"[A] well-researched and original monograph . . . <i>The Lebanese Connection</i> is an important contribution to the historiography of Lebanon. Marshall makes excellent use of U.S. government sources that scholars of the Middle East overlook . . . Marshall also provides an important outline of the origins of drug cultivation and trafficking in Lebanon and their subsequent role in the civil war . . . [H]e provides rich foundations to broaden and complicate our understanding of Lebanon's early independence and civil war periods."—Donald Powell Cole, <i>International Journal of Middle East Studies</i>
"<i>The Lebanese Connection</i> . . . is a sterling contribution to the academic literature on the global drug trade, having made a truly original contribution. It also opens a revealing view not only on the contemporary Middle East, but contemporary terrorism, covert operations by state and non-state actors, and the making of narco-states and failed states."—Phillip Smith, <i>Drug War Chronicle</i>
"Using a vast range of sources, from interviews with former U.S. narcotics agents [to] journalistic research, Marshall especially drew from previously classified U.S. government records, both from the State Department and the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, now known as the Drug Enforcement Administration." — Olivia Alabaster, <i>The Daily Star: Lebanon</i>
"[T]he principal strength of this work is not that it is well researched or identifies people by their names, but that it is written in a manner which allows readers to appreciate the history, relevance and consequences of how drugs fueled the civil war. Instead of the accusatory tone that most are used to in their national publications, Marshall calmly and matter-of-factly shows how, not just today, but historically the Lebanese authorities have shirked their responsibilities."—Sami Halabi, <i>Executive Magazine</i>
"Marshall provides a historical backdrop to a critical contemporary problem—the power of the illicit economy and its corresponding organized criminal elements. In a richly detailed narrative, Marshall traces the origins, events, and aftermath of Lebanon's civil war, explaining how the financial allure of the drug trade exacerbated sectarian and regional cleavages and ultimately intensified and prolonged the violence of the war . . . Recommended."—M.-F. T. Malone, <i>CHOICE</i>
"Jonathan Marshall's <i>The Lebanese Connection</i> is an enthralling chronicle of Lebanon's rise to prominence as a narco-trafficking state. While serving as a drug enforcement agent in Lebanon from 1972-1974, I experienced firsthand many of the issues he documents. I highly recommend this detailed and informative book."—Jeffrey R. Kildow, Special Agent (Retired), Drug Enforcement Administration 1968-2001
"This is an original book of great importance for understanding not just the Middle East, but today's world of terrorism, covert warfare, and failing states. Few people have the knowledge necessary to decipher the central relevance of Lebanese drug trafficking to Middle Eastern politics, the games of intelligence agencies, and the history of international organized crime. Jonathan Marshall has produced an indispensable guide through this jungle."—Peter Dale Scott, author of <i>American War Machine: Deep Politics, the CIA Global Drug Connection, and the Road to Afghanistan</i>
"Challenging common misconceptions about sectarian civil war, narco-politics, and state failure in Lebanon, Jonathan Marshall sheds new light on how the shadowy realms of drug cultivation, the international arms trade, institutionalized corruption, and organized crime tragically overlapped in the twentieth century Middle East. Hard-hitting and hard-boiled investigative journalism that is cinematic in scope, <i>The Lebanese Connection</i> has troubling implications that should stimulate lively debate and future research."—Max Weiss, Princeton University