Rajiv Chandrasekaran is senior correspondent and associate editor of The Washington Post, where he has worked since 1994. He has been the newspaper's bureau chief in Baghdad, Cairo, and Southeast Asia, and has been covering Afghanistan off and on for a decade. His first book, Imperial Life in the Emerald City, won the Overseas Press Club book award. He lives in Washington, D.C.
Praise for Rajiv Chandrasekaran's Little America:
“Beautifully written. . . . A brilliant and courageous work of
reportage. . . . Rajiv Chandrasekaran has done it again. Like
Imperial Life in the Emerald City, Little America is a . . . deeply
reported account of how a divided United States government and its
dysfunctional bureaucracy have foiled American efforts abroad.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Fascinating and fresh . . . Chandrasekaran is a superb reporter
and graceful writer whose individual vignettes, focused on military
and civilian misfires, are on-target and often mortifying.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Brilliant . . . Only a journalist with Chandrasekaran’s experience
and skill could tell this extraordinarily complicated story with
such clarity.”
—Newsday
“A scalding and in-depth critique of U.S. policy and performance in
Afghanistan.”
—The Star-Ledger
“Chandrasekaran draws vivid sketches of how Karzai and his family
and their allies operate as a gang of looters, frustrating every
attempt to create an honest government that could confront their
Taliban enemy . . . The reader gets a keen sense of the chaos that
reigns among the Americans and their allies.”
—The Washington Post
“A thoughtful guide to President Obama’s ‘good war’ [and] a
devastating indictment of a dysfunctional war machine . . .
Chandrasekaran’s expose is a stark warning to rethink how America
uses its power.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Chandrasekaran’s apt portrayal of the Afghan perspective and
on-the-ground tensions makes the book a must for policy shapers and
voters alike.”
—Mother Jones
“Sharp and subtle . . . Enormously informative . . . Little America
does not disappoint.”
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“A must-read account . . . Little America is the best work yet in
addressing our military-diplomatic campaign in Afghanistan and the
dysfunction that stymies it.”
—Peter J. Munson, Small Wars Journal
“Searing . . . Solid and timely reporting, crackling prose, and
more than a little controversy will make this one of the summer’s
hot reads.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Clearheaded . . . Well-researched and compelling . . .
Chandrasekaran captures the absurdity of a bumbling bureaucracy
attempting to reengineer in its own image a society that is half a
world away . . . A timely, convincing portrait of an occupation in
crisis.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Drawing on interviews with key participants and three years of
first-hand reportage, Chandrasekaran delivers a bracing diagnosis
of the problem.”
—Booklist
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