Through first hand accounts from Saddam’s rule to that of the post-Bremer rulers, he traces the turning of the tables from a Sunni- to Shia-led state. Pelham recounts how Shia clerics led the largest protests the region had seen since the Iranian Revolution to topple Paul Bremer, America’s Shah in Iraq. As Washington struggled to back peddle, Pelham reveals how the Ayatollahs’ drive for elections won power for their acolytes to draft the constitution for a utopian Shia state.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY:
Nicolas Pelham has spent 20 years studying, writing and broadcasting in the Middle East and North Africa. He has lived in Damascus, Cairo, Rabat and most recently Baghdad, where he covered the US occupation as a correspondent for The Economist and Financial Times. He nowworks in Jerusalem as a senior analyst for the Brussels-based think-tank,International Crisis Group.
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