CheapBooks



Home - News - Help - Search History - Contact     
10am - 5pm EST: (260) 399-6111 (no phone orders)     

  Advanced Search

  DO NOT ENTER EDITION # OR AUTHOR
 Half.com  Amazon

Book Categories






0307408647

The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower
     
  • Edition:
  • Author:
  • Publisher:

  • Product Type:
  • Binding:
  • Pages:
  • Number of Items:

  • Released:
  • Sales Rank:
  • List Price:

  • ISBN-10:
  • EAN:

1
Robert Baer
Crown

Book
Hardcover
288
1

2008-09-30
1133
$25.95

0307408647
9780307408648

Cover



2008-11-05 - Understanding Other Cultures

This is an excellent book. It gives insight as to why certain people that we really don't understand act the way they do.


2008-11-04 - Almost Great

First let me say that I was really excited when I saw that Baer was writing on Iran. I was not dissapointed either. The problem is he seems to be too much in Iran's camp. One outright falsehood is his complete disregard for Al-Sistani: the Iraq shia religious leader, now is he as powerful as Iran? No, but he (according to Iraqis I have talked to while being stationed there) is not just sitting in his house in Najaf waiting to be taken out as Mr. Baer implies: according to my Iraq friends Maliki seeks him out.
Now about the negotiations, I agree we should talk to and even negotiate with Iran, but is it much better that they do terrorism for realist purposes as opposed to the Takfiri way of terrorism for pure chaos sake? And who in there right mind thinks the Shia could hold Saudia Arabia? Why because Hezbollah fought the Israelis? That seems to be his rationale, I know he knows the Shia are less than 20% of the Muslim population. Still I would recommend this book as something new and original to any one interested in foreign affairs.



2008-11-02 - Very Important for America to consider

This guy knows what he is talking about and the books well written. I was fortunate to catch Robert Baer's interview with Terry Gross on NPR's Fresh Air" October 2 episode (available for download/podcast) and was astonished. I consider myself somewhere in the middle or higher than average as far as being informed about what goes on in this world, but found that interview astonishing!. I immediately had to run out and get the book. I've now read all three, and am better informed about what is REALLY going on in this country and the world- to the point of nausea, sometimes. Shame on us, shame on them. Our country's leaders have really let us down over the years. It's not too much to expect our leaders, and the leaders of this world, to act with honesty and integrety- rather than acting out of corrupted self-interest. Thank you, Mr. Baer, for sharing your experiences and insight. It's time for things to change- way past time.


2008-10-29 - Questions for Mr. Baer

I couldn't find any contact information for Mr. Baer so I post my question here. I watched Mr. Baer's interview with Stephen Colbert
( [...] ) He says some strange and wrong things about Iran in this interview, such as Iran was involved in 9/11 and those Al-Qaida members were trained in Iran and USA should have attacked Iran instead of Iraq.
Then I watched his interview with BBC Hard Talk here: [...]
What he says in this more recent interview totally contradicts with what he says in interview with Stephen Colbert, He says that Iran has done nothing to USA and we should negotiate with them and Iran is helping USA in Iraq, etc.
I want to know what is the reason of this substantial change ? Are all CIA agents so ignorant and change their opinions so fast and substantial? If that's the case and CIA operations are based on the intelligence reports that people like Baer provide, then I am really sorry for CIA and USA. I am just wondering what was revealed to Mr. Baer between his interview with Stephen Colbert and the BBC Hard Talk interview that so fundamentally changed his view on Iran?
My email is payams79@yahoo.com in case Mr. Baer wants to reply to this.



2008-10-27 - If you can't beat them, join them...

This book has value as a reference to assist in the understanding of the players involved in the Middle East and how they interact/relate to each other. There is a lot of good information on how many of the players came to reach their current positions of power and how positions of power were lost. And the author is correct in that the West (and the US in particular) doesn't understand Iran and it's internal workings and the core differences between Shia and Sunni factions.

The problem is that the author doesn't seem to be learning from the lessons he presents in his own book. The conclusion he reaches is that we should abandon any Sunni relationship (Pakistan, Saudia Arabia, Oman, etc) we currently have in favor of aligning with Iran and the Shia. Why? Because at the moment, the author believes the Shia are 'winning' and it's best to align with the 'winner' who can consolidate and control the Middle East as our 'partner'.

This whole theory leads to disastrous results because, as the author points out repeatedly in the book, the Iranians have no interest in being subservient to the US (which a paranoid society such as Iran would view any partnership which wasn't completely dominated by the Iranian side) and in general can not be trusted due to the core fundamental belief that deception is just fine as long as its viewed as neccessary to defend Islam.

In the end it all boils down to a call for a complete compitulation to Iran's imperial desires under the guise of 'negotiation'. Negotiation with Iran would be a farse. Anyone engaging in it would be doing it for feel good political points, which in the end would lead the death of hundreds of thouands of people in countries we currently call our allies and ultimately to the deaths of US citizens once Iran consolidates it's power in the Middle East.



Other Search Links for ISBN-10 0307408647








Navigation


Search
 Bestsellers
 Bulk ISBN
 Buybacks   <<<<<

Help
 Contact Information
 Online Help
 Search History
 Feedback

Video Reviews (Free)
 Author Interviews
 Author Presentations
 Book Commentary
 Book Summaries
 Book Trailers

Video Downloads ($1.99+)
 Biography
 Cooking
 Documentary
 History
 TV Shows (College Age)

Services
 AudioBook Clubs
 Book Clubs
 Coupon Codes
 Educational Links
 Event Gallery
 Facebook Page
 News & Summaries
 Sponsored Links

About Us
 About
 Press Coverage
 Privacy Information
 Trademarks

Gift Certificates
 Amazon
 Borders




Doubleday







Pagerankpagerank checker
Copyright 2008 CheapBooks®. All Rights Reserved. CheapBooks® is a U.S. Registered Trademark.
CheapBooks.com® / CheapBook / "Cheap Books Com" / "Cheap Books Online"