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The Convenient Terrorist: Two Whistleblowers' Stories of Torture, Terror, Secret Wars, and CIA Lies Hardcover – June 27, 2017
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The Convenient Terrorist is the definitive inside account of the capture, torture, and detention of Abu Zubaydah, the first high-value target” captured by the CIA after 9/11. But was Abu Zubaydah, who is still being indefinitely held by the United States under shadowy circumstances, the blue-ribbon capture that the Bush White House claimed he was? Authors John Kiriakou, who led the capture of Zubaydah, and Joseph Hickman, who took custody of him at Guantanamo, draw a far more complex and intriguing portrait of the al-Qaeda mastermind” who became a symbol of torture and the dark side” of US security. From a one-time American collaborator to a poster boy for waterboarding, Abu Zubaydah became a convenient terrorist”a way for US authorities to sell their War on Terror” to the American people.
- Print length160 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHot Books
- Publication dateJune 27, 2017
- Dimensions6 x 0.8 x 9 inches
- ISBN-109781510711624
- ISBN-13978-1510711624
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"The riveting story of the man in the center of a historic crisis that cost America her moral authority and her claims to exceptionalism. A courageous spy's heartbreaking dissection of the milestone incident that marked devolution of American idealism."—Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., NY Times bestselling author of Framed
“Who is Ali Zubaydah? What did he really have do with 9/11? Who did the Bush regime take so much bureaucratic trouble just to torture him, and then keep torturing him? And why has he been locked up at Guantanamo, incommunicado, for over 15 years? Such are the questions posed by this disturbing book, which should enlighten anyone who thinks that ‘1984’ did not arrive in the United States until the Age of Trump.”—Mark Crispin Miller, bestselling author of Fooled Again and The Bush Dyslexicon
“A fascinating and important history well told.”— Oliver Stone
“The Convenient Terrorist depicts the dark story behind the capture of Abu Zubaydah and the broader issue of American values sacrificed in the War on Terror. It is a must-read for anyone trying to understand our post 911 world and the murky forces at play shaping it and the lives of us all.”—J. Malcolm Garcia, author of The Khaarijee: A Chronicle of Friendship and War in Kabul and What Wars Leave Behind: The Faceless and the Forgotten
“In The Convenient Terrorist, Joseph Hickman and John Kiriakou provide a fascinating insider's account of the policies that defined George W. Bush's war-on-terror — as well as a reminder of their ongoing human toll. For anyone looking to understand this toll and its complexities, there is no better place to start than the story of Abu Zubaydah's career, arrest, torture, and 15 years of confinement without due process.”—Alexander Zaitchik, author of The Gilded Rage: A Wild Ride Through Donald Trump’s America
“Welcome to the Dark Side of America’s ‘War on Terror.’ Aside from the fact that it is impossible to fight a war against an abstract noun like ‘terror,’ just consider this: If you waterboard a person long enough, they will confess to anything. ‘Enhanced interrogation’ is nothing more than torture – and America is supposed to stand for something better than that. The well-qualified authors of this book do a great job of exposing this fiasco, an international embarrassment of American foreign policy.”—David Wayne, NY Times bestselling author of Hit List: An In-Depth Investigation into the Mysterious Deaths of Witnesses to the JFK Assassination
“News headlines haven't done justice to the story of Abu Zubaydah. The Convenient Terrorist makes clear he’s not one of the good guys. But the authors also show Zubaydah didn’t deserve the torture he’s suffered at the hands of the American government, and deserves a fair trial after 15 years in American custody. This book goes beyond the scattered news reports about Zubaydah, and will help you better understand the US war on terror.”—Bill Sanderson, author of Bulletins from Dallas: Reporting the JFK Assassination
“After you read this book, you will never look at Homeland the same way again.” —Gregg Stebben, author of White House Confidential
“The Convenient Terrorist is a unique, compelling, first-hand account by Joseph Hickman and John Kiriakou who lived the life of Abu Zubaydah to the hilt. Fortified by tenacious research and intimate involvement in black side of this case, no other authors could come close to telling this roller coaster ride through America’s War on Terror and the major role Abu Zubaydah has played in this war. This book pulls no punches and exhibits total courage. The “water boarding” section reminded me of what I have come to hate in a lifetime in the criminal law: confession by torture. Not only is it beyond the boundaries of human decency but, worse yet, it more likely than not produces a false confession, a serious danger to those inflicting the torture. Every sentence in The Convenient Terrorist is packed with corroborated facts than add up to aiming a spotlight at the War on Terror. It is an essential read.” —William Martin, editor of The Crime of the Century
“Who is Abu Zubaydah? A monster? A ‘high value detainee’ indefinitely imprisoned in Gitmo without charge? Or collateral damage in an undeclared but unending war—a human being transformed into moral dark matter by uncomprehending national leaders and their unquestioning agents? A former CIA officer and one of Zubaydah’s original captors, John Kiriakou served thirty months in federal prison during 2013-2015 essentially for revealing that Zubaydah was tortured. Together with coauthor Joseph Hickman, he now reveals all the inconvenient truth behind the captivity of this ‘convenient terrorist.’ It is a story for our time, and I know three American presidents who will not want you to read it.”—Alan Axelrod, author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to American History and Patton on Leadership
“This book describes the horrific, prolonged and illegal torture by the CIA and the Department of Defense of Abu Zubayadah at Guantánamo. Coauthor John Kiriakou was imprisoned for blowing the whistle on this. Bush, Cheney, and their complicit underlings should have served time instead. They didn't and now Trump wants to use torture again. Read this book. And stop him.”—Michael Steven Smith, cohost of Law and Disorder and coauthor of How the CIA Killed Che
“The Convenient Terrorist will grab you from the very start. It reads like a spy novel but has the benefit of being all too real. Told by John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer who blew the whistle on CIA torture, and by Joseph Hickman who worked in military intelligence on Guantanamo Bay, it is the story of CIA ineptitude, cruelty, cover-up, and terrible blowback. It is the tale of a rogue agency which has compromised our safety and security while in the process shredding our Constitution and the international laws that should govern us. This book will make you wonder what this War on Terror is all about and question the bizarre methods being used to wage it. This is a book of conscience and courage, and is a must-read for every American.”—Dan Kovalik, author of The Plot to Scapegoat Russia
Praise for John Kiriakou and Joseph Hickman's previous work:
"Kiriakou cracks open the CIA’s vault, revealing an unusually human inside account of what goes on inside. A vivid picture of the tradeoffs facing America in the post 9/11 world."?Jane Mayer, staff writer, The New Yorker and author of Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right and The Dark Side: How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals
“Doing Time Like a Spy is an unusual and outstanding book: part prison memoir, part CIA tradecraft instruction manual. If you ever wondered how a seasoned CIA case officer operates, or how he might use his covert skills to survive an experience as brutal as prison, this is your book. In fact, it contains so much valuable information and so many insights the Agency ought to issue it to new recruits. But of course, its author is John Kiriakou, who blew the whistle on torture, and if the powers that be were vindictive enough to imprison him for that, it’s a safe bet they’ll be spiteful enough to try to keep young recruits from reading him. Go around the censors?you’ll be glad you did.” ?Barry Eisler, Former CIA Officer and bestselling author of The God's Eye View.
“The true life story of a US spy on the frontlines of the war on terror, and what that meant for both his personal and professional life. Doing Time Like A Spy is a gripping page turner that reads better than fiction. A great read about the murky world of American espionage."?Peter Bergen, author of Holy War, Inc. and Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden
"The Obama Administration and the US Government set out to make an example of John Kiriakou. They succeeded beyond the wildest dreams. John is a shining example of courage, principal, and the America we are struggling to preserve. This guy took a bullet for all of us. We are forever in his debt."?Marc Ash, publisher, Reader Supported News
"John Kiriakou has done things the hard way, standing up to federal authority for years. The CIA couldn't silence him when, after fifteen years as an analyst and operations officer, he said the CIA was torturing its prisoners, an act of heroism that cost him two years of his freedom. The Bureau of Prisons couldn't silence him when, wrongly-confined, he exposed waste, fraud, abuse, and illegality in the prison system in a series of blogs that put him under constant threat of solitary confinement. And he did it all without losing his sense of humor. Doing Time Like a Spy is a must read."?Daniel Ellsberg, Whistleblower and author of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers
"With a touch of humor and more than a bit of irony, Kiriakou sheds light on the sad reality that his CIA training amply prepared him to thrive in a US prison. What should outrage the rest of us is that Kiriakou was in prison at all! In fact, Kiriakou's gentleness is on full display in this book?which makes his circumstances more understandable and outrageous at the same time. And it causes me to ask, "How can we ever call it a 'Justice' system when an act of conscience that exposes US state crimes is punished and not those who authorized the crimes?"?Congresswomen Cynthia McKinney
"Sgt. Joe Hickman has written a terrific, riveting, and deeply disturbing book. I am shocked by what he reveals. Governments have always tended to suppress embarrassing facts; as the French general staff explained to investigator Col. Picquart during the Dreyfus Affair: "What importance is the innocence of one Jew compared to the reputation of the French Army?" But like Col. Picquart, Sgt. Hickman is compelled by an inner moral code to pursue truth and justice, regardless of the cost to himself. Our country badly needs such men. The truth always matters."—Thomas Wilner, Counsel of record for Guantanamo detainees before the U.S. Supreme Court in Rasul v. Bush and in Boumediene v. Bush
“Disturbing account of abuse and secrecy at the Guantanamo Bay military prison, tied to the deaths of three detainess . . . [Murder at Camp Delta is] a plainly told, unsettling corrective to the many jingoistic accounts of post-9/11 military action.”—Kirkus
“[A] disturbing account of the mysterious deaths of three Arab prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2006…. [Hickman] makes his case with compelling clarity and strength of character.”—Publishers Weekly
“If the Seton Hall report on Camp Delta was a seed, and Horton’s article for Harper’s a sapling, then Murder at Camp Delta is the tree in full bloom, its branches reaching into the spooky shadows of the national security apparatus.”—Newsweek "Compelling... It's clear from his version of ... that there’s still plenty we don’t know about Guantanamo, a prison in which horrifying acts were carried out in the name of every American citizen."—San Francisco Chronicle
Review
"The riveting story of the man in the center of a historic crisis that cost America her moral authority and her claims to exceptionalism. A courageous spy's heartbreaking dissection of the milestone incident that marked devolution of American idealism."―Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., NY Times bestselling author of Framed
“Who is Ali Zubaydah? What did he really have do with 9/11? Who did the Bush regime take so much bureaucratic trouble just to torture him, and then keep torturing him? And why has he been locked up at Guantanamo, incommunicado, for over 15 years? Such are the questions posed by this disturbing book, which should enlighten anyone who thinks that ‘1984’ did not arrive in the United States until the Age of Trump.”―Mark Crispin Miller, bestselling author of Fooled Again and The Bush Dyslexicon
“A fascinating and important history well told.”― Oliver Stone
“The Convenient Terrorist depicts the dark story behind the capture of Abu Zubaydah and the broader issue of American values sacrificed in the War on Terror. It is a must-read for anyone trying to understand our post 911 world and the murky forces at play shaping it and the lives of us all.”―J. Malcolm Garcia, author of The Khaarijee: A Chronicle of Friendship and War in Kabul and What Wars Leave Behind: The Faceless and the Forgotten
“In The Convenient Terrorist, Joseph Hickman and John Kiriakou provide a fascinating insider's account of the policies that defined George W. Bush's war-on-terror ― as well as a reminder of their ongoing human toll. For anyone looking to understand this toll and its complexities, there is no better place to start than the story of Abu Zubaydah's career, arrest, torture, and 15 years of confinement without due process.”―Alexander Zaitchik, author of The Gilded Rage: A Wild Ride Through Donald Trump’s America
“Welcome to the Dark Side of America’s ‘War on Terror.’ Aside from the fact that it is impossible to fight a war against an abstract noun like ‘terror,’ just consider this: If you waterboard a person long enough, they will confess to anything. ‘Enhanced interrogation’ is nothing more than torture – and America is supposed to stand for something better than that. The well-qualified authors of this book do a great job of exposing this fiasco, an international embarrassment of American foreign policy.”―David Wayne, NY Times bestselling author of Hit List: An In-Depth Investigation into the Mysterious Deaths of Witnesses to the JFK Assassination
“News headlines haven't done justice to the story of Abu Zubaydah. The Convenient Terrorist makes clear he’s not one of the good guys. But the authors also show Zubaydah didn’t deserve the torture he’s suffered at the hands of the American government, and deserves a fair trial after 15 years in American custody. This book goes beyond the scattered news reports about Zubaydah, and will help you better understand the US war on terror.”―Bill Sanderson, author of Bulletins from Dallas: Reporting the JFK Assassination
“After you read this book, you will never look at Homeland the same way again.” ―Gregg Stebben, author of White House Confidential
“The Convenient Terrorist is a unique, compelling, first-hand account by Joseph Hickman and John Kiriakou who lived the life of Abu Zubaydah to the hilt. Fortified by tenacious research and intimate involvement in black side of this case, no other authors could come close to telling this roller coaster ride through America’s War on Terror and the major role Abu Zubaydah has played in this war. This book pulls no punches and exhibits total courage. The “water boarding” section reminded me of what I have come to hate in a lifetime in the criminal law: confession by torture. Not only is it beyond the boundaries of human decency but, worse yet, it more likely than not produces a false confession, a serious danger to those inflicting the torture. Every sentence in The Convenient Terrorist is packed with corroborated facts than add up to aiming a spotlight at the War on Terror. It is an essential read.” ―William Martin, editor of The Crime of the Century
“Who is Abu Zubaydah? A monster? A ‘high value detainee’ indefinitely imprisoned in Gitmo without charge? Or collateral damage in an undeclared but unending war―a human being transformed into moral dark matter by uncomprehending national leaders and their unquestioning agents? A former CIA officer and one of Zubaydah’s original captors, John Kiriakou served thirty months in federal prison during 2013-2015 essentially for revealing that Zubaydah was tortured. Together with coauthor Joseph Hickman, he now reveals all the inconvenient truth behind the captivity of this ‘convenient terrorist.’ It is a story for our time, and I know three American presidents who will not want you to read it.”―Alan Axelrod, author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to American History and Patton on Leadership
“This book describes the horrific, prolonged and illegal torture by the CIA and the Department of Defense of Abu Zubayadah at Guantánamo. Coauthor John Kiriakou was imprisoned for blowing the whistle on this. Bush, Cheney, and their complicit underlings should have served time instead. They didn't and now Trump wants to use torture again. Read this book. And stop him.”―Michael Steven Smith, cohost of Law and Disorder and coauthor of How the CIA Killed Che
“The Convenient Terrorist will grab you from the very start. It reads like a spy novel but has the benefit of being all too real. Told by John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer who blew the whistle on CIA torture, and by Joseph Hickman who worked in military intelligence on Guantanamo Bay, it is the story of CIA ineptitude, cruelty, cover-up, and terrible blowback. It is the tale of a rogue agency which has compromised our safety and security while in the process shredding our Constitution and the international laws that should govern us. This book will make you wonder what this War on Terror is all about and question the bizarre methods being used to wage it. This is a book of conscience and courage, and is a must-read for every American.”―Dan Kovalik, author of The Plot to Scapegoat Russia
Praise for John Kiriakou and Joseph Hickman's previous work:
"Kiriakou cracks open the CIA’s vault, revealing an unusually human inside account of what goes on inside. A vivid picture of the tradeoffs facing America in the post 9/11 world."―Jane Mayer, staff writer, The New Yorker and author of Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right and The Dark Side: How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals
“Doing Time Like a Spy is an unusual and outstanding book: part prison memoir, part CIA tradecraft instruction manual. If you ever wondered how a seasoned CIA case officer operates, or how he might use his covert skills to survive an experience as brutal as prison, this is your book. In fact, it contains so much valuable information and so many insights the Agency ought to issue it to new recruits. But of course, its author is John Kiriakou, who blew the whistle on torture, and if the powers that be were vindictive enough to imprison him for that, it’s a safe bet they’ll be spiteful enough to try to keep young recruits from reading him. Go around the censors―you’ll be glad you did.” ―Barry Eisler, Former CIA Officer and bestselling author of The God's Eye View.
“The true life story of a US spy on the frontlines of the war on terror, and what that meant for both his personal and professional life. Doing Time Like A Spy is a gripping page turner that reads better than fiction. A great read about the murky world of American espionage."―Peter Bergen, author of Holy War, Inc. and Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden
"The Obama Administration and the US Government set out to make an example of John Kiriakou. They succeeded beyond the wildest dreams. John is a shining example of courage, principal, and the America we are struggling to preserve. This guy took a bullet for all of us. We are forever in his debt."―Marc Ash, publisher, Reader Supported News
"John Kiriakou has done things the hard way, standing up to federal authority for years. The CIA couldn't silence him when, after fifteen years as an analyst and operations officer, he said the CIA was torturing its prisoners, an act of heroism that cost him two years of his freedom. The Bureau of Prisons couldn't silence him when, wrongly-confined, he exposed waste, fraud, abuse, and illegality in the prison system in a series of blogs that put him under constant threat of solitary confinement. And he did it all without losing his sense of humor. Doing Time Like a Spy is a must read."―Daniel Ellsberg, Whistleblower and author of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers
"With a touch of humor and more than a bit of irony, Kiriakou sheds light on the sad reality that his CIA training amply prepared him to thrive in a US prison. What should outrage the rest of us is that Kiriakou was in prison at all! In fact, Kiriakou's gentleness is on full display in this book―which makes his circumstances more understandable and outrageous at the same time. And it causes me to ask, "How can we ever call it a 'Justice' system when an act of conscience that exposes US state crimes is punished and not those who authorized the crimes?"―Congresswomen Cynthia McKinney
"Sgt. Joe Hickman has written a terrific, riveting, and deeply disturbing book. I am shocked by what he reveals. Governments have always tended to suppress embarrassing facts; as the French general staff explained to investigator Col. Picquart during the Dreyfus Affair: "What importance is the innocence of one Jew compared to the reputation of the French Army?" But like Col. Picquart, Sgt. Hickman is compelled by an inner moral code to pursue truth and justice, regardless of the cost to himself. Our country badly needs such men. The truth always matters."―Thomas Wilner, Counsel of record for Guantanamo detainees before the U.S. Supreme Court in Rasul v. Bush and in Boumediene v. Bush
“Disturbing account of abuse and secrecy at the Guantanamo Bay military prison, tied to the deaths of three detainess . . . [Murder at Camp Delta is] a plainly told, unsettling corrective to the many jingoistic accounts of post-9/11 military action.”―Kirkus
“[A] disturbing account of the mysterious deaths of three Arab prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2006…. [Hickman] makes his case with compelling clarity and strength of character.”―Publishers Weekly
“If the Seton Hall report on Camp Delta was a seed, and Horton’s article for Harper’s a sapling, then Murder at Camp Delta is the tree in full bloom, its branches reaching into the spooky shadows of the national security apparatus.”―Newsweek "Compelling... It's clear from his version of ... that there’s still plenty we don’t know about Guantanamo, a prison in which horrifying acts were carried out in the name of every American citizen."―San Francisco Chronicle
About the Author
Joseph Hickman spent most of his life in the military, first as a Marine, then as a soldier in both the Army and the National Guard. He has deployed on several military operations throughout the world, sometimes attached to foreign militaries. The recipient of more than twenty commendations and awards, he was awarded the Army Achievement Medal and the Army Commendation Medal while he was stationed with the 629th Military Intelligence Battalion in Guantanamo Bay. He is currently working as freelance journalist covering national security issues, and corporate fraud. He is also an independent researcher, and Senior Research Fellow at Seton Hall Law School’s Center for Policy and Research. His revelations about the abuse of prisoners at Gitmo resulted in a National Magazine Award–winning story in Harper’s magazine and a 2015 book, Murder at Camp Delta. He has also written for Newsweek, TIME, VICE News, and Al-Jazeera America.
David Talbot is the New York Times bestselling author of Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years and The Devil’s Chessboard. He is the founder and former editor-in-chief of Salon and has written for the New Yorker, Rolling Stone, and Time. He lives in San Francisco.
Product details
- ASIN : 1510711627
- Publisher : Hot Books
- Publication date : June 27, 2017
- Language : English
- Print length : 160 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781510711624
- ISBN-13 : 978-1510711624
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.8 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #73,851 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #29 in Terrorism (Books)
- #58 in Political Intelligence
- #82 in Middle Eastern Politics
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Joseph Hickman spent most of his life in the military, first as a Marine, then as a soldier in both the Army and the National Guard. He has deployed on several military operations throughout the world, sometimes attached to foreign militaries. The recipient of more than twenty commendations and awards, he was awarded the Army Achievement Medal and the Army Commendation Medal while he was stationed with the 629th Military Intelligence Battalion in Guantanamo Bay. He is currently working as freelance journalist covering national security issues, and corporate fraud. He is also an independent researcher, and Senior Research Fellow at Seton Hall Law School’s Center for Policy and Research. His revelations about the abuse of prisoners at Gitmo resulted in a National Magazine Award–winning story in Harper’s magazine and a 2015 book, Murder at Camp Delta. He has also written for Newsweek, TIME, VICE News, and Al-Jazeera America.
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2017Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseJohn Kiriakou led the CIA operation that arrested, or rather, kidnapped without charge, Abu Zubaydah. Joseph Hickman helped imprison Abu Zubaydah as a guard at Guantanamo and was later the lead researcher for Zubaydah’s habeas defense team.
Here are some highlights of a tale of crackpot criminality recounted by Hickman and Kiriakou in their jointly authored new book, The Convenient Terrorist:
Maher Abu Zubayda and Zain Abidin Mohammed Husain aka Abu Zubaydah are two completely different people. They and many other people use the name Abu Zubayda, with various spellings in English transliterations from Arabic. The Zubaydah family was evicted from a Palestinian village during the Nakba. The CIA, employing more torturers than Arab speakers, confused the two Zubaydahs. When the basic facts that the CIA had about the life of the man it imprisoned and tortured turned out to all be wrong, the CIA paid no attention.
Maher Abu Zubayda worked with al Qaeda in the 1990s with an address in San Jose, Calif., three blocks from al Qaeda spy Ali Mohammed who later pled guilty to a role in bombing U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Mohammed had “served” in the Egyptian and U.S. armies. When the U.S. Army had learned in 1987 that Mohammed was a Muslim extremist, it had removed him from “Special Forces” but kept him in the Army. In 1988 Mohammed used a leave from the U.S. Army to go to Afghanistan to fight Soviets, rejoining the U.S. Army afterwards.
Maher Abu Zubayda later lived in Montana, studying explosives and a major dam, the Fort Peck Dam. The day before the attacks of September 11, 2001, an explosion occurred on his ranch, and he fled. On September 19, 2001, he was arrested. Clueless, the CIA built a major operation to try to locate the other Abu Zubaydah in Pakistan. On March 28, 2002, the day after that other Abu Zubaydah was seized in Pakistan, this one was convicted of unlawful possession of a firearm and of immigration violations. Six months later he was deported. Ten years after that, in 2012, a man in Jordan named Mahmoud wrote to the defense team of the Abu Zubaydah by then in Guantanamo to say that an Abu Zubayda had been in a prison in Jordan in 2005. It could not have been the same man who was in Guantanamo, as he had been grabbed by the CIA in 2002 and in 2005 had been undergoing torture by the CIA in Poland. The defense team soon heard that Mahmoud had been killed by a U.S. drone.
In the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s the CIA funded Muslim extremists in Afghanistan, including the Islamic Union for the Liberation of Afghanistan, led by Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, along with six other major alliances, with the funding passed along to many smaller groups including Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda. Presidents Reagan, Bush the First, and Clinton referred to these groups as “freedom fighters” and “heroes.”
Zain Abidin Mohammed Husain aka Abu Zubaydah, the man kidnapped, tortured, and still imprisoned to this day in Guantanamo, joined Sayyaf’s Islamic Union, not Al Qaeda. But Sayyaf, with U.S. funding since 1973 helped to create Al Qaeda. Sayyaf met with President Reagan and received abundant U.S. funding for years, to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan, and then to train fighters in Pakistan to overthrow Gaddafi in Libya. After September 11, 2001, the U.S. labeled Sayyaf’s “Libyan Islamic Fighting Group” a terrorist organization, but the CIA went right on funding it until Gaddafi was murdered 10 years later.
In October 2000, the Able Danger operation set up by the U.S. Special Operations Command and the Defense Intelligence Agency suspected three people in the United States of planning an attack, all three members of Al Qaeda, all three having trained in Sayyaf’s camps. The Department of so-called Defense paid no attention, and the DIA destroyed almost all of the information collected by Able Danger. Sayyaf reportedly learned of the September 11, 2001, attack plans in February 2001. Immediately after those attacks, the U.S. sent him tens of millions of dollars with which to fight the Taliban, assigned him to help write a Constitution for a new Afghanistan, and got him appointed to the Afghan parliament, where he remains today with the intractable incumbency of a U.S. Congress member.
It was in 1991 that the Abu Zubaydah with the unlucky name joined the Islamic Union. In 1993 the CIA funded a group of fighters he commanded in Tajikistan. Also at this time he asked to join Al Qaeda and was rejected on the grounds that he’d had a head injury.
The CIA’s language skills failed to distinguish between two Abu Zubaydahs. The CIA also failed to properly identify training camps as belonging to the Islamic Union or Al Qaeda. In addition, it failed to distinguish between a house called The House of Martyrs and one called Martyr’s House, even though one of these houses was in Afghanistan and run by Al Qaeda, while the other was in Pakistan and run by Abu Zubaydah of the Unlucky Name.
After the attacks of September 11, 2001, Abu Zubaydah headed off to Afghanistan to fight against a U.S. invasion. He claims not to have managed to actually fight the U.S. there. The United States, without evidence, claims he did. He openly says he intended to. He then caught wind of the fact that the U.S. was conducting a major search for him. He professed bewilderment, as he was neither Taliban not Al Qaeda, much less a top Al Qaeda leader as the U.S. claimed.
That the CIA was hunting for the wrong man, while the Abu Zubayda with ties to Al Qaeda was sitting in jail in Montana, is not somehow by the transitive properties of childish thinking, a statement that this Abu Zubaydah was a pacifist or a saint. He fought against a Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and a U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. We pacifists find fault with both of those actions, while the U.S. government praises one and condemns the other beyond any possibility of redemption.
It is also possible that in 1999 this Abu Zubaydah helped to some extent with failed attacks in Jordan and the United States, referred to as “the millennium bomb plot,” which Hickman and Kiriakou blame on Hamas and Hezbollah, not Al Qaeda, citing Saudi funding funneled through the SAAR Foundation in Herndon, Virginia, run by Alamoudi, a man who publicly supported Hamas and Hezbollah while also being made a guest at the White House on several occasions before and after September 11, 2001, in addition to being a “supporter” of George W. Bush’s election campaign.
But it was not for that or any other possible offense that the CIA in February 2002 mounted a mammoth effort to raid fourteen locations in Pakistan simultaneously in hopes of capturing the wrong man. U.S. tax dollars invested in this ludicrous operation far more generously than in your children’s schools. A man identified as Abu Zubaydah was nearly killed, just barely kept alive by top U.S. doctors jetted in for that purpose, and subsequently nearly killed through extensive torture over a period of years.
The questioning of this Abu Zubaydah did not begin immediately, however, because the CIA’s “Counterterrorism” Center did not believe the right man had been seized. Once questioning did begin, “many in the CIA,” according to Hickman and Kiriakou, wondered whether they had the right person. Such doubts were not allowed to stand in the way of a good opportunity for sadistic human experimentation.
Abu Zubaydah was off on a years-long torture tour of the globe. Thus began the familiar story of the FBI’s Ali Soufan eliciting information through humane questioning, the CIA learning nothing through its brutality, and the CIA lying about those facts. The torture, always illegal, began before President George W. Bush “authorized” it. Zubaydah was treated to the full menu of “approved” (and some unapproved) torture techniques: stripped naked, shackled, hooded, slammed against concrete, confined in a small box, threatened with death, waterboarded, deprived of sleep, etc.
Only on September 6, 2006, did Abu Zubaydah arrive at Guantanamo, where the CIA torture and human experimentation continued with the use of mefloquine, extended solitary confinement, and other brutality.
Did anyone on this little planet of ours know that the Central “Intelligence” Agency had kidnapped the wrong victim? It seems likely. It also seems that such knowledge became a fatal condition. Mahmoud was reportedly killed by a drone. The man whom Abu Zubaydah called his best friend in his diary, Ibn al-Shaykh Al Libi was tortured into false statements used by President Bush Junior to justify attacking Iraq. Al Libi died in a Libyan prison cell. A few weeks later, a man kidnapped along with Abu Zubaydah, a man named Ali Abdullah Ahmed, died in a Guantanamo cell. Fifteen other men were “captured” at the same time. All are dead. Khalil Al-Deek, an associate of Abu Zubaydah, was killed — we know not how — in April 2005.
Two corpses in the pile surrounding the story of Abu Zubaydah of the Unlucky Name were Saudi princes, and one was a Pakistani air marshal. One of the CIA’s brilliant strategies for “interrogating” Abu Zubaydah was to dress up as and pretend to be Saudis. Instead of getting scared by this ploy, Abu Zubaydah appeared greatly relieved. He told the phony Saudis to call three Saudi officials. He provided their phone numbers. One of the three was Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdul Aziz, a nephew of the Saudi king who spent most of his time in the United States and owned the 2002 Kentucky Derby winner. A second was Chief Prince Turki Al-Faisal Bin Abdul Aziz who had in 1991 arranged for Al Qaeda training to take place in Sayyaf’s camps. The third was the Pakistani air marshal Mushaf Ali Mir. All three shortly died (“heart attack” at 43, car crash, and clear weather airplane crash).
What can we learn from all of this? Probably not the new liberal conceit that anything the CIA tells us about Russia is the gospel truth derived from super serious professionalism and about which requesting evidence constitutes a treasonous act.
Now for a few quibbles with this book. The authors claim that the confessions of U.S. troops to crimes in the war on North Korea were all or mostly false confessions. They should read research on that war that parallels their fine work on more recent ones. They claim the jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan was the best example of a defensive jihad that there is, despite and without mentioning Brzezinski’s confession that the U.S. initiated the war. They claim that Saudi Arabia feared an Iraqi invasion in 1990, prompting the U.S. to “offer” to send in troops. This misleadingly omits the fact that the U.S. generated that fear through the aggressive use of false satellite images falsely suggesting an Iraqi troop presence that did not exist. The authors also state that the 9/11 attacks were a protest of U.S. support for Israel. They provide no source for that statement, but if we are to believe reported statements by bin Laden the motivation included that along with numerous other U.S. actions harmful to Muslim populations including the presence of U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia so generously provided in 1991.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2019Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseWhat an excellent, yet disturbing book!
It tells the story how the CIA captured Abu Zubaydah, after President Bush claimed he was #3 in Al-Qaeda. Turns out the man they captured was the wrong Abu Zubaydah - he'd never been a member of Al-Qaeda, and all sorts of other claims about him were false.
But the CIA only became convinced they'd made a mistake after they had mercilessly tortured the man, waterboarding him dozens of times. He had nothing more useful to tell them, because he wasn't the man they thought he was.
Now he's still locked up in GITMO, never charged with any crime - apparently, there's no crime against the United States he's ever committed.
But of course, if he wasn't an enemy of the US before, he sure is now that we've tortured him. So he can never be allowed to speak publicly, because he would tell about United States war crimes we committed against him.
Kiriakou speaks of what he knows: he was the CIA chief that led the search for, and capture of, Abu Zubaydah. He captured the man he was told to find - but he was told to find the wrong man.
In fact, the real "Abu Zubaydah" was in federal prison in the United States at the time!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2022Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI judge books based on keeping my attention. This book past that test
- Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2018Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThe author of this book must have been paid off by the subject's defense team, or the author believes the media hype surrounding the detainees at Guantanamo Bay and their "innocence." A lot of assumptions made, and a lot of inaccuracies. Makes for a quick read, but don't believe the hype.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2017Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI. F. Stone, the one of the 20th century’s great journalists famously said, “All governments lie.” I would add, that all governments lie most of the time. Readers will remember the lie of weapons of mass destruction used to justify the illegal invasion of Iraq. They may remember the lies surrounding the capture and rescue of Pvt. Jessica Lynch in the first days of that war. They should not have forgotten the lies surrounding the death in Afghanistan of Pat Tillman and his lionization at the hands of the NFL and our government. But we should also know of the lies surrounding the capture and torture of Abu Zubaydah. We were lied to concerning his true identity. We were lied to concerning his “crimes.” We were lied to concerning his treatment as a captive. Abu Zubaydah was tortured without mercy, never charged with a crime, and to this day he remains a captive in Guantanamo. The true story of Abu Zubaydah deserves to be told by two patriots who were intimately involved in his capture and treatment. This is that story and it is well told.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2017Format: KindleVerified PurchaseAwful truth to what has become the unacceptable norm in a country that is fast becoming an embarrassment. Truly saddened and sickened by those charged with leading our country. Those that are responsible MUST be held ACCOUNTABLE, and must not be allowed to continue with their blatant disrespect for what our constitution stands for.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2017Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is a book any well-informed citizen doesn't want to miss. In my mind, whistle-blowers are the unsung heroes of our country and vital to our country's continued freedom. They deserve medals not jail-time.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2017Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis book and the authors of this book are totally awesome!
Top reviews from other countries
Iain MunroReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 21, 20195.0 out of 5 stars An immensely important account of the CIA torture programme and "War on Terror"
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThis book undertakes a detailed investigation of the mistakes that were made in the arrest of the wrong man, who was alleged to have been a senior member of Al Qaeda. This man was subsequently tortured, repeatedly water boarded and sent to Guantanamo Bay without trial. He was never released even after information surfaced that he was innocent of the crimes for which he had originally been arrested. It is a story which reveals the remarkable dedication and skill of many of those involved in the capture of alleged terrorists, but equally, a host of mistakes, which were compounded by denials and coverups that led to a terrible injustice. The book was written by the CIA operative directly involved in the capture, and it must have taken great courage and perseverance to speak out against the odds about the mistakes that were made and continue to investigate what exactly happened and what went wrong. Some members of the CIA refused to participate when the injustice of this situation became apparent but the unsavoury fact is that others preferred to go along with the cover up. This is an essential book - not only concerning an individual case of injustice, but in ensuring that the insanity of the so-called "war on terror" is recognised for what it is.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on December 16, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Page turner
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseA MUST read!! A page turner from beginning to end! Couldn't put the book down, read straight through! Looking forward to reading author's (John Kiriakou) other books!!
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Natalia Rivera ScottReviewed in Mexico on September 26, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Chilling
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseChilling. A great book about the truth behind torture legalized by the Bush administration, the torture architects, the CIA and the horrible place Guantanamo is. A must read.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on August 31, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Such good service- but then that is what we expect and ...
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseSuch good service- but then that is what we expect and always have from Amazon.The book is very interesting but in many ways very concerning.








