Jason Burke begins his story in an age of innocence, when terrorists simply walked across the tarmac to board commercial flights unchecked, with guns and bombs in their hand baggage. The Revolutionists then traces the evolution of increasingly sanguinary terrorism into the early 1980s, with the transformation of ‘secular, leftist’ terrorists into the movements of jihad that dominate terrorism even today. Drawing on three decades of front-line reporting, declassified files, and interviews with hijackers, counter-terrorism agents, spies and survivors, Burke crafts a narrative that is as compulsive as a thriller, even as he retains exceptional rigour in argument and documentation.
The Revolutionists is no mere chronicle, as Burke refuses to flatten his subjects into stereotypes. He probes the human frailties behind revolutionary and radical postures: the functional illiteracy of some…