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238 pages, Hardcover
First published November 3, 2015

This is the story of how a new nation, saddled with war debt and desperate to establish credibility, was challenged by four Muslim powers. Our merchant ships were captured and the crews enslaved. Despite its youth, America would do what established western powers chose not to do: stand up to intimidation and lawlessness.
Tired of Americans being captured and held for ransom, our third president decided to take on the Barbary powers in a war that is barely remembered today, but is one that, in many ways, we are still fighting.
Although he despaired of an easy solution, Adams wasn't ready to stop talking. He could understand the financial concerns, and he was already beginning to realize what O'Brien would later say of the pirates: "Money is their God and Mahomet is their prophet."
According to his holy book, the Qur'an, Abdrahaman explained, "all nations which had not acknowledged the Prophet were sinners, whom it was the right and duty of the faithful to plunder and enslave."
Christian sailors were, plain and simple, fair game.
Jefferson tried to make sense of what he was hearing. He was familiar with the Muslim holy book. He had purchased a copy of the Qur'an during his days of reading law in Williamsburg twenty years before but found its values so foreign that he shelved the volume with books devoted to the mythology of the Greeks and Romans....The man who had written that all people were "endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights" was horrified at Abdrahaman's religious justification.