From the Inside Flap:
ORTANT BOOK...[THAT] TELLS US WHY ATTENTION MUST BE PAID."
--New York Newsday
At 12:17 p.m. on February 26, 1993, a 1,500 pound bomb tore into the underbelly of New York City's World Trade Center. Six people were killed, numerous others injured, the city's economy traumatized. The blast took just two seconds, but in that instant America's sense of security was destroyed forever. Now, for the first time ever, here is the complete, authoritative, inside story of the conspiracy and its origins, the bombing and its aftermath. Written by the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists who first broke much of the story, TWO SECONDS UNDER THE WORLD reveals, in a vivid and gripping narrative, just how vulnerable America remains to terrorist attack...
* The internal squabbles that may have prevented the FBI from catching the fanatics before they had a chance to act
* How the bombers nearly succeeded in actually knocking down the Twin Towers
* A shoc
From Kirkus Reviews:
A lively recounting of how a ring of Islamic extremists engineered the most ambitious terrorist attack in America to date- -the 1993 bombing of Manhattan's World Trade Center. New York Newsday columnist Dwyer (Subway Lives, 1991), along with reporters David Kocieniewski, Deidre Murphy, and Peg Tyre, won a Pulitzer Prize for their coverage of the story. Here, the first few chapters offer a dramatic, almost second-by-second account of the actions of principal characters on Feb. 26, 1993, at 12:17 p.m., the moment before a yellow Ryder van parked in the lower-level garage of One World Trade Center exploded; the blast itself; and its immediate aftermath. The blast resulted in six deaths and hundreds of injuries. The description of the detonation, however, is only the gravy of this account--the meat follows with an elaborate rehashing of how, where, and why the bomb was made, and by whom. Dwyer spices up the journalistic legwork with great narrative flair, using reconstructed dialogues to portray the incompetence and stupidity of both bombers and the people who were supposed to stop them (such as the tribulations of two NYPD detectives trying to sort through the remains of the Ryder van). But underlying all the blundering, say the authors, is a serious question: ``Could the Twin Towers bombing have been stopped, or was it the price of a free, open society? Sadly, the evidence now suggests the latter''; he blames both the FBI and the press for failing to pursue earlier the violent anti-American Muslim presence here. The profiles of the major players involved are highly descriptive: Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, the Muslim leader charged with seditious conspiracy; a vital FBI informant; William Kunstler and others attorneys involved in the trial. The authors neatly relate the plot and plotters to other events, including the 1990 murder of Rabbi Meir Kahane, the increasing religious turmoil in Egypt, and various 1993 threats to bomb New York City landmarks and transportation routes. A spirited account. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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