maya’s Reviews > Al-Qaeda : The True Story of Radical Islam > Status Update
maya
is on page 72 of 355
Mujihadeen, focussing on the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
The book stresses that the USA did not fund them as much, which I took with a grain of salt. It also explores the interconnection of major events; the peace deal between Israel and Egypt, the Islamic Revolution, the Soviet Invasion, and the occupation of the mosque in Mecca. It describes the implications of these on the Islamic world, and the role of OBL.
— Jun 30, 2026 08:52AM
The book stresses that the USA did not fund them as much, which I took with a grain of salt. It also explores the interconnection of major events; the peace deal between Israel and Egypt, the Islamic Revolution, the Soviet Invasion, and the occupation of the mosque in Mecca. It describes the implications of these on the Islamic world, and the role of OBL.
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maya’s Previous Updates
maya
is on page 56 of 355
This chapter surrounds the background of the Bin Laden family, the thinkers behind Bin Laden's ideology, and his childhood. Islam is proposed as a solution to economic, social, and political problems, much the way capitalism or communism is, and is a unique political ideology inherently. It also somewhat touched upon the effects of colonialism, with most major thinking being reactionary.
— Jun 29, 2026 09:39AM
maya
is on page 41 of 355
This chapter provided context to the religion of Islam, and argues that due to this it is explicitly political. Bin Laden took the element of jihad, assumedly defensive but definitely offensive, for his political goals. There are links to martrydom; action, demonstration of faith, is more important than results. Therefore, suicide becomes a part of terrorism, highlighting that faith will bring them success.
— Jun 27, 2026 08:01AM
maya
is on page 22 of 355
Much to unpack; kinda repetitive. Ultimately, the 'Al Qaeda' didn't call themselves that - it perpetuates an oversimplified assumption that it was an organisation. Its comforting but allows for agendas and propaganda. Instead, Laden attracted militants with a network and there were ideological, political, and tactical differences between them. Many did not follow him because their goals were national, not global.
— May 24, 2026 04:33AM
maya
is starting
I just read the introduction. It is extremely well structured and already challenged some beliefs, like the Al Qaeda not being as meticulously planned. I have been super interested in American involvement in the Arab world after learning about the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan in my Cold War unit. It seeks to examine the roots of and contextualise Al Qaeda. I'm excited to begin reading
— May 21, 2026 08:48AM

