Blood and Rage_ A Cultural History of Terrorism - Michael Burleigh [363]
37 David Pratt, Intifada. The Long Day of Rage (Glasgow 2006) p. 51
38 As well as numerous obituaries of the sheikh, see Matthew Levitt, Hamas. Politics, Charity, and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad (New Haven 2006) pp. 34-7
39 Zaki Chehab, Inside Hamas. The Untold Story of Militants, Martyrs and Spies (London 2007) p. 23 and Shaul Mishal and Avraham Sela, The Palestinian Hamas. Vision, Violence, and Coexistence (New York 2006)
40 ‘Hamas Covenant 1988’ in the Avalon Project edition available at www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/mideast/ hamas.htm pp. 1-25 and as an appendix in Mishal and Sela, The Palestinian Hamas pp. 175-99
41 Samuel M. Katz, The Hunt for the Engineer. How Israeli Agents Tracked the Master Bomber (Guilford, Connecticut 2002) is a brilliant account of Ayyash’s career
42 Pratt, Intifada pp. 108ff is vivid
43 See especially Ami Pedahzur, Suicide Terrorism (Cambridge 2005) pp. 134ff. and the less interesting Robert A. Pape, Dying to Win. Why Suicide Terrorists Do It (London 2006) and Diego Gambetta (ed.), Making Sense of Suicide Missions (Oxford 2005)
44 Anat Berko and Edna Erez, ‘“Ordinary People” and “Death Work”: Palestinian Suicide Bombers as Victimizers and Victims’ Violence and Victims (2006) 20, pp. 603-23
45 Ed Husain, The Islamist (London 2007) pp. 74-81
46 Noel Malcolm, Bosnia. A Short History (London 1994) pp. 220-22 is characteristically humane and intelligent
47 Lorenzo Vidonio, Al Qaeda in Europe. The New Battleground of International Jihad (Amherst, New York 2006) pp. 215-31
48 Evan Kohlmann, Al-Qaeda’s Jihad in Europe. The Afghan-Bosnian Network (Oxford 2004) pp. 85-6
49 ‘The 1995 and 1998 Renditions’ Human Rights Watch at http://dR//hrw.org/ reports/2005/egypt0505h5.htm
50 Kepel, Jihad pp. 251-3
51 Paul Murphy, The Wolves of Islam. Russia and the Faces of Chechen Terror (Washington DC 2006) pp. 20-24
52 Andrew Higgins and Alan Cullison, ‘Saga of Dr Zawahiri Sheds Light on the Roots of Al Qaeda Terror’ Wall Street Journal 3 July 2002
53 Evan Kohlmann, ‘Two Decades of Jihad in Algeria: The GIA, the GSPC, and Al-Qaida’ www.nefafoundation.org (2007) pp. 1-28. Mohammed Samraoui, Chronique des années de sang (Paris 2003) should be used with caution as it has been the object of libel actions in French courts. See especially Martin Evans and John Phillips, Algeria. Anger of the Dispossessed (New Haven 2007) pp. 235ff.
54 Stora, Algeria 1830 -2000 pp. 213ff. is good on politics in the 1990s
55 For the first point see Mark Allen, Arabs (London 2006) p. 30
56 Habeck, Knowing the Enemy pp. 83ff.
57 Simon Reeve, The New Jackals. Ramzi Yousef, Osama bin Laden and the Future of Terrorism (London 1999) pp. 125-32 is a persuasive account of Yousef’s mind
58 Richard A. Clarke, Against All Enemies. Inside America’s War on Terror (New York 2004) pp. 140-47
59 Burke, Al-Qaeda p. 127
60 See mainly Ahmed Rashid, Taliban. The Story of the Afghan Warlords (London 2001) pp. 72-5
61 See Alan Cullison, ‘Inside Al-Qaeda’s Hard Drive’ Atlantic Monthly (September 2004) pp. 1-16. Cullison’s brilliant reporting from Afghanistan for the Wall Street Journal includes details from abandoned Al Qaeda computers he purchased in Kabul
62 Daniel Byman, Deadly Connections. States that Sponsor Terrorism (Cambridge 2005) pp. 205-9
63 McDermott, Perfect Soldiers Appendix C p. 264 for most of this text
64 Baradan Kuppusamy, ‘Hambali: The Driven Man’ Asia Times 19 August 2003
65 Lucien Vandenbroucke, ‘Eyewitness to Terror: Nairobi’s Day of Infamy’ and Patience Bushnell, ‘After Nairobi: Recovering from Terror’ American Foreign Service Bulletin (2000) June, July issues
66 Michael Griffin, Reaping the Whirlwind. Afghanistan, Al Qaeda and the Holy War (Sterling, Virginia 2003) p. 174
67 Jean-Charles Brisard and Damien Martinez, Zarqawi. The New Face of Al-Qaeda (Cambridge 2005) is essential on Zarqawi as it is based on extensive Jordanian documentation
68 Vidino, Al Qaeda in Europe pp. 147ff.