Reviews for The revolutionists : The story of the extremists who hijacked the 1970s.

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Terrorism and its long tail. Burke’s expansive history of leftist and Islamist political violence in Europe and the Middle East from the late 1960s to the early 1980s combines journalistic rigor with spy novel–esque skullduggery. TheGuardian reporter divides the period roughly in half. Exploiting technological advances in mainstream media, far-left militants staged dramatic crimes that “hundreds of millions” saw on TV. Within one week in 1970, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked three planes, emptied them of passengers, and destroyed them. As this multinational spasm of primarily secular radicalism exhausted itself in the late ’70s, Islamist fundamentalist violence “flourished.” Among the perpetrators were small cadres and religious regimes targeting purported apostates. When a fundamentalist cleric took over the government in Iran, “entire families were hanged, including teenagers and grandmothers.” The two strains of terrorism sometimes overlapped. Both secular and religious militants trained at Yasser Arafat’s camps in Jordan. Burke excels at limning the varieties of extremism, which reached many illiterate devotees via cassette tapes of speeches by clerics who characterized piety as the “single, obvious solution” to all problems. The durable influence of such ideas was most infamously embodied by Osama bin Laden. “Communism and socialism offered social justice but ignored identity,” Burke writes. “Political Islam, and its violent fringe, offered both.” Unlike earlier secular leftist attacks, which “rarely caused many deaths,” some Islamist terrorists “sought to maximise loss of life.” Along with horrific carnage, there’s plentiful intrigue in these pages. A well-known hijacker gets plastic surgery and commandeers another plane. A terrorist’s death may be attributable to poisoned chocolate. Though some readers may quibble about Burke’s geographical focus, which largely excludes concurrent revolutionary violence in Northern Ireland and Latin America, this is an intelligent and enlightening book. An authoritative epic about era-defining extremism. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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This sweeping account from journalist Burke (The New Threat) charts the emergence of “a new kind of transnational terrorism” in the late 1960s, when loose networks of radicals, including the Baader-Meinhof gang and Carlos the Jackal, committed brazen acts of political violence on an unprecedented scale, from airplane hijackings to kidnappings and bombings. Their numbers were small—Burke recounts attacks in two dozen countries committed by roughly 100 perpetrators, among them “young women and old men... penniless refugees and scions of wealthy families.” Drawing on dozens of interviews, Burke offers sober but humanizing profiles of these revolutionaries and their victims, along the way exploring how this “secular, often left-leaning revolutionary” movement born of anticolonial struggle evolved, by the end of the 1970s, into one dominated by “Islamic extremism.” Across the decade, many of the political gains of decolonizing movements were reversed by the U.S. and its allies in the name of fighting communism, leading many radicals to see leftist politics as a failure and seek answers elsewhere. Meanwhile, right-wing extremist groups committed attacks in Europe and the Americas throughout the ’70s, but “received far less political or media attention” than the “transnational” left. Thus, right-wing extremism, particularly Islamism, bubbled up powerfully but unlooked for, most spectacularly during the 1979 Iranian Revolution, when the success of a rebellion organized by “radical clerics,” rather than left-wing intellectuals, blindsided nearly everyone. Readers will find this a stunning and in-depth look at a tumultuous sea change in the global political order. (Jan.)

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