), 26. November 1996. Apart from the fact that Jansa himself had discovered the hidden arms at the Maribor Airport, mothballed and stocked there to be transported from Sudan, via Slovenia to Bosnia (why he would incriminate himself by doing so?), the documents charging him for profiting money by this transaction, were recently proven to be a fake. Since such arms deals were paid by hard cash, where hefty commissions are usual, the real profiteers in Maribor affair have not (yet) been discovered.

The author displayed that not only the Serbs, but also the Bosnians and Croats were bad guys, who caused numerous war crimes during the Bosnian conflict. One of the proofs for this is that the culprits of all three nations must defend themselves at the International Hague Tribunal.

This book displays the Bosnian conflict in an entirely new light, which shows that the whole region is unstable in the same way as the multi-national Yugoslavia was a makeshift construction after the Versailles Treaty in 1920. It is just a question of time when today's Bosnia, which was hastily patched together in Dayton, just to stop the war, will start falling apart. Due to horrible atrocities which happened in Kosovo, there is no glue to attach this State back to Serbia again. Why should the forecast for Bosnia be any different?

P.S. In spite of my meticulous effort to write in Times New Roman CE fonts, the special Serbo-Croat diacritical fonts appeared different in my freview. Would the amazon.com editors spent the necessary effort and correct the mistakes?
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars About time...
A well reasoned and researched book that illuminates an unknown aspect of the West's blind support of one actor in a complicated civil war. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Steve O

2.0 out of 5 stars No Book Can Be All Things to All People
I can definitely see why people with no knowledge of the war will think the Bosnians are rabid terrorists because of this 'tell-all expose. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Analyst

1.0 out of 5 stars Don't read
I guess Mr. Schindler thinks that the US Army should have invaded Bosnia instead of Iraq to fight Al-Qaeda. Come on, people. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Michael Fox

1.0 out of 5 stars Don't Bother
The connection between Al-Qaeda and the Balkans is just as that of Basque Homeland and Freedom organization and the country of Argentina, meaning it can be made on a faint... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Addison

1.0 out of 5 stars Untruthful and propaganda-ridden
This book is an attempt to exploit the current terrorist Al-Qaida threat in the U.S. in order to gain some recognition and possbily sell a few copies. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Mel Radoncic

5.0 out of 5 stars Unholy Terror
It is an extraordinary book that honestly presents preceding events, without the usual propaganda and lies.

Dr. Eng. Sc. Michael Savic
Published 15 months ago by Dr. Michael Savic

5.0 out of 5 stars A critical and reasoned perspective supported by research
John R. Schindler has a background in scholarship and has the analytical background to weigh the credibility of various sources. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Ciprian E. Ivanof

5.0 out of 5 stars First Time Observation Turned Into an Expert Opinion
I really love Amazon but one of its downfalls is the customer reviews of politically-based books. It's clear to me that a reader will give a thumbs up or down based as to whether... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Andrew F. Shaker

1.0 out of 5 stars Sad attempt!
To see that this book is based on propaganda and is a sad attempt to make money based on twisting the truth, go to Bosnia to see for yourself. Read more
Published 21 months ago by E. Lemes

5.0 out of 5 stars For the true story on Islamic extremism in the Balkans
Having spend years in the Balkans, I strongly recommend this book for anyone interested in seeing the role that Bosnia played in the growth of the world wide Islamic extremist... Read more
Published on October 3, 2007 by secretguard

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