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88 Days to Kandahar

A CIA Diary

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The "first" Afghan War, the CIA's war in response to 9/11,was approved by President Bush and directed by the author, Robert Grenier, theCIA station chief in Islamabad. Forging separate alliances with warlords,Taliban dissidents, and Pakistani intelligence, Grenier defeated the Talibanand put Hamid Karzai in power in eighty-eight days. Later, as head of CIAcounterterrorism, he watches as bureaucratic dysfunction in the CIA, Pentagon,and the White House lead to failure in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In his gripping narrative we meet General Tommy Franks, whobridles at CIA control of "his" war; General "Jafar Amin," a gruff Pakistaniintelligence officer who saves Grenier from committing career suicide; MaleehaLodhi, Pakistan's brilliant ambassador to the US, who tries to warn hergovernment of the al-Qaeda threat; "Mark," the CIA operator who guides GulAgha Shirzai to bloody victory over the Taliban; General Kayani, a cautious manwho will become the most powerful man in Pakistan, struggling with Grenier'sdemands while trying to protect his country; and Hamid Karzai, the puzzlinganti-Taliban insurgent, a man of courage, petulance, and vacillating moods.

Grenier's enemies out in front prove only slightly morelethal than the ones behind his own lines. This first war is won despiteWashington bureaucrats who divert resources, deny military support, and try toundermine the only Afghan allies capable of winning.

Later, as Grenier directed the CIA's role in the Iraq War,he watched the initial victory squandered. His last command was of CIA'sCounterterrorism Center, as Bush-era terrorism policies were beingrepudiated, as the Taliban reemerged in Afghanistan, and as Pakistan descendedinto fratricidal violence.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 22, 2014
      Grenier, former director of CIA’s counterterrorism center and station chief in Islamabad, offers unparalleled insight into the American campaign in Afghanistan with a frank, even-handed assessment of the initial military effort to topple the Taliban. Casting himself as an intrepid defender of his agents, he expounds at length on the strategic concerns, bureaucratic squabbles, and conditions on the ground that shaped the conflict. Pakistan in particular comes out looking better than it does in most accounts. Grenier contends that Pakistani intelligence services were fully and capably committed to the fight against al-Qaeda, and that the rise of extremism in Pakistan since 9/11 has more to do with shortsighted American policy and Indian meddling than with official Pakistani complicity with terrorists. One question never addressed is how bin Laden could have survived for so long within a mile from the Pakistani Military Academy in Abbottabad: Grenier merely says, “Once safely in Pakistan, given even a modicum of support, he could have gone virtually anywhere undetected.” Grenier does refer to himself in the third person, but by and large his tone is affable, and his conclusions—many of which run counter to conventional wisdom—are logical and amply demonstrated. Agent: David McCormick, McCormick & Williams.

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