Powerful and eloquent. The author is an interrogator with extensive experience in both police and military roles, and he thoroughly debunks the rationalizations for torture that made possible the abuses at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib - counterproductive abuses, in that they provided much less useful information than more appropriate methods, and in the terrible damage to America's standing in the world.
However, these legal, appropriate, and moral methods are more difficult to use than the simple thuggery which characterized those abuses of prisoners and the entire approach of that administration to foreign affairs.
This is one of the books I recommend to anyone who is studying the insurgency/counterinsurgency war in Iraq. A fascinating story I stayed up all night to finish reading.
The story and the author's new techniques for interrogation are fascinating and impressive. They find relevance far beyond military or police personal - for that matter, building trust and reciprocity with friends and adversaries would do almost all of us a lot of good. And obviously the title sells the book much better than a review will be able to.
I do have two criticisms that undermined the credibility of the book. They may seem small but they are difficult to ignore both during and after reading.
1) The other annoyingly refers to himself and colleagues as 'gators (short for interrogators) and it makes the whole thing seem ridiculous. I'm sure it's different in person but in the book it is off-putting and obnoxious. Using the actual word would have made no difference whatsoever other than removing a colloquialism most of us are not familiar with.
2) Mark Bowden's foreword is a marketing ploy. Without exaggeration, it is 3 pages but has above the title billing on the book. Worse, Bowden says little and in no way provides context for the book. Anyone picking the book up for that reason will be disappointed.
Those two points of contention aside, the book is good. Unfortunately for the reader they are difficult to ignore and that prevents How to Break a Terrorist from being excellent.
The book gives an admirably succint account of new interrogation techniques development in 2006 Iraq. Drawing a line between the old Guantanamo-style physical coercion and the new ways of non-violent approaches to getting intel, the divide is seen in the polarised interrogator crew. The office politics are a backdrop to this fast-paced story, and you find yourself pulled into the daily routine of a ‘gator squad: strategic briefings, 1:1s with detainees, quick watercooler exhanges of tips, some friendly competition between the ‘gators (and othertimes outright hostility — illustrating the divide between oldschool and the new ways).
What surprised me was a subtle message on what is good leadership: staying in the shadows to score a meaningful team win. It’s not something I expected to find in a military/intelligence book.
I read the book and it is great. It is simply written and a fast read. This book is suspenseful as if reading a murder mystery.
This book details interrogation of prisoners in Iraq during the Shia-Sunni civil war created by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and the interrogators or ‘gators as the author calls them and himself and the old, coercive, controlling and enhanced methods vs newer methods geared towards earning the respect of each prisoner by acting to extract the needed information.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I highly recommended it.
This is, next to the hunt for UBL, one of the greatest interrogation and intelligence stories ever told. The narrative is direct, Easy to read, well-written, and wastes no pages in building up toward the conclusion. In addition, this story is a testament to Matthew Alexander’s approach to interrogations versus the force and control methods.
How to Break a Terrorist is an insightful and entertaining account of the U.S. intelligence operation that was instrumental in the killing of Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, the head of Al-Qaeda in Iraq. This non-fiction book is a fast-paced psychological thriller. In addition to being exciting to read, the book makes a political statement on torture and intelligence gathering. The author presents a viable and arguably more effective alternative to torture to get information out of detainees. Through the well-crafted storyline, the author illustrates these new interrogation techniques of psychology, building rapport, respect (or at least the perception of it), and ultimately, deception.
By and large, I enjoyed the book and have only a couple minor complaints. One, I didn't care for the blacked out sentences. I suppose the intention is to make the reader feel that they are getting a glimpse of the top secret intelligence world. And blacking out sentences makes the account seem more authentic and special. Instead, I felt that it was purposely done, like special effects in a movie, and hence fake. Two, because the book is written as a story (which I appreciate), I wonder about all that is missing. The book recounts the successful interrogations with minimal emphasis on the unsuccessful ones. Hence, attaining the end goal almost seems too easy. Nonetheless, I am forgiving on this point because I understand that recounting all the false leads and dead end interrogations would detract from the storyline and make the book boring.
I definitely recommend this book to everyone, but especially to Americans who have little interest in or knowledge of our conflicts in the Iraq and Afghanistan. Because the book reads like a psychological thriller, it is easy to become engrossed in the story. You don't have to be up to date on current events to enjoy this book. And meanwhile, it will open up your eyes and give you a glimpse of what may be going on in the Middle East.
I really, really hate terrorists. When I was pregnant with Benjamin, my husband's best friend Ben got shot in Afghanistan by terrorists. We named Benjamin after him. My husband was also in Kuwait then, and I was home alone for almost a year and a half, pregnant, then with a baby for what seemed like forever. I got guns and a security system, and I started to have rage filled (I will blame pregnancy hormones) fantasies about someone breaking into my house, assuming I was a helpless pregnant lady (or lady with a baby) with no husband home, who would be an easy target. I'd shoot them in the legs, possibly maiming them before turning them over to authorities, and then go do the talk show circuit. Criminals everywhere would learn that you should not mess with army wives! I also dreamed of killing terrorists, who were constantly trying to kill many of my army wife friend's deployed husbands. Oh, I hated those terrorists so much. I thought, "They think trained American soldiers are scary? They should see this crazy angry pregnant lady with a gun!!"
My ultimate fantasy: a high ranking terrorist comes to Utah and breaks into my home in the middle of the night to steal my TV. I hold his whole group of thugs hostage with my personal home arsenal, proving you should not break into an army wive's house, and becoming a national hero by ending lots of wars and genocides.
How to Break a Terrorist: The U.S. Interrogators Who Used Brains, Not Brutality, to Take Down the Deadliest Man in Iraq is a fascinating must-read for anyone who is interested in the war on terror. I was handed this book by a friend and I assumed it was going to be a typical anti-war screed that demands that terrorists be "understood" and coddled.
There is also little fear of coddling with Alexander. He is repulsed and haunted by the senseless butchery that went on in Iraq and was sickened by those that were willing to kill innocents with suicide bombings. Alexander's techniques only prove that his eyes were strictly on the goal - stop Zarqawi.
Alexander's techniques are hardly "touchy-feely" - in a way they are a form of psychological trickery. He fools his interview targets into giving him the information he wants and then exploits their trust. It is also the type of technique that any regular viewer of TV detective shows see every day.
The methods Alexander espouses only make sense to me, a veteran teacher. It is easier to get cooperation from someone that you can create a sense of rapport with, even if it is only temporary.
Anyway, the book reads like a suspense novel. It is a quick and intense read and absolutely riveting and informative.
This book is a fascinating take on a virtually unknown subject - military intelligence. Matthew Alexander is an interrogator for the US military and this book is the story of how he and his team gathered intelligence from POWs which led to the death of Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, an Islamic fanatic who was trying to instigate a civil war amidst the United States' efforts to bring peace.
The common idea of interrogation is one of waterboarding, dark rooms with the single light bulb focused on the prisoners face as he sits handcuffed to his chair. Alexander expels this theory with an in-depth revelation of new philosophies of intelligence-gathering. No more a process of intimadation and threatening, it has rather become a game of psychology, manipulating emotions until the prisoners trust is gained. The author comes through with accounts of exact conversations and situations.
I highly recommend this to anyone interested in anything military. It is a refreshing and unusual view into the behind-the-scenes work of the United States.
The only problem with this book is the title: It really should be "How to Break a Criminal."
In the wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal (aka, crimes against humanity), defense officials realized they needed actual trained interrogators, not torturers, to get information about the people we call terrorists but the Iraqi government call criminals. This book details, as best possible and with redactions, how that's done. And how it was used to bring down a genuine threat.
The author is a trained criminal investigator and he shows more than you might think about the tension between the "new guys"(interrogators) and the "old school" (the ineffective brutes). I read this for research and have taken copious notes. But it's a little weird carrying it around where I live with that title, so in addition to the paperback, I went and bought the Kindle so I can do my research with less drama.
This book feels like a well-restrained diatribe against torture from a man who interrogates prisoners for a living. It consists of anecdotes about real people, complete with the black bars of government censorship. It would have been a stronger book had the author done research and included background information and corroboratign examples rather than relying soley on his own experience, but I commend him for hiring a skilled ghostwriter.
This was a good, quick and easy read. I really enjoyed how easy the flow of the dialogue and how the conversations went. It grabbed you and holds your interest. I was eager to see the next piece of the puzzle fall into place. It was interesting to see how playing to the emotions of the terrorists gathered more and better intel. I wasn't surprised to see petty politics and internal strife in the military push back on these methods and even take offense that they worked (Lenny). It's amazing to me that we still can't get past personal egos in the military at all levels in order to achieve our goals and objectives.
This is a good read for anyone interested in interrogation or the recent events in the middle east (Iraq war).
Boring. I expected much more. There are probably much better books on the subject. It was a short, quick, easy read, but left me unimpressed. I was also disappointed that the information provided by the terrorists was used to simply hunt and kill other higher-level terrorists instead of using the information to surveil them, try to work up the chain more and potentially expose the whole network. Short-sighted thinking, in my opinion, but what do I know?
Decent if perhaps self-serving book, which makes a good case for the author's main points. However, it's easy to imagine that the author sees himself as perhaps more of a hero fighting against the odds, than would be borne out by a discussion with all those involved.
It is an inside raw look at the takedown of AMZ. I cannot help but think of how cruel it is so many people who were put into situations where they felt as if their only choice was to join Al-Qaeda for survival. It single handily changed the way I have viewed terrorism, although I suspected my views were incomplete and leaning a particular way for some time.
Riveting and Examples of Why Humans should be treated with respect
I couldn’t put this book down. An easy read, it was a good reminder that people should be treated with respect and dignity, no matter how evil they may be.
Passages blacked out by the DoD aside, it’s a fairly transparent look at modern interrogation tactics. The author seemed falsely modest until you learn he was screwed out of a Bronze Star. Probably the motivation for the book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
It is a must read book for all interrogators. It is difficult to imagine, how the author was able to recall so many details, yet the book justifies the title with convincing arguments and ideas. The suggestions given do work well.
Always wondered how interrogations worked and the info they give really interesting and informative thank God for such brave and patriotic men & women we owe you so much
it was a pretty good book! took a couple chapters to get interesting, but then i couldn’t put it down. wish that there was some sort of glossary for all the characters because at certain points it got confusing.
3.75 stars. Definitely a slow start but an impactful book overall. I’ve been interested fin interrogation techniques for a while and this book explains experiences with just that. Worth the read!
A phenomenal read. A gripping step by step.. day by day description of the way team of interrogators got through one the most dreaded terrorist on Iraqi soil.