Sale 10% Off Your First Order
The Count of Monte Cristo
$18.00
Louvre
$14.95
Peter Doig
$75.00
The Spirit World
$10.29
Mahatma Gandhi
$15.99
The Twelve Caesars
$24.99
The Secret History
$9.73
The Souls of Black Folk
$19.99
Malleus Maleficarum
$24.95
The Book of Five Rings
$9.99
The Book of Enoch
$10.99
Traverse City State Hospital
$31.99
Stories of the Prophets
$14.95
A Larger Hope?, Volume 1
$58.00
Stories of the Prophets
$25.00
The Polish Saber
$49.99
- Login Account
- 0
- 0
-
0 Your Cart $0.00
The Count of Monte Cristo
$18.00
Louvre
$14.95
Peter Doig
$75.00
The Spirit World
$10.29
Mahatma Gandhi
$15.99
The Twelve Caesars
$24.99
The Secret History
$9.73
The Souls of Black Folk
$19.99
Malleus Maleficarum
$24.95
The Book of Five Rings
$9.99
The Book of Enoch
$10.99
Traverse City State Hospital
$31.99
Stories of the Prophets
$14.95
A Larger Hope?, Volume 1
$58.00
Stories of the Prophets
$25.00
The Polish Saber
$49.99
Sale 10% Off Your First Order
- Home
- History - Books
- Seeds of Terror: How Drugs, Thugs, and Crime Are Reshaping the Afghan War
Description
Seeds of Terror is a groundbreaking triumph of reporting, a book that changed U.S. policy toward the Afghan heroin trade and the fight against terror.
Gretchen Peters exposes the deepening relationship between the Taliban and drug traffickers, and traces decades of America's failure to disrupt the opium production that helps fund extremism. The Taliban earns as much as half a billion dollars annually from drugs and crime, and Peters argues that disrupting this flow of dirty money will be critical to stabilizing Afghanistan. Based on hundreds of interviews with fighters, smugglers, and government officials, Seeds of Terror is the essential story of the narco-terror nexus behind America's widening war in Afghanistan.
About the Author
Gretchen Peters has covered Pakistan and Afghanistan for more than a decade, first for the Associated Press and later for ABC News. A Harvard graduate, Peters was nominated for an Emmy for her coverage of the 2007 assassination of Benazir Bhutto and won the SAJA Journalism Award for a Nightline segment on Pervez Musharraf. She lives in the United States with her husband, the Robert Capa Gold Medal-winning photojournalist John Moore, and their two daughters.
Related Products
Recently viewed products
Shopping cart
close
-
WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?Search
- Home
- Movies & TV
- Music
- Toys & Collectibles
- Video Games
- Books
- Electronics
- About us
- Castle Chronicles
- Contact us
- Login / Register