In an interview on Al-Qaeda
Interview Extract:
Your next choice is The 9/11 Commission Report, which is the result of months of intensive investigations and inquiries by a specially appointed bipartisan panel, and is viewed by many as one of the most important historical documents of the modern era.
It certainly is, and the remarkable thing about The 9/11 Commission Report is that it is a government report. Normally we journalists pick up government reports with a degree of trepidation because they tend to be thick tomes, not easily digestible, and you have got to mine the report for the things you want to find out. Luckily, this report is diametrically the opposite. It is incredibly thorough and it is incredibly well written. It actually reads like a novel or a thriller, and given that many hands were involved in the writing of it, it has a unity and a style and accessibility that is, I think, probably unique in any government report. I would rank it alongside Lawrence Wright’s account, The Looming Tower. And because it was done by a commission it is infinitely more detailed. As a source resource it is unparalleled.
How did it help you?
If any of your readers want to get hold of it, it is important that they get hold of a copy with the index, because without the index it is hard to navigate your way through it. It is huge. The way that I used it when I was looking at the origins of Al-Qaeda, the names of certain individuals and things like the interrogation of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, was I would simply check in the index. I know that what the report says about individuals and what they did is as accurate an account as you are ever going to get. It was indispensable.
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