If someone knew when and where the next major terrorist attack was to be to take place against America, wouldn't the US intelligence community want to know about it? In Countdown to Terror, US Congressman Curt Weldon, proves that "Ali," an informant with access to the minutes of the most secret Iranian councils does have details about many plots against the US. In fact, he has outright predicted - days, weeks, or months in advance - numerous terrorist plots that were actually carried out our thwarted at the last minute. Still, the CIA, the DIA, the NSA, and the FBI in the US have all repeatedly refused to listen to him, even going as far as to threaten him for his communications with Congressman Weldon. "Ali" now warns of an even greater threat than the 11th of September 2001 - a plot called "The 12th Imam" - which the US intelligence community must act upon, or face catastrophic consequences. Congressman Weldon exposes a deeply dysfunctional culture and perverse political agendas in American intelligence that are endangering American security. He also explains why the recent restructuring of the intelligence agencies will do nothing to fix the country's broken and failing intelligence services.
This is a 50/50 book where half of it has aged well and the other half has not. It is also a 50/50 book in that you really only need to read half of it.
The first part of the book is "reports" from a source named Ali. I eventually skipped over much of this because they were vague and repetitive. Ali pretty much wrote variations of the same thing over and over. Weldon would have been better off using them throughout the book to support points he was trying to make rather than just making them half the book.
The second half of the book, Weldon does bring up many interesting and valid points of how the intelligence community was operating at the time. The mistakes and just out right incompetence was pretty remarkable, but not surprising, to read about.
Weldon does layout a pretty good idea for how the intelligence community should be reformed to get actual usable results. Unfortunately, however, much of the book comes across as him whining about why is no one listening to me.
Countdown to Terror is a compelling book that offers insight into the failures of the United States' intelligence community. The author provides detailed information he received and passed on to the United States intelligence, which they did not act upon. He also provided key information to the president of the United States, who did not act on it. These failures continue to multiply, and each hurts the United States. The author also provides corrective action that can be taken to improve the US intelligence community. I listened to this book on Audible. The narration was good.
An interesting book from an intelligence community point of view. The only problem is that it is 5 years out of date. I worked intelligence in the Air Force and I'm getting pretty tired of people telling me about weapons of mass destruction which only turn out to be a carrot and stick trick. I need actionable intelligence. Does Iran have atomic weapons or not? They were on the "verge" in 2005 and we're still not sure where they are at in 2010. This book was written by an Congressman, for whatever that is worth.