"The bestselling author of The Secretary tells the gripping story of the real roots of the Sunni-Shia conflict in Middle East in the 1979 Iran Revolution that changed the region forever"--
Kim Ghattas Volgorde van de boeken
Kim Ghattas is een auteur wiens werk zich verdiept in internationale aangelegenheden, met een specifieke focus op het Midden-Oosten. Haar schrijven biedt een scherp inzicht in complexe geopolitieke dynamieken, waarbij de nadruk ligt op de menselijke verhalen die vaak over het hoofd worden gezien in wereldgebeurtenissen. Ghattas levert een indringende analyse die lezers helpt de nuances van wereldpolitiek en internationale conflicten te begrijpen. Haar stijl is toegankelijk en boeiend, wat haar vestigt als een gerespecteerde commentator op het wereldtoneel.


- 2020
- 2013
The Secretary
- 368bladzijden
- 13 uur lezen
Written with the full cooperation of Hillary Clinton and her staff, The Secretary is the first book of its kind: a detailed look at an intensely private woman - arguably the most powerful woman in the world - from an author with both an insider and a global perspective. The Secretary tells the story of Hillary Clinton's tenure as Secretary of State: from the first days of the Obama administration, to the drama of Wikileaks, to the "Arab Spring" uprisings, the killing of Osama bin Laden, and the standoff with Iran. Though Ghattas eyes, we see Clinton under the intense professional spotlight commanded by the world's chief diplomat, but also in the softer lighting of the more personal nuances of foreign relations - cheerfully boarding her plane at 5 AM after no sleep, committing an embarrassing blunder while going off-script at an Israeli press conference, handily working out some limo ride diplomacy between the Turks and the Armenians. Viewed through Ghattas vantage point as a half-Dutch, half-Lebanese citizen who grew up in the crossfire of the Lebanon civil war - and her personal quest to understand America's place in a rapidly changing global landscape - the book offers a close-up of diplomacy at the highest level while seeking to answer pivotal questions about the United States. Is America still the global superpower? If not, who or what will replace it, and what will it mean for America and the world?