Buda's Wagon: A Brief History of the Car Bomb
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Average customer review:Product Description
In this brilliant and disturbing history, Mike Davis traces the car bomb's worldwide use and development, in the process exposing the role of state intelligence agencies - particularly those of the United States, Israel, India, and Pakistan - in globalizing urban terrorist techniques. Davis argues that it is the incessant impact of car bombs, rather than the more apocalyptic threats of nuclear or bio-terrorism, that is changing cities and urban lifestyle, as privileged centres of power increasingly surround themselves with "rings of steel" against a weapon that nevertheless seems impossible to defeat.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #106708 in Books
- Published on: 2008-09-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 228 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Mike Davis, long-time chronicler of apocalyptic terror has done it again: he has made me frightened... The brilliance and power of Davis' story is undeniable." Joanna Bourke, The Times "Cold-eyed diagnostic intelligence." Evening Standard "A brilliantly terse book." Guardian "Davis's story gains in detail, effectiveness and horror as it proceeds." Independent "A catalogue of horrors." Financial Times "Compelling history of the 'poor man's air force'" Scotland on Sunday "Davis has produced a captivating work." Metro "A serious, disturbing and pessimistic book that resonates with wide-spread contemporary terrors... An excellent analysis of the arrogant miscalculations, cruelties and sometimes wanton stupidity of various governing elites." TLS "Brilliant... Buda's Wagon escorts us with a savage sarcasm from the first-known instance of the art... to present-day Gaza and Iraq, where most people reside outside the Green Zone." Harper's "Riveting... a whirlwind survey of the car bomb's historical hot spots." Time Out New York"
About the Author
MacArthur Fellow MIKE DAVIS lives in San Diego. He is the author of Planet of Slums, Prisoners of the American Dream, City of Quartz, Ecology of Fear, Magical Urbanism, Late Victorian Holocausts, Dead Cities, and The Monster at Our Door: The Global Threat of Avian Flu.
Customer Reviews
The poor man's airforce
Buda's Wagon - A Brief History of the Car Bomb by Mike Davis, Verso
MacArthur fellow Mike Davis has written an absorbing book about the development of what has been called 'the poor man's air force'. Starting with anarchist Mario Buda's horse and cart bombing of J.P. Morgan's building in Wall Street in 1920, Davis leads the reader through the development of increasingly powerful and sophisticated weapons until we get to the use of car bombs in Baghdad today.
But the author is not just interested in the technical time-line of car bombs, he also looks at the sociology of car bombs, in particular the way in which car bombs have been increasing used to inflict deliberate civilian casualties, rather than to target specific 'enemy' infrastructure. Davis also charts the rise in suicide car bombings and sets the whole story in a political framework which some people will find uncomfortable.
Just one caveat. Don't take this book to read on a plane. Government security personal are notorious for their inability to understand that people might want to study activities of which they disapprove in order to understand motivation!
Recommended.
"The poor man's air force"
In Buda's Wagon: A brief history of the car bomb, Mike Davis recounts the background of what he calls the "workhorses of urban terrorism".
Often the product of fringe militancy or "clandestine state terrorism", Davis shows that the car bomb has a limitless capacity to create and sustain fear.
This is, he argues, largely because of its low cost and technological accessibility.
He writes, "Vehicle bombs are stealth weapons of surprising power and destructive efficiency."
However, as Davis puts it, "Like even the `smartest' of aerial bombs, car bombs are inherently indiscriminate. `Collateral damage' is virtually inevitable.
"If the logic of an attack is to slaughter innocents and sow panic in the widest circle, to operate a `strategy of tension', or just demoralise a society, car bombs are ideal.
"But they are equally effective at destroying the moral credibility of a cause and alienating its mass base of support, as both the IRA and the ETA in Spain have independently discovered."
Davis steers away from romanticism, keeping tight focus on the indiscriminate violence inflicted upon innocents.
Packed with horrific details, the book goes beyond the statistics to portray the human and moral costs of this gruesome political lever.
He exposes the role of state intelligence agencies - particularly those of the US, Israel, India, and Pakistan - in globalising urban terrorist techniques.
He points out, "Anonymity, in addition, greatly recommends car bombs to those who like to disguise their handiwork, including the CIA, the Israeli Mossad, the Syrian GSD, the Iranian Pasdaran, and the Pakistani ISI - all of whom have caused unspeakable carnage with such devices."
The Zionist Stern Gang brought the car bomb to the Middle East. In the 1950s the CIA brought it to Vietnam.
It was brought to Algeria by far-right French ex army officers trying to destroy the independence struggle. In each case, the weapon produced blowback when adopted by their enemies.
Davis argues at the end of the book, "Since there is little likelihood of socio-economic reforms or concessions to self determination that might lead to the large scale `decommissioning of minds' the car bomb has a brilliant future.
"Every laser-guided missile falling on an apartment house in southern Beirut or mud-walled compound in Kandahar is a future suicide truck bomb headed for the centre of Tel Aviv or perhaps downtown Los Angeles."
Slightly bitter taste to this
Factually very interesting (some of the stories such as the brief account of an explosion of fertiliser on a boat off the coast of Texas are staggering), but the constant snipes at American foreign policy are tedious. The fact that Pilger credits this book on the back of the book is of no surprise! Still, it doesn't hamper a well constructed book on a under reported subject.



