Cockburn has written three books on Iraq. The first,
Out of the Ashes: The Resurrection of Saddam Hussein, was written with his brother Andrew prior to the
war in Iraq. The book was later re-published in Britain under the title
Saddam Hussein: An American Obsession. Two more books were written by Cockburn after the U.S. invasion, following his reporting from Iraq.
The Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq (2006) mixes first hand accounts with reporting. Cockburn's book is critical of the invasion as well as the
Salafi fundamentalists who comprised much of the insurgency.
The Occupation was nominated for the 2006
National Book Critics Circle award for nonfiction. The second,
Muqtada: Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia Revival, and the Struggle for Iraq was published in 2008.
Muqtada is a journalistic account of the recent history of the religiously and politically prominent
Sadr family, the rise of
Muqtada, and the development of the
Sadrist Movement since the 2003 U.S. invasion. He is also the author of
The Jihadis Return: Isis and the New Sunni Uprising (2014), which has been translated into nine languages, and
The Rise of Islamic State: Isis and the New Sunni Revolution (2015). Both are about how the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant was able to set up its own state in northern Iraq and eastern Syria. Cockburn has written a memoir,
The Broken Boy (2005), which describes his childhood in 1950s Ireland, as well as an investigation of the way
polio was handled – Cockburn himself caught and survived
polio in 1956. He has also published a collection of essays on the
Soviet Union, titled
Getting Russia Wrong: The End of Kremlinology (1989). He co-wrote the book ''
Henry's Demons'' with his son, Henry, which explains their coming to terms with the latter's diagnosis with schizophrenia. Cockburn also writes for
CounterPunch and the
London Review of Books. == Views ==