Review
"If you want to read a serious book about the origins and consequences of the intervention in Iraq in 2003, you owe it to yourself to get hold of a copy of Douglas Feiths War and Decision." --
Christopher Hitchens, Slate"Meticulous. . . . A convincing refutation of unfair allegations about the author [and] a balanced analysis of policy debates about Iraq inside the administration. . . . Will be studied for years by journalists, historians and aspiring political appointees." --
National Review"One would have expected, as in the case of all the other Iraq exposés, that [Feith] would use the memoir genre to get even. Instead, he is selfcritical, even admits to occasional hubris, but, more importantly, also chronicles the contortions and reinventions of many post2003/4 critics of the war." --
Victor Davis Hanson, National Review Online"Whats needed now? More memoirs, more data, more information, more testimony. More serious books, like Doug Feiths. More this is what I saw and this is what is true. Feed history." --
Peggy Noonan, Wall Street JournalDouglas Feith has written a model memoir: fair-minded, objective, and without rancor. The fact that the policy to which he contributed was flawed from the outset in no way diminishes the historical importance of this firsthand account. --
Jean Edward Smith, John Marshall Professor of Political Science, Marshall University; author of FDR; Grant; And John Marshall: Definer of a NationDouglas Feith has written what will be a controversial book. It will certainly anger many readers because it takes a different position than most other accounts on the wisdom of going to war in Iraq, on what mistakes were made, and on who made them. But Feiths is a serious work, well documented, that presents the best defense to date of the defining policy of the Bush presidency. It is a readable account that deserves to be read and its argument debated. --
Robert L. Gallucci, Dean of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University; Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, Clinton AdministrationFor anyone seriously interested in the decisions prior to and during the Iraq war, War and Decision is a must-read book. It is the first from within the Department of Defense, and Feith provides careful documentation rather than just freewheeling opinions. He explodes many of the journalistic and political myths that have become widely accepted. He provides a spirited defense of the Presidents decisions, though the subsequent discussion makes clear the failures in execution. His judgments are thoughtfuland, for a major player in the process, he is quite objective regarding what went wrong. War and Decision will be a treasure trove for the historianswhen the current passions have finally cooled. --
James Schlesinger, Director of Central Intelligence, Nixon Administration; Secretary of Defense, Nixon and Ford Administrations; Secretary of Energy, Carter AdministrationThe fullest and most thoughtful statement of the Pentagon thinking prior to and in the first stages of the Iraq war. Even those, as I, who take issue with some of its conclusions will gain a better perspective from reading this book. --
Henry A. Kissinger, National Security Adviser, Nixon Administration; Secretary of State, Nixon and Ford Administrations
Review
"Extraordinarily frank and persuasive. . . . [O]ur first in-depth look at the inside of the Bush administration's national security top leadership from one who was there. [Feith] has been criticized harshly and, I think, unfairly." (Michael Barone, U.S. News & World Report )
"As Americans turned on the Iraq war, anti-war forces tried to portray the war as not only a mistake, but the result of a neoconservative coup. . . . In his new memoir, War and Decision, Mr. Feith does an admirable job in dispelling this hokum." (Eli Lake, New York Sun )
"By far the most balanced, detailed, and lucid account of this story that's come out yet. . . . Feith makes the first intellectually serious attempt to explain how the government tried to answer that question [of settling post-9/11 defense strategy] in the years after 9/11." ("The Corner," National Review Online )
"One would have expected, as in the case of all the other Iraq exposs, that [Feith] would use the memoir genre to get even. Instead, he is self-critical, even admits to occasional hubris, but, more importantly, also chronicles the contortions and reinventions of many post-2003/4 critics of the war." (Victor Davis Hanson, National Review Online )
"Indispensable. . . . The best account to date of how the administration debated, decided, organized and executed its military responses to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Much of what makes War and Decision so compelling is that it is, in effect, a revisionist history." (Bret Stephens, Wall Street Journal )
"What's needed now? More memoirs, more data, more information, more testimony. More serious books, like Doug Feith's. More 'this is what I saw' and 'this is what is true.' Feed history." (Peggy Noonan, Wall Street Journal )
"Extraordinary. . . . I was unprepared for the thoroughness of the documentation, the sweeping nature of the narrative and the highly readable prose. It is the first attempt by a serious student of history to lay out the myriad, challenging choices confronting a president. . . . Splendid." (Frank J. Gaffney Jr., Washington Times )
"Meticulous. . . . A convincing refutation of unfair allegations about the author [and] a balanced analysis of policy debates about Iraq inside the administration. . . . Will be studied for years by journalists, historians and aspiring political appointees." (National Review )
"If you want to read a serious book about the origins and consequences of the intervention in Iraq in 2003, you owe it to yourself to get hold of a copy of Douglas Feith's War and Decision." (Christopher Hitchens, Slate )
See all Editorial Reviews