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Blowback, Second Edition: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire
Chalmers Johnson
Holt Paperbacks
, 2004 - 288 pages
average customer review:
based on 93 reviews
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highly recommended
American Empire Triology
Chalmers Johnson in "
Blowback
" presciently and eerily predicts 9/11 or a similar event. Published in 2000 the analysis should be required reading for all interested in foreign policy and how the "
American
Empire
" is perceived by those subject to it. An outstanding contribution to the literature.
We were warned
This book is quite well researched and somewhat academic. I would not call it dry nor would I call it spellbinding. It presents a plethora of facts prior to making predictions that have been proving to be true.
Chalmers is an expert on China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. You will find considerable recent history of these countries, history with a bias in economics.
A very minor complaint is that Chalmers refers to the US Treasury when he should be referring to the Federal Reserve which essentially privatized the US Treasury...in 1913 as I recall. But he likely has a good reason for his chosen vernacular.
As the title indicates, this book focuses on a prediction that our militaristic hubris and imperialism would be likely to both earn enemies and eventually undermine our economy.....to think that it was written before the Bushbarians galloped into town and made Chalmers look like the prophet of the century.
Chalmers divides his time ripping into the military history of Japan, the USSR, and of course Cold War America..especially post Cold War America. With the exception of Tibet, China receives comparatively light treatment.
This is a great book for those who feel comfortable with slightly academic leaning books.
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A fascinating book.
`
Blowback
' is the term the CIA uses to refer to the unintended
consequences
of
American actions
abroad. The author makes the reader aware of the dangers faced by the US
Empire
, which he feels has been overextended, with about 19 military bases worldwide. The US insists on projecting its military power to every corner of the earth and to force global economic integration on its own terms. I remember once a Chinese leader commenting, "Why should we live by the standards set by the US?" In other words, who says the US way of life is the best there is and we should all follow it? This method of dictating what's right and what is not to the rest of the world angers a lot of people according to the author, and will one day cause a blowback against US interests.
The author asks, "Why are there still US bases in Japan?" He then asks if the American people would like it if other nations had military bases on US soil.
The US is not liked in Japan for many reasons. The US dropped two atomic bombs on them, one on Hiroshima and another on Nagasaki, killing many innocent women, children, and the elderly. The blowback from this atrocious act is still to come. Today such an act would be condemned worldwide. Could you imagine if India decided to nuke Pakistan, or North Korea nuked a neighboring country, what would the world's response be? Yet the US got away with it during World War II, even though Japan was on the verge of surrender before the atomic bombs were dropped. Killing civilians is unacceptable. If Russia had won the cold war, the US would today have been paying compensation to the Japanese, much like how Germany is still paying the state of Israel compensation for the atrocities it inflicted on the Jewish people under Hitler.
The author mentions rape cases on Okinawa committed by US soldiers based there. In one case, a 12 year old Japanese schoolgirl was gang raped by US soldiers. Japanese Families are upset because these soldiers are trialed in the US under US military laws which tend to be lenient with the soldiers. Furthermore, in many cases, by the time a lawsuit is brought against a US soldier, he or she no longer is on Okinawa. The US soldiers' duty time on Okinawa is only 6 months! Once a soldier leaves Japan, it is impossible for the Japanese families to bring him or her to justice. US soldiers based on Okinawa therefore get away with crimes.
Bases were also built on land owned by Japanese farmers without giving them compensation. Military maneuvers and artillery fire are constantly being performed on protected reefs around Okinawa. Furthermore, bullets made of depleted uranium at one point littered Okinawa's coast, but the Navy eventually cleaned up the shores after international pressure and outrage. How would American citizens feel if China or Russia had military bases on American soil, raped young American girls, took land from farmers without compensation, and polluted the US coast with UN prohibited depleted uranium bullets? How would the American people feel if crimes committed against them could not be trialed under US laws? For example, why didn't the soldiers involved in Abu Ghuraib prison in Iraq stand trial in an Iraqi court under Iraqi law? Similarly, the US fighter pilots involved in the cable car accident in Italy stood trial in the US and were found innocent! Why didn't they stand trial in Italy? This angered the Italians.
The author discusses Afghanistan and how the CIA started helping the Mujahedeen before the Russian invasion of Afghanistan, not after as is often believed. The CIA therefore used the Mujahedeen to fight the US war against the Soviets. Once the Soviets were defeated, the CIA dropped support for the Mujahedeen. The blowback was that the Mujahedeen turned against the US.
Interestingly, the author says that the US should withdraw all of its troops from the Middle East. If this is done, the author says, there would no longer be the hatred that Arab people feel today against the US. Imagine China had military bases in Canada, Mexico, and Cuba. How would the US people feel? Threatened? Unsafe? This is exactly how Arabs feel today.
The book also discusses the IMF and how it has destroyed the Indonesian economy. I thought that chapter on the IMF and globalization extremely interesting and thought provoking.
This is really a great book, and if you like reading Noam Chomsky, you will like this book. This book was originally published before 9/11, but has a new introduction on blowback in the post-9/11 world.
One thing to keep in mind: All empires throughout history have collapsed. The question to ask is `Why?' If the US can answer this question, it might just defeat the cycle of history.
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The Best of Johnson's Trilogy!
In the Introduction to the book Mr. Johnson tells the reader the circumstances of when the term "
Blowback
" first appeared in a government document related to covert C.I.A. actions of 1953.
The author shares his critical view of the
American
empire
and uses the U.S. military bases in Japan and Okinawa as examples.
He also examines the joint exercises that various U.S. military organizations perform with some nations known for brutal human rights violations.
On accountability he made this observation, "The Pentagon's most recent route around accountability is 'privatization' of it's training activities."
Another aspect of American imperialism is the actions of the International Monetary Fund that often leads to political instability.
On financing he discusses the enormous sums of money in the U.S defense budget to maintain access to Persian Gulf oil and why that's a priority.
"The American Empire has become skilled at developing self-fulfilling and self-serving prophecies in order to justify it's policies." -page 92.
No truer words have been written about the subject.
He offers up an accurate assessment of free trade, particularly with China. "The
second aspect
of human rights in China we must recognize is to ensure that poor working conditions and prison labor in China (and elsewhere) do not end up destroying the livelihood of American workers."
Chalmers Johnson clarified the financial as well as the military aspect of the American empire citing the positions of Adam Smith and John Hobson.
"Smith and Hobson both believed that finance capitalism produced the pathologies of the global economy they called mercantilism and imperialism."
He observes that capitalists are seldom happy with being capitalists and would prefer being monopolists, inside traders, or usurers.
After reading all three of Chalmers Johnson's trilogy books, I regard "Blowback, Second
Edition
" as the best.
If you want to understand how the American empire works and why blowback happens, this book is a "must read".
It covers the many aspects of American imperialism and in an easily understood fashion. Destined to be a foreign policy classic, if it isn't already!
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Fascinating
Nutshell review - A fascinating look at the build up and consequence of
American military
power and presence across the globe. Interesting, well written, and very worth reading whether one agrees with the conclusions or not.
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Now with a new and up-to-date Introduction by the author, the bestselling account of the effect of
American global
policies, hailed as ?brilliant and iconoclastic? (Los Angeles Times)
The term ?
blowback
,? invented by the CIA, refers to the unintended results of American actions abroad. In this incisive and controversial book, Chalmers Johnson lays out in vivid detail the dangers faced by our overextended
empire
, which insists on projecting its military power to every corner of the earth and using American capital and markets to force global economic integration on its own terms. From a case of rape by U.S. servicemen in Okinawa to our role in Asia?s financial crisis, from our early support for Saddam Hussein to our conduct in the Balkans, Johnson reveals the ways in which our misguided policies are planting the seeds of future disaster.
In a new
edition that
addresses recent international events from September 11 to the war in Iraq, this now classic book remains as prescient and powerful as ever.
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