Skip to Content
The Thistle And The Drone

Price:

1,200.00 ৳


লোককবিতায় বঙ্গবন্ধু ২ খণ্ডে একত্রে
লোককবিতায় বঙ্গবন্ধু ২ খণ্ডে একত্রে
1,500.00 ৳
1,500.00 ৳
Brave New World (Vintage)
Brave New World (Vintage)
1,000.00 ৳
1,000.00 ৳

The Thistle And The Drone

https://pathakshamabesh.com/web/image/product.template/4994/image_1920?unique=a436325

1,200.00 ৳ 1200.0 BDT 1,200.00 ৳

Not Available For Sale


This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

 Delivery Charge (Based on Location & Book Weight)

 Inside Dhaka City: Starts from Tk. 70 (Based on book weight)

 Outside Dhaka (Anywhere in Bangladesh): Starts from Tk. 150 (Weight-wise calculation applies)

 International Delivery: Charges vary by country and book weight — will be informed after order confirmation.

 3 Days Happy ReturnChange of mind is not applicable

 Multiple Payment Methods

Credit/Debit Card, bKash, Rocket, Nagad, and Cash on Delivery also available. 

'A groundbreaking and startling book ... It should be required reading for those working in the media, policy-making and education-and, indeed, for anybody who wishes to understand our tragically polarized world'-Karen Armstrong The United States declared war on terrorism in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. More than ten years later, the results are decidedly mixed. In The Thistle and the Drone, Akbar Ahmed reveals a tremendously important yet largely unrecognized adverse effect of these campaigns: they actually have exacerbated the already-broken relationship between central governments and the tribal societies on their periphery. Drawing on forty case studies, this groundbreaking analysis demonstrates that it is the conflict between the centre and the periphery and the involvement of the United States that has fuelled the war on terror. No one is immune to this violence - neither school children, nor congregations in their houses of worship. Battered by military or drone strikes one day and suicide bombers the next, people on the periphery say, 'Every day is like 9/11 for us.'

Akbar Ahmed

Akbar Ahmed Pakistani-American academic, author, poet, playwright, filmmaker and former diplomat. He currently holds the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies and is Professor of International Relations at the American University in Washington, D.C. A former Pakistani High Commissioner to the UK and Ireland, Ahmed was a member of the Civil Service of Pakistan and served as Political Agent in South Waziristan Agency and Commissioner in Baluchistan. He also served as the Iqbal Fellow (Chair of Pakistan Studies) at the University of Cambridge as well as holding teaching positions at Harvard, Princeton, and the U.S. Naval Academy. An anthropologist and scholar of Islam, he received his PhD from the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. He has been called "the world's leading authority on contemporary Islam" by the BBC.

Title

The Thistle And The Drone

Author

Akbar Ahmed

Publisher

HarperCollins Publishers India Pvt.Limited

Number of Pages

424

Language

English (US)

Category

  • Current Affairs
  • First Published

    JAN 2012

    'A groundbreaking and startling book ... It should be required reading for those working in the media, policy-making and education-and, indeed, for anybody who wishes to understand our tragically polarized world'-Karen Armstrong The United States declared war on terrorism in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. More than ten years later, the results are decidedly mixed. In The Thistle and the Drone, Akbar Ahmed reveals a tremendously important yet largely unrecognized adverse effect of these campaigns: they actually have exacerbated the already-broken relationship between central governments and the tribal societies on their periphery. Drawing on forty case studies, this groundbreaking analysis demonstrates that it is the conflict between the centre and the periphery and the involvement of the United States that has fuelled the war on terror. No one is immune to this violence - neither school children, nor congregations in their houses of worship. Battered by military or drone strikes one day and suicide bombers the next, people on the periphery say, 'Every day is like 9/11 for us.'
    No Specifications