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Abstract
George W. Bush has fundamentally changed America's place in the world. In some neo-conservative circles the word 'empire' is back in fashion, and a great republic that broke away from the British empire is now supposed to be proud of its new imperial role. This book explains how the neo-conservatives and the petro-military complex have hijacked US foreign policy. It examines the price that Americans will have to pay for this new era of unlimited US military might - a never ending fear of terrorism; mushrooming defence and security spending; the erosion of civil liberties at home and the deaths abroad of tens of thousands of civilians and military combatants.
At the heart of this disturbing and timely book is the ultimate question. Previous empires have foundered on the rock of imperial overstretch - the costs of trying to run and protect empires eventually outstripping the capacity and willingness of the citizenry to pay for them. Is the US in danger of going down that road? Who around George 'Dubya' Bush is pushing him along that path?
'Imperial Overstretch is a sweeping view of the history of US empire, the economic and military underpinnings of this empire, and the rise of the petro-military complex under the Bush administration. It is essential reading for those wishing to understand the rise of the neo-cons, the political birthing of George Bush and the imperial hijacking of September 11.'
Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Global Exchange and the women's peace group CodePink
'A brilliant expose of savage greed and imperial hubris masquerading as the United States of America.'
Mike Davis, University of California at Irvine
'Roger Burbach and Jim Tarbell provide us with indispensable insights into why, for all its bluster and armed might, the American empire has feet of clay. Provocative and comprehensive, this book is must reading for the global resistance movement.'
Walden Bello, 2003 Recipient, Right Livelihood Award (Alternative Nobel Prize)
Roger Burbach is Director of Research and Publication at the Center for the Study of the Americas (CENSA) in Berkeley, California. A historian by training, he was for a number of years a staff member and writer with NACLA, the North American Congress on Latin America. During the 1990s he was Visiting Scholar in Peace and Conflict Studies, and subsequently at the Institute of International Studies, University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of numerous books, including most recently The Pinochet Affair: State Terrorism and Global Justice (Zed Books, 2003), Globalization and Postmodern Politics: Zapatistas versus High Tech Robber Barons (2001) and Globalize This! The Battle against the World Trade Organization (2000) (edited with Kevin Danaher). He coauthored with Orlando Noez Fire in the Americas (1987).
Jim Tarbell is a writer and broadcaster based in Northern California. Following spells as a staffer for Congressman Wendell Wyatt (1968-72) and Peace Corps volunteer (1973-75), he founded his own publishing house, Ridge Times Press, in 1981. Amongst many other activities, he is now the editor of the Alliance for Democracy quarterly journal Alliance Alerts, and co-hosts a radio programme on KZYX called Corporations and Democracy. He is the author of a previous book, I Came Not Alone (1994), which tells of ordinary people's experiences of globalization in Latin America, and is currently working on a new book, Democracy versus Empire.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover\r | Cover | ||
Contents | v | ||
Acknowledgements | vii | ||
Prologue: the toll of empire | 1 | ||
1. George W. Bush and the reality of empire | 9 | ||
Bush and Imperial Overstretch | 11 | ||
Mythology and the American Empire | 13 | ||
The Empire of Deceit | 15 | ||
Militarization of the Empire | 17 | ||
Multi-polar Resistance to Empire | 20 | ||
The Empire Confronts the Republic | 22 | ||
Rise of the ‘Second Superpower’ | 25 | ||
2. Empire as the American way of life | 27 | ||
Defining Empire, the American Way | 29 | ||
The Foundation of the American Empire | 32 | ||
Fighting Communism | 43 | ||
Rise of the Bushes | 50 | ||
3. The ‘American century’ | 52 | ||
Setting the Ground Rules for Empire | 54 | ||
Truman: Scaring the Hell Out of Americans | 55 | ||
The Subjection of Latin America | 58 | ||
Seizing the Prize | 60 | ||
On Revolutions and CIA Coups | 62 | ||
Counter-revolutionary Warfare | 68 | ||
Globalizing the Empire | 70 | ||
The New World Order | 73 | ||
4. The rise of the Bush people | 76 | ||
The Movement that Upended the Establishment | 76 | ||
Corporate Right | 78 | ||
Rise of the Neo-cons | 80 | ||
The Next Generation | 85 | ||
American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) | 91 | ||
Things Go Better with God | 94 | ||
Republikud | 96 | ||
Costs of Empire | 100 | ||
Note | 101 | ||
5. The making of George W. Bush | 102 | ||
The Privileged American Dream | 104 | ||
Atonement | 105 | ||
Finding His Persona | 105 | ||
The Governor | 108 | ||
Headed Towards the White House | 110 | ||
Who is This Man? | 114 | ||
The Iron Triangle | 117 | ||
Oil Power | 120 | ||
A Political Circus | 123 | ||
6. The politics of fear: Bush hijacks 11 September | 125 | ||
The Open Door to War | 127 | ||
‘Why Do They Hate Us?’ | 130 | ||
The Unilateral ‘Coalition’ | 134 | ||
The Empire Confronts the Republic at Home | 139 | ||
The Dirty War in Afghanistan | 142 | ||
Bush and the Axis of Evil | 145 | ||
7. The drums of pre-emptive war | 149 | ||
History of US Intervention in Iraq | 153 | ||
The Oil Connection | 155 | ||
Selling the War | 157 | ||
The Intelligence War | 159 | ||
Multilateral Consensus? | 163 | ||
The Unwilling | 167 | ||
8. Iraq and the imperial dead-enders | 172 | ||
Preventive War | 175 | ||
The Non-existent Road Map for the Empire | 177 | ||
The Oblivious Empire | 179 | ||
The Incompetent Emperor | 183 | ||
The Mirage of an Occupied ‘Democracy’ | 186 | ||
The Counter-insurgency War | 190 | ||
9. The interregnum: an empire in descent confronts a world in upheaval | 193 | ||
Economic Overstretch | 194 | ||
The Interregnum | 198 | ||
The Pentagon’s Corrupt Spartans | 199 | ||
The Empire’s New Frontier | 201 | ||
Iraq Around the Clock | 206 | ||
The World in Revolt | 209 | ||
The New Internationalism | 215 | ||
Note | 218 | ||
Bibliography | 219 | ||
Index | 231 | ||
Some titles of related interest from Zed Books | 241 |