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The Trade

Jere Van Dyk

A former hostage in the tribal areas of Pakistan returns to meet his kidnappers and uncover how political kidnappings and ransomings take place in the shadows of the world's most lawless territories.

In 2014 Jere Van Dyk traveled to Afghanistan to try to discover the motives behind a kidnapping that had occurred six years earlier -- his own. He was haunted by questions about why he was taken and why he was released and troubled by the refusal of his friends employer and government employees to offer him a full account of what they knew. An experienced investigative reporter he began a quest to interrogate the accuracy of everything he was told including from the people he trusted most.

In pursuing his kidnappers and the stories of the intermediaries and money men Van Dyk uncovered not just the story of his own abduction but the operation of what he calls the Trade: the business of kidnapping. Operating according to its own shadowy rules the Trade has become a murky form of negotiation between criminal groups corporations families and governments who have no formal lines of communication.

Van Dyk's journey took him from up near the Tribal Areas of Pakistan to the tea shops of Kabul to the Obama White House and revealed evidence of lucrative transactions and rival bandit groups working under the direction of intelligence services. In its course he met the families of many Americans who were or are still kidnapped bargaining chips at the mercy of violent and pitiless extremists who thrive in the world's most lawless spaces.>

  • Classification : Politics & Current Affairs
  • Pub Date : SEP 5, 2017
  • Imprint : Publicaffairs
  • Page Extent : 448
  • Binding : HB
  • ISBN : 9781610394314
  • Price : INR 2,049
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Jere Van Dyk

Jere Van Dyk was born in Washington state and raised in a family of Plymouth Brethren. He first went to Afghanistan in 1973 when he and his younger brother drove an old Volkswagen from Germany to Kabul. He returned in 1981 as a young reporter for the New York Times and lived with the mujahideen our allies fighting the Soviet Union. There and later when he became the director of Friends of Afghanistan a non-profit organization overseen by the National Security Council and the State Department he got to know the leaders who were linked from the beginning with al-Qaeda and the Taliban with Iran Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and from which emerged the Islamic State.

After 9/11 he returned to Afghanistan and Pakistan for CBS News for which he covered the kidnapping of Daniel Pearl in Karachi. In 2008 he was the next American journalist kidnapped in Pakistan. He is the author of Captive and In Afghanistan.

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