With our troops now committed until 2009, The Unexpected War exposes the poverty of Canadian foreign policy, arguing that Canadas various military missions in Afghanistan have been ad hoc in nature and made on the basis of political calculationsoften flawedabout CanadianAmerican relations. Drawing upon interviews with key decision makers and advisors, and a first-hand account by a former Defence Ministry insider, the book offers a gripping account of how Canada became embroiled in a new kind of warfighting insurgency in a failed state.