THE GOLDEN THREAD

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On Sept. 18, 1961, Hammarskjöld died in a crash during a mission to the Congo to mediate a vicious war that had intensified since 1960. Journalist Somaiya, a former correspondent for the New York Times and contributor to the Guardian, among other venues, draws on interviews and government archives to create a tense narrative that reveals the “web of seasoned, brutal spies and assassins,” dirty deals, and ferocious hatreds that, he argues compellingly, led to the downing of the plane. Hammarskjöld, the author discovered, was caught in the crosshairs of geopolitical conflict. Russia hated him “as an agent of the West,” and the West hated him for “opening the door to Russia in the Congo.” The Congolese blamed him for the death of Patrice Lumumba, the Congo’s first prime minister, whom Hammarskjöld had tried to protect. The Belgians, who since the time of King Leopold had ruthlessly exploited the Congo and oppressed its populace, hated Hammarskjöld, as well, because he opposed the secession of a mineral-rich region from the rest of the country. After the crash, the wreckage was examined by Rhodesians, who hated the U.N. Although the official verdict maintained that the crash had been an accident, over the years, “a band of ingenious devotees” disputed that conclusion. Theories abounded: that there had been a hijacker aboard, that a mercenary plane had attacked it, even that Hammarskjöld caused the crash in order to commit suicide. Finally, in 2014, the U.N. appointed Mohamed Chaude Othman, a Tanzanian judge, to reexamine the case, and although logs—and the airport manager—had conveniently disappeared, his evidence, added to Somaiya’s research, led the author to conclude that the plane did succumb to an aerial attack, orchestrated by one or many of the parties that desperately wanted Hammarskjöld gone.



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THE GOLDEN THREAD THE GOLDEN THREAD Reviewed by CTS Store on July 06, 2020 Rating: 5

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