Charlie Wilson's War - George Crile

Author: DeanoPublished: Jan 11, 2004 at 6:47 pm 2 comments

"When you're wounded and left on Afghanistan's plains,
And the women come out to cut up what remains,
Jest roll to your rifle and blow out your brains
An' go to your Gawd like a soldier."
- Rudyard Kipling, 'The Young British Soldier'

When you study history in school, everything seems very structured and comprehensive, very coherent when viewed through the lense of economics and cause-and-effect. History is all about treaties and laws, trade, economic theory, statesmen and the hard realism of power....but then, time and time again, as you flip through the pages of history, they come at you - rollicking out of the mist with some grand wild-eyed vision, a chaotic elemental force that just seems to skew everything sideways...and at the end of the day you are left surveying an empire in ruins, millions of people freed from oppression and a blowback that is today, still only barely understood or acknowledged.

At the end of the day, Zia ul Haq's observation "Charlie did it." rings utterly true.

Charlie Wilson was a womanizing, alcoholic wastrel, an East Texas congressman best known for his booming voice, drinking, congressional junkets and proclivity for showgirls and Playboy bunnies. He was also the hinge and the catalyst for the largest covert operation in history - the war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

Charlie Wilson's War is, quite frankly, an extraordinary piece of work. George Crile, a producer for the television news show 60 Minutes, has put together a vivid and fascinating book that tellingly examines how a U.S. congressman essentially hijacked U.S. foreign policy into supporting the Afghan mudjahideen to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars.

This quixotic politician became obsessed with the plight of Afghanistan, the Afghan people,and with taking the fight to the Soviets directly. This passionate ambition (or obsession depending on your perspective) brought Wilson into play initially as the primary critic of the CIA's early efforts in Afghanistan, and through his political machinations, almost single-handedly pushed the CIA into a far more active covert role than they had planned. The operation evolved into one of the most critical centerpieces of the Cold War and a major contributing factor in the collapse of the USSR.

Crile's ability to draw vivid and motivated portrayals of the many people working with Charlie Wilson is one of the defining characteristics of this compulsively readable book. Charlie Wilson was aided in is endeavors by an unlikely and diverse cast of characters including Gust Avrokotos, a street-smart, "working-class" CIA agent of Greek-American descent, adrift in a sea of bureaucratic Ivy League "cake-eaters"; code-breakers, eccentric politicians trading favors and committee funding votes, suicidal mujahidden, Israeli weapons dealers, the President of Pakistan Zia ul Haq (who seemed to find a kindred spirit in Charlie Wilson), a Dallas housewife turned belly-dancer and an ex-Green Beret who helped turn the muj into an effective and deadly army of peasant techno-guerillas. Maybe too effective...

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Article Author: Deano

Writer. I don't really think anything else could possibly describe it....it's one heck of a loaded word.

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  • 1 - Chinaboy

    Mar 18, 2004 at 10:54 am

    Good article, I am fan into China art stuff

  • 2 - Terry Parkhurst

    Apr 25, 2006 at 2:15 am

    This is perhaps the best work of non-fiction, or certainly one of the best, in the past 10 years. It reads almost like a novel. Charlie Wilson is a character so grandiose and yet plebian at the same moment, he is almost unbelievable.
    This book also gives amazing insight into why September 11, 2001 happened. While we can't blame that day of 21st Century infamy on former Congressman Wilson, the Afghan war is where Osama bin Laden got his start as a soldier; and where a man whose name escapes me, once prided by the CIA as one of their most effective trainees, turned into one of the most wanted criminals for the United States forces, after September 11. In one of the final chapters, it states that on that day, Charlie Wilson simply thought straightaway, "They did it (to us)." This book is one every American should read, no matter how long it might take them. Buy this book, turn off the television and read it. It is about 600 pages and will likely take more than one setting; but it is time well spent.

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