jump to navigation

“Overthrow: America’s Century of Regime Change” April 18, 2006

Posted by Delilah in : Washington Consensus, World, Iran , trackback

A must read review of what seems to be a must read book from former NYTimes correspondant Stephen Kinzer.

“Overthrow” is the history of forcible regime changes by the United States and its local allies over the past 110 years, starting with the undermining of the Hawaiian monarchy in 1893, passing through Cuba (1898), the Philippines (1898), Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954) and elsewhere, and ending with present-day Iraq.

All of this with the noblest of intentions, no doubt:

But if you are going to use the argument that making a successful geopolitical omelet requires breaking eggs, you’d better have something edible to show for all the shattered shells lying around. As Kinzer makes clear, the problem is that all too many of the interventions he recounts were not just utterly ruthless; they were utterly unnecessary.

In pax americana, breaking eggs = collateral damage - mostly Arab, and mostly Muslim of late.

To conclude

I must confess that I put down this fine book with a feeling of deep disheartenment. For what, after all, is the point of such meticulously reported studies if the American public is repeatedly going to wipe such episodes from its collective consciousness, and the American establishment is going to make similar mistakes over and over again, first in the cold war and now in the “war on terror” — each time covering its actions with the same rhetoric of spreading “freedom” and combating “evil”?

As Kinzer writes of the Iranian hostage crisis, “because most Americans did not know what the United States had done to Iran in 1953, few had any idea why Iranians were so angry at the country they called ‘the great Satan.’ ” They still don’t.

Time for fellow Americans to get an education then.

Comments»

no comments yet - be the first?