Books

The Longest War

The Enduring Conflict between America and Al-Qaeda

The Longest War: The Enduring Conflict between America and Al-Qaeda, a New York Times bestseller, it was named by the Guardian and Newsweek as one of the key books about terrorism in the past decade, and won the Washington Institute’s Gold Prize for best book about the Middle East and was named by Amazon, Kirkus and Foreign Policy as one of the best books of 2011. 

New York Times bestseller

Amazon, Kirkus, and Foreign Policy: One of the best books of 2011.

The Guardian and Newsweek: Key book about terrorism of the past decade. 

Washington Institute’s Gold Prize for best book about the Middle East.

“For readers interested in a highly informed, wide-angled, single-volume briefing on the war on terror so far, The Longest War is clearly that essential book.”
— Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

The Longest War is Mr. Bergen‘s magnum opus…. essential reading.”
The Washington Times

“For years, I tried to read every new novel about how 9/11 affected our lives. Some were very thoughtful, but I always came away unsatisfied, feeling that the authors had worked hard but had somehow fallen short. As I read the stunning first section of Peter L. Bergen’s new book on the war between the United States and Al Qaeda, I realized I had been looking in the wrong genre. None of the novels were as effective or moving as “The Longest War,” which is a history of our time. … “The Longest War” is one of the most important accounts on the subject to appear in years. But be warned: You will read it and weep.”
— Thomas E. Ricks, The New York Times Book Review

“His important history of the war on terrorism….The greatest strength of The Longest War is that it provides a detailed history of what has occurred since al-Qaeda first appeared on the terrorist scene. Uniquely, it tells the history from three sides: the Americans involved in prosecuting the war; ordinary Muslims, the vast majority of whom remain unmoved by bin Laden’s siren call; and the many terrorists and sympathizers whom Bergen has sought out in the field or whose voluminous writings he expertly synthesizes. The Longest War is also a very good read.”
Washington Post

“The Longest War is ambitious both in scope and aims…you need to understand al-Qaida, and Bergen, with this detailed, serious, scrupulously fair, perceptive and sometimes startling work has made a significant contribution to us doing exactly that.”
The Guardian

The Longest War is by far the best and most comprehensive book on the conflict so far.”
Sunday Times

“A grippingly important work that belongs on the shelf alongside The Looming Tower and Ghost Wars.”
— –The Daily Beast

“The Longest War is his history of a daunting subject that succeeds where other books have failed. That’s because the author was one of the few people onto al-Qaeda years before the instant experts cropped up. And he is still there watching, long after most of those so-called experts packed it in and moved on.”
The Globe and Mail

“A revelatory, pull-no-punches history of the War on Terror, from before 9/11 to the present day…One of the deepest and most disturbing investigations of one of the defining issues of our era.
— Kirkus, starred review

“Drawing on vast firsthand knowledge of the region and mining a huge stock of primary and secondary material, including his own interviews with combatants, the book’s depth of detail and breadth of insight make it one of the more useful analysis of the ongoing conflict.”
Publishers Weekly, starred review

‘In The Longest War Bergen attempts to provide us with an overarching narrative of the first ten years of the epic struggle that resulted from the 9/11 attacks, and he does an admirable job of it.”
— Christian Caryl, The Washington Monthly

“[a] readable and well-reported appraisal”
The Economist

“”The Longest War” is a useful synopsis of the struggle we’ve come to call the war on terror, and he chronicles it with the keen eye of an experienced journalist and on-the-ground observer. Bergen, who actually has interviewed Bin Laden and is the author of two books on him, gives a particularly good view of Al Qaeda’s operative behavior — it’s much more bureaucratic than you might imagine — as well as a gripping re-creation of what went wrong at Tora Bora, the last opportunity the U.S. had to apprehend or kill Bin Laden.”
LA Times

“Peter Bergen has long since established himself as America’s most authoritative and insightful analyst on Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, and time and again has given the nation an unblinking glimpse into the mind of the enemy. Now, with The Longest War, he has performed perhaps his greatest public service with what is certainly the finest comprehensive history of the war on terror yet written. Weaving together the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the broader anti-terror campaigns of Bush and Obama, he does something nearly impossible. He explains how we got here from 9/11.”
— James Risen, author of State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration

“When the War on Terror is consigned to the history books, one name will dominate as the steady, clear-eyed chronicler of that period. Peter Bergen was among the first to note the rise of al-Qaeda, and he is still on the case. The Longest War is a vital and essential account of the central conflict of our times.”
— Lawrence Wright, author of The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11

“Peter Bergen’s The Longest War is indispensable history. Authoritative and ambitious, it provides a damning account of the fitful fight against Islamic terrorism that every American should read.”
— Jane Mayer, author of The Dark Side: How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals

“Peter Bergen has produced a masterful, definitive assessment of Al-Qaeda and America since September 11 – rich with new details, elevated by careful analysis, and quickened by riveting characters and stories. This is essential reading.”
— Steve Coll, two-time Pulitzer Prize winning author of Ghost Wars and The Bin Ladens

REVIEW

May 15, 2012

Second Review of The Longest War in the NYT

New York Times
May 15, 2012

Review in NYT of The Longest War

New York Times
May 15, 2012

Wash Post review The Longest War

Washington Post
May 15, 2012

Review of Longest War in WSJ

Wall Street Journal
May 15, 2012

The Longest War review in the Economist

The Economist
May 15, 2012

Longest War, Daily Telegraph

Daily telegraph
May 15, 2012

Longest War in Sunday Times (UK)

PB
May 15, 2012

Longest War review/ Guardian Jason Burke

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May 15, 2012

Longest War in Sunday Express

The Guardian UK
May 15, 2012

First review of the Longest War

PB
May 15, 2012

Macleans on The Longest War

Publishers Weekly
May 15, 2012

Washington Times Review of The Longest War

Macleans
May 15, 2012

FP Book Club: Peter Bergen’s The Longest War

The Washington Times
May 15, 2012

Review of Longest War in Washington Monthly

ForeignPolicy.com
May 15, 2012

The Longest War/Toronto Star

PB
May 15, 2012

Daily Beast on The Longest War

Toronto Star
May 15, 2012

Kirkus Review starred for “The Longest War”

PB
May 15, 2012

The Longest War, Amazon review and selected as one of Amazon’s books of the month

Kirkus Review
May 15, 2012

Bruce Riedel review of Longest War

PB
May 15, 2012

Globe and Mail/The Longest War

PB
May 15, 2012

Longest War: Nouvel Observateur

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May 15, 2012

Brooklyn Rail on Longest War

PB
May 15, 2012

Review The Longest War Idaho Statesman

May 15, 2012

Review The Longest War Portland Review

May 15, 2012

Another review The Longest War

SYNOPSIS

TEN YEARS HAVE PASSED since the shocking attacks on the World Trade Center, and after seven years of conflict, the last U.S. combat troops left Iraq—only to move into Afghanistan, where the ten-year-old fight continues: the war on terror rages with no clear end in sight. In The Longest War Peter Bergen offers a comprehensive history of this war and its evolution, from the strategies devised in the wake of the 9/11 attacks to the fighting in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and beyond. Unlike any other book on this subject, here Bergen tells the story of this shifting war’s failures and successes from the perspectives of both the United States and al-Qaeda and its allies. He goes into the homes of al-Qaeda members, rooting into the source of their devotion to terrorist causes, and spends time in the offices of the major players shaping the U.S. strategic efforts in the region. Weaving together internal documents from al-Qaeda and the U.S. offices of counterterrorism, first-person interviews with top-level jihadists and senior Washington officials, along with his own experiences on the ground in the Middle East, Bergen balances the accounts of each side, revealing how al-Qaeda has evolved since 9/11 and the specific ways the U.S. government has responded in the ongoing fight.

Bergen also uncovers the strategic errors committed on both sides—the way that al-Qaeda’s bold attack on the United States on 9/11 actually undermined its objective and caused the collapse of the Taliban and the destruction of the organization’s safe haven in Afghanistan, and how al-Qaeda is actually losing the war of ideas in the Muslim world. The book also shows how the United States undermined its moral position in this war with its actions at Guantбnamo and coercive interrogations—including the extraordinary rendition of Abu Omar, who was kidnapped by the CIA in Milan in 2003 and was tortured for four years in Egyptian prisons; his case represents the first and only time that CIA officials have been charged and convicted of the crime of kidnapping.

In examining other strategic blunders the United States has committed, Bergen offers a scathing critique of the Clinton and Bush administrations’ inability to accurately assess and counter the al-Qaeda threat, Bush’s deeply misguided reasons for invading Iraq—including the story of how the invasion was launched based, in part, on the views of an obscure academic who put forth theories about Iraq’s involvement with al-Qaeda—and the Obama administration’s efforts in Afghanistan.

At a critical moment in world history The Longest War provides the definitive account of the ongoing battle against terror.