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For a distinguished book of nonfiction by an American author that is not eligible for consideration in any other category, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).

Ghost Wars, by Steve Coll (The Penguin Press)

Lee Bollinger and Steve Coll

Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger presents Steve Coll with the 2005 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction.

Winning Work

Ghost Wars

From the managing editor of the Washington Post, a news-breaking account of the CIA's involvement in the covert wars in Afghanistan that fueled Islamic militancy and gave rise to bin Laden's al Qaeda.

For nearly the past quarter century, while most Americans were unaware, Afghanistan has been the playing field for intense covert operations by U.S. and foreign intelligence agencies-invisible wars which sowed the seeds of the September 11 attacks and which provide its context. From the Soviet invasion in 1979 through the summer of 2001, the CIA, KGB, Pakistan's ISI, and Saudi Arabia's General Intelligence Department all operated directly and secretly in Afghanistan. They primed Afghan factions with cash and weapons, secretly trained guerrilla forces, funded propaganda, and manipulated politics. In the midst of these struggles bin Laden conceived and then built his global organization.

Comprehensively and for the first time, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Steve Coll tells the secret history of the CIA's role in Afghanistan, from its covert program against Soviet troops from 1979 to 1989, to the rise of the Taliban and the emergence of bin Laden, to the secret efforts by CIA officers and their agents to capture or kill bin Laden in Afghanistan after 1998. Based on extensive firsthand accounts, Ghost Wars is the inside story that goes well beyond anything previously published on U.S. involvement in Afghanistan. It chronicles the roles of midlevel CIA officers, their Afghan allies, and top spy masters such as Bill Casey, Saudi Arabia's Prince Turki al Faisal, and George Tenet. And it describes heated debates within the American government and the often poisonous, mistrustful relations between the CIA and foreign intelligence agencies.

Ghost Wars answers the questions so many have asked since the horrors of September 11: To what extent did America's best intelligence analysts grasp the rising threat of Islamist radicalism? Who tried to stop bin Laden and why did they fail?

(From the book jacket)

 

Biography

Winner of a 1990 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory journalism, Steve Coll was managing editor of The Washington Post from 1998 to 2004 and covered Afghanistan as the Post's South Asia bureau chief between 1989 and 1992. He is now an associate editor at the Post.

Coll is the author of four books, including On the Grand Trunk Road and The Taking of Getty Oil.

He lives with his wife and three children in Maryland.

 

 

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in General Nonfiction in 2005:

The Jury

Michael Skube(chair )*

writer and journalism professor

Adam Hochschild

author

Frank Wilson

book review editor

Winners in General Nonfiction

2005 Prize Winners

Staff

For its comprehensive, clear-headed coverage of the resignation of New Jersey's governor after he announced he was gay and confessed to adultery with a male lover.