BookMentionsBookMentions
Cover unavailable
Perilous Interventions
2 recommendations

Perilous Interventions

The Security Council and the Politics of Chaos

by Hardeep Singh Puri

Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Recommended by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Recommended by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Check price on Amazon

Proof-backed recommendation

Amazon availability

Should I read this?

Recommended by 2 sources and appears in Most Recommended Books, Politics, and History.

It was an exclusive lunch at a highend Manhattan restaurant on 7 March 2011. UN SecretaryGeneral Ban Kimoon and his Ateam were present. It soon became clear that the main item on the menu was Libya, where it was alleged that the forces of Muammar Gaddafi were advancing on the rebel stronghold of Benghazi to crush all opposition. Over an $80 per...

Looking for Kindle, hardcover, paperback, or audiobook editions?

Check formats, pricing, and current availability directly.

Check availability on Amazon

Why recommended

Recommended by 2 sources and appears in Most Recommended Books, Politics, and History.

Recommended by notable people

People and public figures who have recommended this book.

Recommendation Signals

Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.

Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Author, essayist, mathematical statistician, and risk analyst

An outstanding book on the side effects of interventionism, written in extremely elegant prose and with maximal clarity. It documents how people find arguments couched in moralistic terms to intervene in complex systems they don't understand. This book should be mandatory reading to every student and practitioner of foreign affairs.

Appears In

The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
Try This Instead

Not sure if this is the right fit?

Consider The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy. Recommended by 8 sources.

Soft-spoken, heavily illustrated fable built from short dialogues and watercolor sketches. Each spread pairs a spare line of text with a loose drawing, so the pleasure is visual and aphoristic rather than narrative; readers collect felt-true sentences more than plot. Most useful when you want quick consolations, a prompt for conversation with a child, or a pause during a rough day. Limiting if you want sustained argument, concrete advice, or tightly plotted storytelling: the repetition of gentleness can feel sentimental or thin after a while.

Similar books

How recommendation signals are reviewed

Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.

Perilous Interventions

View on Amazon →