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Enemy Combatant: My Imprisonment at Guantanamo, Bagram, and Kandahar | 
enlarge | Author: Moazzam Begg Creator: Victoria Brittain Publisher: New Press Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy New: $5.45 You Save: $13.50 (71%)
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Rating: 19 reviews Sales Rank: 121741
Media: Paperback Pages: 416 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.8 x 1.3
ISBN: 1595582061 Dewey Decimal Number: 958.1047092 EAN: 9781595582065 ASIN: 1595582061
Publication Date: September 11, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: we ship quickly from maine
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Product Description The "shocking firsthand account" (Chicago Sun-Times) of one man's years inside the notorious American prisonand his Kafkaesque struggle to clear his name.
When Enemy Combatant was first published in the United States in hardcover in 2006 it garnered sensational reviews, and its author was featured in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, on National Public Radio, and on ABC News. A second generation British Muslim, Begg had been held by the U.S. military for more than three years before being released without charge in January of 2005. His memoir is the first published account by a Guantanamo detainee of life inside the infamous prison.
Writing in the Washington Post Book World, Jane Mayer described Enemy Combatant as "fascinating...Begg provides some ideological counterweight to the one-sided spin coming from the U.S. government. He writes passionately and personally, stripping readers of the comforting lie that somehow the detainees aren't really like us, with emotional attachments, intellectual interests and fully developed humanity."
Recommended by the Financial Times and Tikkun magazine and a ColorLines Editors' Pick of Post-9/11 Books, Enemy Combatant is "a forcefully told, up-to-the-minute political story...necessary reading for people on all sides of the issue" (Publishers Weekly, starred review).
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| Customer Reviews: Read 14 more reviews...
What if during WWII "good Germans" had read "The Diary of Anne Frank"...? August 9, 2006 Ann Tares (new york city) 59 out of 64 found this review helpful
This book, "Enemy Combatant," draws its power from simple, straight forward descriptions of what it was like for an innocent man to be arrested in the night as a suspected terrorist in Pakistan, torn from wife and children, and then spend the next years of his life in US prisons at Bagram, Kandahar and Guantanamo. No preaching or polemics. The author, UK citizen Moazzam Begg, even has compassion and forgiveness for the frightened young military police, soldiers and a few of the interrogators. Even for people who brutalized him physically and psychologically. In 2002 or 2003, I heard the author's father, a British banker and other parents of Gitmo detainees, speak at an event sponsored by the Center for Constitutional Rights at Cooper Union in New York City. When I heard these parents speak, I and many others assumed all prisoners in Guantanamo, Cuba were probably terrorists. The Center held the event to increase our awareness that it was only humane for the prisoners to know the charges against them, contact their families, and get a (fair) trial even if military. I had worked daily on the 101-105th floors of World Trade One until March 01 and know hundreds of the dead, could have been with them, so I took terrorism threats very seriously. But I went to hear the parents of detainees speak because I believe Americans can protect ourselves from terror attacks without, in the process, destroying the Bill of Rights and our nation's commitment to fair treatment of every individual. When the author's father told us why his son Moazzam had gone from the UK with his wife and children before 9-11 to work with a girls' school and a water project, I remember thinking, "This may be the lie of a terrorist's father or his naievete about his son, but it certainly sounds truthful." In the book, I have met many of those "enemy combatants" in Gitmo, many of whom even the US now says were not trying to attack Americans or the US. In the book, I met men who were arrested because they had been in Afghanistan training camps before 9-11 to fight the Russians... Men who were sold to Americans looking for terrorists... Or who went to Afghanistan before 9-11 to help impoverished people and got scooped up like the author who had gone to set up schools for girls, water projects and other charity services as part of Muslim charity similar to Christian missionary work... Or heard about the collateral damage - deaths of civilians after American started bombing the Taliban in Afghanistan in retaliation for 9/11 and went to help protect the Afghani people caught in the bombings. Much as Lebanese and Israelis are leaving the US to help their countrymen now. Throughout the book, Moazzam Begg, with the help of former Guardian editor Victoria Brittain, invites us to become a part of his childhood in England, his family in Pakistan, Kashmir and India, and then his life as a prisoner without any legal protection from guards who were terrified that he had funded the 9/11 attacks and would kill Americans if left unguarded for a second. Through his book, he introduces us to the prisoners and guards he met throughout his years of shackled terror when he thought he would never see his beloved wife, children, father and friends again. I usually skim a book but I've been riveted to each page of this one. Ann Tares
Required Reading--Shames Our President as Unfit September 15, 2006 Robert D. Steele (Oakton, VA United States) 59 out of 68 found this review helpful
Neither the publisher nor Amazon have done well at posting useful details that would encourage the purchase of this book, so here are two right up front: 1) David Ignatius, the world-renowned editor formerly with the Washington Post and now with the International Herald Tribune, is the author of the Foreword. This alone is compelling reason to buy the book, for this author and this story not only pass the Ignatius smell test, Ignatious rings the bell on how this book documents the shameful misconduct resulting from a Presidential violation of all the tenets of both international treaties and moral democracy. 2) The table of contents is as follows: 1) Illegally detained, 2) The Lynx; 3) Underdogs; 4) Mercy Mission; 5) Spooks; 6) 'English 558' (Prisoner of War Number); 7) The Hardest Test; 8) Devil's Agents; 9) A Solitary Echo; 10) Trial of Strength; 11) The Teasing Illusion; 12) Chime of the Razor Wire; 13) Mockery of Justice; and 14) Do You Know Who I Am? The book does not have an index which I believe to be an error that should be corrected in future editions. While this is a book of reflections, there are enough legal, military, torture, and other matters to merit indexing and ease of access to references via an index. I put the book down after an intense morning with it with the following reflections: 1) I am ashamed that the American Congress and the American public has stood idly by as the White House has ursurped the power to make law and interpret law, while sinking to the lowest moral point in our recent history. 2) The author is quite balanced and most extraordinary in his personal telling of this history. I hope he files a wrongful imprisonment lawsuit against the government of the United States of America. As Senators Warner and McCain refuse to support the White House's idiotic and immoral attempts to justify torture, every American should be conscious that there is a price to pay for allowing our government to commit war crimes, and there is also a great strategic value to be gained by restoring "America the Good." This book should be translated into many languages, and will stand in history as a simple individual condemnation of the very worst abuses of power--while we have not gassed the millions that Hilter did, we have negligently killed hundreds of thousands, murdered hundreds and aided in the murder of thousands more--this is serious sick mis-behavior. 3) The author is to be admired for recollecting the goodness of those who ingored the illegal and immoral orders, and treated him humanely. Marines are taught to think for themselves and to disobey illegal orders, I am only sorry that our military is on rigid auto-pilot and lacking an understanding of the strategic value on inherent morality at every level of operations. 4) Lastly, this book confirms my worst fears about what happens when you give FBI and CIA personnel too much money and too much power without first giving them the education and experience they need to be balanced in the field. This book documents, at every turn, the incompetence of our whole system, while also documenting how torture causes prisoners to make things up just to stop it--and in turn wastes precious time and resources in following false leads. There are many other books I have reviewed that could be helpful to Americans in search of wisdom and rehabilitation in relation to Islam, such as "Good Muslim, Bad Muslim," but I have to say, if there were one book that I would want to force on every good-hearted person in America who needs to understand just how badly broken the federal government is, how counter-productive this "war on terror is" (terror is a tactic, not an enemy, and the fear the White House seeks to inspire is a lie, not a solution), this is that book. Although the author has not suffered the many years of prison that Nelson Mandela did, or Martin Luther King, I believe that in this book the author has earned a very special place in the literature of moral freedom. I recommend Cornel West's "DEMOCRACY MATTERS: Winning the Fight Against Terrorism," itself a Nobel-level work, and going back in time, B. F. Skinner's "Beyond Freedom and Dignity." Indeed, throw in George Will's "Statecraft as Soulcraft," to make my final point: this White House, and the extremist Republican Party, aided by the inept and timid Democrats, Senator Byrd not-with-standing, has substituted ideological hypocrisy and high crimes and misdemeanors for legitimate governance. This book is George Bush's report card--he not only earns an F, he earns a one way ticket to juvenile detention. He has no business pretending to be an adult, and he must still be held accountable for stealing the 2000 and 2004 elections (see my reviews of three books on the substance of impeachment).
Journey of a Torture Survivor November 25, 2006 paul ferris (Waterville, Maine United States) 12 out of 16 found this review helpful
Moazzam Begg has given us a rare testimony of the experience of a survivor of torture in his book, Enemy Combatant, My Imprisonment at Guantanamo, Bagram, and Kandahar. Moazzam starts his story as a child who lost his mother at the age of six. He relates his early education as a Muslim in a Jewish school, his troubled teen years as a member of the Lynx gang. Moazzam is a second generation Pakistani who is born in and grows up as a British citizen. By the time he marries Zaynab and fathers his first two children we are familiar enough with Moazzam that we know him as a fascinating human being in search of an identity. After Moazzam marries he makes a critical decision to live his life as a devout Muslim with a special commitment to practice charity and social justice. This fateful decision leads him to travel to Pakistan, Turkey, and finally to settle in Kabul Afghanistan where he can assist the poorest of the poor. When the United States, in response to 9/11, attacks the Taliban and Al Qaeda, Moazzam and his family, caught in the crossfire, flee to Pakistan. Moazzam's travel and work for the poor brings him under suspicion of the British M15. Soon thereafter he is awakened in the middle of the night and carried off to Bagram, Kandahar and finally to Guantanamo where his harrowing three year experience as a prisoner of US forces begins. Moazzam is branded a terrorist. In fact, Moazzam is considered such a threat to security he is placed in solitary confinement, continually watched by an American soldier for twenty-three long months. He is only taken out of his cage to endure over three hundred interrogations. His interrogation runs the whole gamut of physical and psychological abuse including threats to his family. In the treatment of Moazzam the reader can understand the consequences of the suspension of the Geneva conventions, the denial of the writ of habeas corpus, the endless time it takes for the prisoner to get effective legal representation. Moazzam's life becomes the focal point of the dramatic battle in the courts, the Congress, and the Bush-Blair administrations, human rights organizations, as well as ordinary citizens, concerning the proper (hopefully legal and just) means to "wage the war on terror." Moazzam spends most of his time in Guantanamo in a section of the prison called, ironically, Camp Echo. From Camp Echo, comes a sound that is surely not intended by Moazzam's captors. It is the sound of a beautiful, innocent human being, who with the strength given to him by indomitable character and reliance on his Muslim faith, turns the table on the guards and the prison system. Without minimizing the awful pain, fear and isolation he undergoes, the reader finds Moazzam Begg retains his dignity, defends himself, and in the process, even uplifts the American soldiers who guard him. Some even come to respect him, seek his advice, and even see themselves less free than he. Without any lessening of Moazzam's desire to return home to his loved ones, we see he will not be reduced to an animal in captivity, no matter how brutal the treatment as a defenseless human being deprived of all liberty he endured. After a serpentine legal process and a media campaign carried on by his family in Britain, Moazzam's ordeal abruptly comes to an end. He is brought into a room and told by an army Major, `Mr. Begg, I am here to inform you that the United States military has decided to hand you over to the British authorities, and any charges that we had pending have been dropped.' The man whom President Bush claimed was the `worst of the worst, and who according to reports leaked to Newsweak claimed that he designed and was planning to fly unmanned drones loaded with anthrax in the Houses of Parliament' was to become a free man. He returns to England and is at last united with his family whom he feels has suffered as much if not in some ways more than he. His ordeal as a torture survivor has begun a new phase. He is questioned by M15 when trains are bombed in Britain. His adjustment to 'normal' life is difficult. He has continual flashbacks and sleepless nights. Mr. Begg meets with human rights groups and thanks them for the support he received in prison. He joins with Vicoria Brittain, a journalist and former associate editor of the Guardian in London to write his book. I was able to read this book on an airplane journey that took all day from Maryland to New Orleans. During the trip I became so engrossed in Enemy Combatant it would be no exaggeration to say that Moazzam's journey and mine became as one.
American Gulag? November 19, 2006 Stratiotes Doxha Theon (Richmond, Missouri) 11 out of 13 found this review helpful
In my younger days I was enthralled with books by prisoners of the Soviet Gulag. Little could one imagine that one day there might be an American variation on that theme. It has been said that September 11th changed everything, it did indeed. One of the most amazing things about this gripping story is that the author does not harbor a grudge against Americans in general - amazing that he did not become what he was suspected of being. This is the source of how terrorism will grow, unjust and heavy handed treatment only breeds more of what it attempts to stop by coercion. This story is uplifting in the human spirit overcoming the horrors of unjust treatment while exposing the lies of those who wish to gloss it over. It is not republican or democrat in its spin, its a look at how fear has led us to injustice. "Anyone who has proclaimed violence his method, inexorably must choose lying as his principle" -Alexander Solzenitzen
Guantanamo brought forth November 15, 2006 Amadeus Leander (The Closet) 9 out of 10 found this review helpful
This book should be required reading for every single American. Moazzam shows us how American policies-policies most people don't even bother learning about-severely affect others. Moazzam, through this book, turns on a very bright light in the darkened closet of American apathy and makes it impossible for us to shut it off once we finish the book.
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