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Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush and the Hubris of Empire
 
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Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush and the Hubris of Empire (Paperback)

by Roger Burbach (Author), Jim Tarbell (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Customers buy this book with Empire with Imperialism: The Globalizing Dynamics of Neoliberal Capitalism by James Petras

Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush and the Hubris of Empire + Empire with Imperialism: The Globalizing Dynamics of Neoliberal Capitalism
Price For Both: $47.18

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Editorial Reviews

Review
"Imperial Overstretch is a brilliantly argued narrative of the past, present and future of the American global imperial project. Indispensable reading!"-author of Declining World Order: America's Imperial Geopolitics

"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)

"A brilliant expose of savage greed and imperial hubris masquerading as the United States of America."-Mike Davis, University of California at Irvine

"Imperial Overstretch is indispensable reading for anyone seeking to understand the underlying motives for the US invasion of Iraq. Placing the Iraqi occupation in the context of the administration's imperial design, the authors highlight the fatal flaws in its' destructive drive for global domination."-Michael Klare, author of Blood and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's Petroleum Dependency

"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. But most of all, Imperial Overstretch is an urgent call to the American public to join the global movement against corporate and military domination, to jointly slay the imperial beast that is a menace to us at home and abroad."--Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Global Exchange and
the women's peace group CodePink

"As at time when American imperialism is in a particularly brutal and violent phase, this book 0is essential reading."-David Barsamian, Alternative Radio, and co-author with Arundhati Roy of The Checkbook and the Cruise Missile and with Noam Chomsky of Propaganda and the Public Mind


Product Description
Burbach and Tarbell argue that George W. Bush has fundamentally changed America's place in the world--for the worse. Hijacked by neoconservatives and the petro-military complex, the nation that once broke from an empire is swiftly becoming an empire itself. Fed by wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; a never-ending fear of terrorism; mushrooming defense expenditures; and the slow but steady erosion of civil liberties on the home front, is this empire in danger of becoming too large to survive? What are the costs--in lives at home and abroad--of failure? Who is driving these policies? And--most important of all--can Americans change direction and restore America's reputation in the world as the shining "city on the hill"?


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Zed Books (September 4, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1842774972
  • ISBN-13: 978-1842774977
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,503,283 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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35 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars IMPERIAL OVERSTRETCH, August 30, 2004
By Kevin Barney (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Imperial Overstretch at first glance seems an odd title for a book about a nation that was founded in a revolution against an empire. Indeed, the principles upon which it was created were based on the democratic concepts of the Enlightenment. The United States of America was to be a republic whose ideology held the concepts of imperialism and colonialism to be anathema. The authors, however, in this concise, well reasoned, and well-documented book, present a compelling case for the fact that the US began its imperial growth virtually from its beginning.

Empires have existed since the beginning of recorded history. As a civilization becomes successful, it grows, conquering new lands in hopes of increasing its wealth. Paul Kennedy described the organic process of the growth and decline of empires in his book The Rise and Fall of Great Powers. It is from Kennedy that the authors get the term imperial overstretch. As an empire grows, it expands its wealth and the military power needed to protect that wealth and to make new conquests. However, this process of growth contains the seeds of its own destruction. The larger the empire becomes, the more of its economic production is devoted to the military costs required to maintain and expand its power. At some point, the imperial power reaches overstretch and begins its decline as the cost of maintaining that power becomes more than the economy can sustain. Sustainable power ultimately results from a strong economy rather than a strong military.

Roger Burbach and Jim Tarbell have applied this mode of analysis to the United States at the beginning of the Twenty-first century. Although the US does not have a colonial empire like Rome or Britain had, its military and economic hegemony translate into imperial power. The book shows how the current Bush administration in general, and the war in Iraq in particular, have pushed the nation into imperial overstretch and decline. The heart of this slim, eminently readable volume is an analysis of the Bush administration and the war in Iraq. It shows how the war is part of an attempt to establish US hegemony in the oil and gas rich areas of Southern Asia. It looks at how the Bush administration achieved power, and the incompetent way it has abused that power, especially in Iraq. It gained power with the support of an unprecedented fund raising apparatus among the ranks of corporate conservatives, especially in the energy industries, and a well-organized fundamentalist Christian right. Unfortunately the ability to gain political power does not guarantee the ability to govern effectively. Influence over decision making within the administration is tightly controlled by a group of hubristic neo-conservative and militarist zealots. The war on terrorism, and the war on Iraq, which the administration has dishonestly convinced the American public are one in the same, has been a series of arrogant, bad decisions that were disastrously executed.

All of this has appeared in the media, but not enough of it in the mass media. The best selling books on the war in Iraq tend to focus on narrower subjects. Burbach and Tarbell have put it all together into a coherent analysis, which shows how and why it happened. It places the war into an historical context, and presents the likely economic results of the debacle. It is an important book that is essential reading for anyone who wants a comprehensive understanding of the war in Iraq and its likely outcome.

It is easy to understand the tragedy of the Iraq war in terms of human suffering and wasted resources, but why should one be concerned about the decline of yet another imperial power? The United States gained its international hegemony after World War II, in no small measure due to the encouragement of its allies. At that time, it was responsible for roughly 50% of the world's economic output. But the Cold War was basically a series of wars of containment. The Bush administration has gone beyond that by trying to expand its imperial power through wars of preemption, with dangerous disregard to international institutions and alliances. The US has become a rogue nation. The international system that was created at the end of World War II is in danger of collapsing. (Bush to the UN: Vote with us or become irrelevant.) The dangers of war and terrorism have increased. Secondly, the US is still the world's largest economy, and the rest of the world depends on a healthy US economy. The trade deficit is currently about a half trillion dollars per year and growing, and the United States has a net debt obligation to the rest of the world of around three trillion dollars. Projections for the future are even bleaker. Most of this has been caused, as Kennedy suggests, by the military expenditures necessary to try to maintain global hegemony.

Burbach and Tarbell, however, refuse to succumb to bleak depression. They find hope in such growing grassroots movements as environmentalism, anti-corporate-globalization, and anti-war. They see the ultimate solution as a fundamental change in our current capitalist system (something which they admit could take centuries). Unfortunately, neither the US nor the planet can afford to wait centuries. Something needs to be done now. What is required is a change of government to one willing to work within the international system to maintain peace and stop despoiling the environment. This is more than imperial decline. It may be our last chance to avoid global decline
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17 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Useful analysis, poor politics, November 1, 2004
By William Podmore (London United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   

On the evening of 9/11, Bush told his cronies, "This is a great opportunity." The US ruling class seized the chance to expand its empire.

Its attack on Afghanistan killed more than 3,000 civilians and overthrew the Taliban government - which had not attacked the USA. It failed to get the Al Qaida leadership, which had attacked the USA. Then Bush, with Labour's support, attacked Iraq, which has never attacked the USA, killing, according to The Lancet`s recent estimate, more than 100,000 Iraqi civilians, mostly women and children.

The US occupation government in Iraq and its puppet have kept Saddam's labour laws banning some trade unions and forbidding all strikes. In June 2003, US troops stormed the Iraqi Workers' Federation of Trade Unions' offices and arrested its leaders.

The authors trace the bones of empire in the drive for oil and bases. They describe the Bush crowd and Bush himself. They note the traditional US ruling class aim of `scaring the hell out of the American people.' As ever, empire brings aggressive wars `to prevent war', violent military occupations and vile war crimes.

The US is indeed a giant with feet of clay. Its military forces are dispersed over 153 countries. Its leadership is pathetically inadequate to the impossibly huge tasks of running an empire. Its economy is overstretched. The government deficit was $375 billion last year, the trade deficit $435 billion, so Bush had to borrow $500 billion abroad. An empire in decline produces chaos at home and abroad.

How do the authors suggest that we beat this empire? By building links between the campaigning environmental, peace and anti-globalisation groups, and by ever-bigger demonstrations and Forums! But occasional international contacts between activists change nothing. The endemic failures of the Second and Third Internationals prove this beyond doubt.

Their approach is pure anarchism. It rejects working in trade unions and rejects workers' nationalism - it is a recipe for permanent subjection and defeat. Only solid working class politics, rooted in national trade unions, can defeat the capitalist classes who run the empires.
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