What Is The Theme Of Ghost Wars By Osama Bin Laden

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Steve Coll’s Ghost Wars: Secret History of the Cia, Afghanistan and Bin Laden, From the Soviet Invasion to September 10 ,2001 examines the CIA’s involvement in the Middle East in their quest to ward off Soviet rivals in Afghanistan, who had backed Afghan communist fighters during the late 1970’s. Coll was an investigative journalist who traveled the world interviewing key constituents from intelligence agencies that were involved in the Afghan war. As the book progresses, it delves into the success and failures of CIA covert operations that would have lasting impacts throughout the succeeding years. Osama bin-Laden had all the attributes of a powerful and affecting leader because he was a master at manipulating public administrations. The …show more content…

Osama was a fly in a crowded room. Coll recounts when bin-Laden’s name had popped up on numerous occasions in CIA reports or in conversation between ISI officials, but due to the lack of relevance it had on their mission, he was overlooked and swatted away. As the theory of organization represents a theory X method of governing, POSDCORD, Osama had proven to be a theory Y. He led his men with bravado, but was not authoritarian in his ways. Close confidents regarded him as calming, brilliant, and adept figure, who had a way with his words. He knew how to collaborate with others, forge alliances, and require agents by preaching his values. Osama bin Laden’s journey from country to country has been well-documented. Each stop along bin Laden’s journey he adapted to the local culture and developed a strong network of allies. He, with the help of the Taliban Regime, became a hostile force against non-devotees of Islam, especially The United States. At the end of the 1990s, Americans finally become cognizant of the radical Islamist Taliban that had established their government in Kabul. Recognized only by Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, it granted Osama bin Laden freedom of action and offered him protection from American efforts to capture or kill