Sometimes hilarious, sometimes tragic, Inside the Danger Zones is the story of Paul Moorcrafts work during the major wars of the last three decades. As a freelance war correspondent and military analyst for many of the top TV networks, Moorcraft has parachuted into countless war zones and has worked in Angola, Namibia, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Mozambique. He has the habit of being in the wrong place at the worst of times, from the siege of Sarajevo in the 1990s to the siege of the West Bank town of Jenin in 2002. This book takes him to a series of conflicts from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, covering coups and counter-coups across the globe. Along the way he encounters some of the most dangerous people in the world; in Afghanistan when the West was training bin Ladens Mujahedin fighters, interviewing Mugabe during the Rhodesian Bush War of the late 1970s and travelling to meet Saddam on the eve of the 2003 allied invasion if Iraq. Paul Moorcraft has been a freelance war correspondent for, among others, Time magazine, the BBC, Channel 4, Sky and Al-Jazeera. He was a senior instructor at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, and the UK Joint Services Command and Staff College. Moorcraft is currently the director of the Centre for Foreign Policy Analysis, London, and a visiting professor at Cardiff Universitys School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies.