John Kiriakou is a former CIA operative and senior
investigator for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. A target
of the Obama administration's war on whistleblowers, he remains the
only US official to serve time behind bars after revelations of CIA
"enhanced interrogation" practices, despite openly opposing the
torture program. He maintains that his case was about exposing
torture, not leaking information, adding, he "would do it all over
again." He currently resides in Arlington, Virginia, with his
family.
Joseph Hickman spent most of his life in the military, first
as a Marine, then as a soldier in both the Army and the National
Guard. He has deployed on several military operations throughout
the world, sometimes attached to foreign militaries. The recipient
of more than twenty commendations and awards, he was awarded the
Army Achievement Medal and the Army Commendation Medal while he was
stationed with the 629th Military Intelligence Battalion in
Guantanamo Bay. He is currently working as freelance journalist
covering national security issues, and corporate fraud. He is also
an independent researcher, and Senior Research Fellow at Seton Hall
Law School's Center for Policy and Research. His revelations about
the abuse of prisoners at Gitmo resulted in a National Magazine
Awardwinning story in Harper's magazine and a 2015 book, Murder at
Camp Delta. He has also written for Newsweek, TIME, VICE News, and
Al-Jazeera America.
David Talbot is the New York Times bestselling author of
Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years and The Devil's
Chessboard. He is the founder and former editor-in-chief of Salon
and has written for the New Yorker, Rolling Stone, and Time. He
lives in San Francisco.
Praise for The Convenient Terrorist:
"The riveting story of the man in the center of a historic crisis
that cost America her moral authority and her claims to
exceptionalism. A courageous spy's heartbreaking dissection of the
milestone incident that marked devolution of American
idealism."—Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., NY Times bestselling author of
Framed
“Who is Ali Zubaydah? What did he really have do with 9/11? Who did
the Bush regime take so much bureaucratic trouble just to torture
him, and then keep torturing him? And why has he been locked up at
Guantanamo, incommunicado, for over 15 years? Such are the
questions posed by this disturbing book, which should enlighten
anyone who thinks that ‘1984’ did not arrive in the United States
until the Age of Trump.”—Mark Crispin Miller, bestselling author of
Fooled Again and The Bush Dyslexicon
“A fascinating and important history well told.”— Oliver Stone
“The Convenient Terrorist depicts the dark story behind the capture
of Abu Zubaydah and the broader issue of American values sacrificed
in the War on Terror. It is a must-read for anyone trying to
understand our post 911 world and the murky forces at play shaping
it and the lives of us all.”—J. Malcolm Garcia, author of The
Khaarijee: A Chronicle of Friendship and War in Kabul and What Wars
Leave Behind: The Faceless and the Forgotten
“In The Convenient Terrorist, Joseph Hickman and John Kiriakou
provide a fascinating insider's account of the policies that
defined George W. Bush's war-on-terror — as well as a reminder of
their ongoing human toll. For anyone looking to understand this
toll and its complexities, there is no better place to start than
the story of Abu Zubaydah's career, arrest, torture, and 15 years
of confinement without due process.”—Alexander Zaitchik, author of
The Gilded Rage: A Wild Ride Through Donald Trump’s America
“Welcome to the Dark Side of America’s ‘War on Terror.’ Aside from
the fact that it is impossible to fight a war against an abstract
noun like ‘terror,’ just consider this: If you waterboard a person
long enough, they will confess to anything. ‘Enhanced
interrogation’ is nothing more than torture – and America is
supposed to stand for something better than that. The
well-qualified authors of this book do a great job of exposing this
fiasco, an international embarrassment of American foreign
policy.”—David Wayne, NY Times bestselling author of Hit List: An
In-Depth Investigation into the Mysterious Deaths of Witnesses to
the JFK Assassination
“News headlines haven't done justice to the story of Abu Zubaydah.
The Convenient Terrorist makes clear he’s not one of the good guys.
But the authors also show Zubaydah didn’t deserve the torture he’s
suffered at the hands of the American government, and deserves a
fair trial after 15 years in American custody. This book goes
beyond the scattered news reports about Zubaydah, and will help you
better understand the US war on terror.”—Bill Sanderson, author of
Bulletins from Dallas: Reporting the JFK Assassination
“After you read this book, you will never look at Homeland the same
way again.” —Gregg Stebben, author of White House Confidential
“The Convenient Terrorist is a unique, compelling, first-hand
account by Joseph Hickman and John Kiriakou who lived the life of
Abu Zubaydah to the hilt. Fortified by tenacious research and
intimate involvement in black side of this case, no other authors
could come close to telling this roller coaster ride through
America’s War on Terror and the major role Abu Zubaydah has played
in this war. This book pulls no punches and exhibits total courage.
The “water boarding” section reminded me of what I have come to
hate in a lifetime in the criminal law: confession by torture. Not
only is it beyond the boundaries of human decency but, worse yet,
it more likely than not produces a false confession, a serious
danger to those inflicting the torture. Every sentence in The
Convenient Terrorist is packed with corroborated facts than add up
to aiming a spotlight at the War on Terror. It is an essential
read.” —William Martin, editor of The Crime of the Century
“Who is Abu Zubaydah? A monster? A ‘high value detainee’
indefinitely imprisoned in Gitmo without charge? Or collateral
damage in an undeclared but unending war—a human being transformed
into moral dark matter by uncomprehending national leaders and
their unquestioning agents? A former CIA officer and one of
Zubaydah’s original captors, John Kiriakou served thirty months in
federal prison during 2013-2015 essentially for revealing that
Zubaydah was tortured. Together with coauthor Joseph Hickman, he
now reveals all the inconvenient truth behind the captivity of this
‘convenient terrorist.’ It is a story for our time, and I know
three American presidents who will not want you to read it.”—Alan
Axelrod, author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to American History
and Patton on Leadership
“This book describes the horrific, prolonged and illegal torture by
the CIA and the Department of Defense of Abu Zubayadah at
Guantánamo. Coauthor John Kiriakou was imprisoned for blowing the
whistle on this. Bush, Cheney, and their complicit underlings
should have served time instead. They didn't and now Trump wants to
use torture again. Read this book. And stop him.”—Michael Steven
Smith, cohost of Law and Disorder and coauthor of How the CIA
Killed Che
“The Convenient Terrorist will grab you from the very start. It
reads like a spy novel but has the benefit of being all too real.
Told by John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer who blew the whistle on
CIA torture, and by Joseph Hickman who worked in military
intelligence on Guantanamo Bay, it is the story of CIA ineptitude,
cruelty, cover-up, and terrible blowback. It is the tale of a rogue
agency which has compromised our safety and security while in the
process shredding our Constitution and the international laws that
should govern us. This book will make you wonder what this War on
Terror is all about and question the bizarre methods being used to
wage it. This is a book of conscience and courage, and is a
must-read for every American.”—Dan Kovalik, author of The Plot to
Scapegoat Russia
Praise for John Kiriakou and Joseph Hickman's previous work:
"Kiriakou cracks open the CIA’s vault, revealing an unusually human
inside account of what goes on inside. A vivid picture of the
tradeoffs facing America in the post 9/11 world."?Jane Mayer, staff
writer, The New Yorker and author of Dark Money: The Hidden History
of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right and The
Dark Side: How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American
Ideals
“Doing Time Like a Spy is an unusual and outstanding book: part
prison memoir, part CIA tradecraft instruction manual. If you ever
wondered how a seasoned CIA case officer operates, or how he might
use his covert skills to survive an experience as brutal as prison,
this is your book. In fact, it contains so much valuable
information and so many insights the Agency ought to issue it to
new recruits. But of course, its author is John Kiriakou, who blew
the whistle on torture, and if the powers that be were vindictive
enough to imprison him for that, it’s a safe bet they’ll be
spiteful enough to try to keep young recruits from reading him. Go
around the censors?you’ll be glad you did.” ?Barry Eisler, Former
CIA Officer and bestselling author of The God's Eye View.
“The true life story of a US spy on the frontlines of the war on
terror, and what that meant for both his personal and professional
life. Doing Time Like A Spy is a gripping page turner that reads
better than fiction. A great read about the murky world of American
espionage."?Peter Bergen, author of Holy War, Inc. and Inside the
Secret World of Osama bin Laden
"The Obama Administration and the US Government set out to make an
example of John Kiriakou. They succeeded beyond the wildest dreams.
John is a shining example of courage, principal, and the America we
are struggling to preserve. This guy took a bullet for all of us.
We are forever in his debt."?Marc Ash, publisher, Reader Supported
News
"John Kiriakou has done things the hard way, standing up to federal
authority for years. The CIA couldn't silence him when, after
fifteen years as an analyst and operations officer, he said the CIA
was torturing its prisoners, an act of heroism that cost him two
years of his freedom. The Bureau of Prisons couldn't silence him
when, wrongly-confined, he exposed waste, fraud, abuse, and
illegality in the prison system in a series of blogs that put him
under constant threat of solitary confinement. And he did it all
without losing his sense of humor. Doing Time Like a Spy is a must
read."?Daniel Ellsberg, Whistleblower and author of Secrets: A
Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers
"With a touch of humor and more than a bit of irony, Kiriakou sheds
light on the sad reality that his CIA training amply prepared him
to thrive in a US prison. What should outrage the rest of us is
that Kiriakou was in prison at all! In fact, Kiriakou's gentleness
is on full display in this book?which makes his circumstances more
understandable and outrageous at the same time. And it causes me to
ask, "How can we ever call it a 'Justice' system when an act of
conscience that exposes US state crimes is punished and not those
who authorized the crimes?"?Congresswomen Cynthia McKinney
"Sgt. Joe Hickman has written a terrific, riveting, and deeply
disturbing book. I am shocked by what he reveals. Governments have
always tended to suppress embarrassing facts; as the French general
staff explained to investigator Col. Picquart during the Dreyfus
Affair: "What importance is the innocence of one Jew compared to
the reputation of the French Army?" But like Col. Picquart, Sgt.
Hickman is compelled by an inner moral code to pursue truth and
justice, regardless of the cost to himself. Our country badly needs
such men. The truth always matters."—Thomas Wilner, Counsel of
record for Guantanamo detainees before the U.S. Supreme Court in
Rasul v. Bush and in Boumediene v. Bush
“Disturbing account of abuse and secrecy at the Guantanamo Bay
military prison, tied to the deaths of three detainess . . .
[Murder at Camp Delta is] a plainly told, unsettling corrective to
the many jingoistic accounts of post-9/11 military
action.”—Kirkus
“[A] disturbing account of the mysterious deaths of three Arab
prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2006…. [Hickman] makes his case with
compelling clarity and strength of character.”—Publishers
Weekly
“If the Seton Hall report on Camp Delta was a seed, and Horton’s
article for Harper’s a sapling, then Murder at Camp Delta is the
tree in full bloom, its branches reaching into the spooky shadows
of the national security apparatus.”—Newsweek "Compelling... It's
clear from his version of ... that there’s still plenty we don’t
know about Guantanamo, a prison in which horrifying acts were
carried out in the name of every American citizen."—San Francisco
Chronicle
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