Customer Review: "Target Iran" tackles a very relevant,current hot topic. The issue is whether the Administration will continue to pursue regime change as it did in Iraq. Of great interest to me was the report in "New Yorker" magazine by Seymour Hersh that CIA and spec ops personnel have been in Iran for a year.more info
Customer Review: It's an okay book. I had a hard time finishing it, but I did, eventually. I am certain that most of what the book talks about are based on facts, as Ritter was the Chief Inspector for UNSCOM for Iraqi disarmament. I also happen to think that his work is full of self-preservation.
Customer Review: The peace movement doesn't need or want to become militarized. So much of what Ritter suggests is antithetical to the most common beliefs and understandings of the vast majority of the peace movement groups in this country, and around the world. Ritter doesn't understand the connection... more info
Customer Review: Overall this book was OK. It presented the key information in money and banking and the authors often made it entertaining to read. However the one major flaw with the book is the lack of ANY math. I know that some books are marketed for a more mathematical approach and thus contain more advanced... more info
Customer Review: The only defensible war is a war of defense.
- G. K. Chesterton. _Neo-Conned! Again: Hypocrisy, Lawlessness, and the Rape of Iraq_, published in 2007 by Light in the Darkness Publications an imprint of IHS Press, is a sequel to the book _Neo-Conned!_ which condemns the War in Iraq from... more info
Customer Review: This small book contains an interview between William Rivers Pitt and Scott Ritter, a former UNESCO inspector in Iraq. Ritter had an exemplary career in the Marine Corps during the first Gulf War, and later became a UNESCO inspector. He was in charge of finding and destroying Iraq's chemical weapons... more info
Customer Review: Ritter is not afraid to go out on a limb with his opinions. He also has a command of the facts (as he sees them). His writing style is somewhat difficult to wade through. Interesting read if you can muddle through it.