At the Center of the Storm Audiolibro Por George Tenet arte de portada

At the Center of the Storm

My Years at the CIA

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At the Center of the Storm

De: George Tenet
Narrado por: Arthur Morey
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In the whirlwind of accusations and recriminations that has attended the post 9/11 world, one man's vital testimony has been conspicuously absent. Candid and compelling, At the Center of the Storm is George Tenet's memoir of his life at the CIA - a revelatory look at the inner workings of America's top intelligence agency and its dealings with national leaders at home and abroad. With unparalleled knowledge and breadth, Tenet illuminates how the country was prepared, and in some respects was not prepared, to deal with a world full of new and deadly threats.

Beginning with his installation as director of Central Intelligence in 1997, Tenet unfolds the momentous events that led up to 9/11: his declaration of war on Al Qa'ida, his worldwide operational plan to fight terror, his warnings to White House officials, and the plan for a response laid down just six days after the attack. Tenet also reveals the CIA's efforts since 9/11 to hunt down the fugitive members of Al Qa'ida's leadership.

In his gripping narrative of the run-up to the war in Iraq, Tenet provides fresh insights and background, including a privileged account of how the famous "sixteen words" made it into the president's State of the Union speech, the real context of his own now-famous "slam-dunk" comment, and the CIA's views of the rise of an Iraqi insurgency. Finally, as the country digs in for a prolonged war, he gives his thoughts on how we can forge a more secure world.

©2007 George Tenet (P)2007 HarperCollins Publishers
Américas Biografías y Memorias Ciencia Política Crímenes Reales Espionaje Historia y Teoría Inteligencia y Espionaje Libertad y Seguridad Política y Activismo Política y Gobierno Políticos Oriente Medio Irán Guerra Militar
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CYA or not, the perspective of the CIA during this time is a valuable read.

Worth the Time

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I was thoroughly interested in hearing the perspective of this participant in the goings-on before and after 9/11. It's sometimes difficult to find one's own opinion amidst the sound-bites, slants, takes, and, imo, downright lies. Mr. Tenet, as well, has his "slant"; but it's an honest one and can be deciphered without the difficulty of much confusion and muddle. Thank you, Mr. Tenet!

Well Worth the Read

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Strong representation by Dir. Tenant of the facts on multiple issues with a clear and concise background of the buildup to the invasion of Iraq. A must read for anyone who cares about their country.

Excellent

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I looked at this book for a few months before picking it up. I am glad I did. I follow politics pretty closely and was fairly unimpressed with what I saw coming from Tenet and the CIA, but he puts up a pretty good defense of himself in this book while doing something few big names like to do...admit they made a mistake or did something wrong. This book gives great insight and has shifted some of my opinions of the government, though my views on the political administration is still firmly affixed. If you want a political diatribe this book will leave you jilted. If you want a pretty fair assessment this is a good start.

Impressive

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...except from journalists who never met him and neocons looking for a fall guy. He's quick to accept blame for the Iraq WMD scandal and slow, in the extreme, to fall back on the now-commonplace historical consensus that Bush 43's administration was determined to go to war in Iraq within days of 9/11 and almost certainly would've found an excuse even if CIA hadn't vouched for Saddam's ongoing CBW programs. His story is competently told and engaging (though it's obvious from the monotonous fore- and afterwords why Tenet didn't narrate the audiobook himself) and does an important historical service in setting the record straight: the real responsibility for the Iraq debacle lies with men who, unlike Tenet, are happy to point the finger at somebody else.

I never heard anything bad about George Tenet...

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When I buy a book written by the director of the CIA, I, of course want to know their side of what goes on in the CIA. Thank you for not burdening the book with ego and HR problems. I feel from beginning to end it is worth reading a few times. Thank you for all of your work ...there are many people out here listening to what the people in the hot seat have to say.

Must Read

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Any additional comments?

This was a well done and balanced historical review of the intelligence communities processes and information before, after and during the 9/11 attack.

Good reading about 9/11 Intelligence History

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I must admit that I've gone from being disdainful of George Tenet, to being an admirer. This wasn't the book that changed my opinion -that was "The One Percent Doctrine", Ron Suskind - but this book confirms my feelings.
There are no new startling revelations in this book, but it is probably the best insider view we will ever get during a critical time in world history.
Why only 4 stars? The narration and writing style quite match. Making the book slow going at times, and at other times making the authors quips fall very flat

As good an explanation as you'll get

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Where does At the Center of the Storm rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

I love to read memoirs of those who played leading roles in history.

What about Arthur Morey’s performance did you like?

Well spoken, clear and interesting.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

General Pervez Musharraf's coming to Jesus moment when Tenet said, " We stole these nuclear weapon blueprints from AQ Khan, and he stole them from you." WOW, that was gold!

Any additional comments?

It's a perspective that really needed to be told. Mr. Tenet demonstrates clearly what he was faced with and gave some incredible insight that only he could know. However, some aspects were designed with a formal defense in mind...I can't blame him. He took a lot of heat.

In the beginning of the book he mentioned that he would talk openly and fairly about his successes and failures. By the end of the book I was still looking for the "failure" he mention, I was expecting an act of contrition...a coming to Jesus moment about his part in the problem of WMD intelligence. There was none of it. Somehow I feel cheated but I did find the book interesting, well organized, and quickly paced.

Read it, it's a SLAM DUNK!

Really good insight albeit defensive...

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After reading Tim Weiner's excellent "Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA", I was eager to hear the CIA story from an insider's perspective. Unfortunately, Mr. Tenet spends most of the book defending CIA employees' dedication, commitment and patriotism instead of giving close examination to their oft-repeated failure to identify threats to this nation and its people. The CIA's reduction in budget and manpower in the years following the collapse of the Soviet Union was more related to a realization by the nation's leaders that even with huge multi-billion dollar appropriations, it was ineffective and hide-bound. It's not at all clear that even with better funding, CIA would have predicted any better than it did the rise of Islamic terrorism and the 9/11 attack. the Agency was, after all, a huge and secret bureaucracy more interested in protecting its own personnel and in its own survival, than in fulfilling its mission. We can only hope that this is not still so.

Readable, but misses the point

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