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Reign of Terror: How the 9/11 Era Destabilized America and Produced Trump Kindle Edition
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"An impressive combination of diligence and verve, deploying Ackerman’s deep stores of knowledge as a national security journalist to full effect. The result is a narrative of the last 20 years that is upsetting, discerning and brilliantly argued." —The New York Times
"One of the most illuminating books to come out of the Trump era." —New York Magazine
An examination of the profound impact that the War on Terror had in pushing American politics and society in an authoritarian direction
For an entire generation, at home and abroad, the United States has waged an endless conflict known as the War on Terror. In addition to multiple ground wars, the era pioneered drone strikes and industrial-scale digital surveillance; weakened the rule of law through indefinite detentions; sanctioned torture; and manipulated the truth about it all. These conflicts have yielded neither peace nor victory, but they have transformed America. What began as the persecution of Muslims and immigrants has become a normalized feature of American politics and national security, expanding the possibilities for applying similar or worse measures against other targets at home, as the summer of 2020 showed. A politically divided and economically destabilized country turned the War on Terror into a cultural—and then a tribal—struggle. It began on the ideological frontiers of the Republican Party before expanding to conquer the GOP, often with the acquiescence of the Democratic Party. Today’s nativist resurgence walked through a door opened by the 9/11 era. And that door remains open.
Reign of Terror shows how these developments created an opportunity for American authoritarianism and gave rise to Donald Trump. It shows that Barack Obama squandered an opportunity to dismantle the War on Terror after killing Osama bin Laden. By the end of his tenure, the war had metastasized into a bitter, broader cultural struggle in search of a demagogue like Trump to lead it.
Reign of Terror is a pathbreaking and definitive union of journalism and intellectual history with the power to transform how America understands its national security policies and their catastrophic impact on civic life.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherViking
- Publication dateAugust 10, 2021
- File size3343 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
—The New York Times
"Ackerman displays a masterful command of facts."
—The Guardian
"A bracing chronicle of the war on terror and its corrosive effect on American democracy."
—Jamelle Bouie, The New York Times
“[Reign of Terror] has a percussive drive that makes it a bracing, infuriating read.”
—The Economist
"In the genre of books that seek to explain why we are in the mess we are in, Reign of Terror is a formidable entry. To those who want to portray Trump as wholly exceptional, and discontinuous with the recent past, the book is an essential corrective."
—The New Republic
"Reign of Terror ranks alongside Adam Serwer’s The Cruelty Is the Point as one of the most illuminating books to come out of the Trump era. Ackerman offers a persuasive, exhaustive accounting of a 20-year-old war and its authoritarian consequences."
—New York Magazine
"Reign of Terror is at its strongest when Ackerman recalls some of the outrages-of-the-week of the past 20 years, which may have faded from memory but feel portentous in retrospect. . . . The book compellingly argues that, the protestations of neoconservative Never Trumpers notwithstanding, Trump’s 'America First' doctrine was not a break from Bush’s 'freedom agenda'; it was its inevitable conclusion."
—Slate
"“The first major work to consider the War on Terror in its entirety, Reign of Terror documents the last 20 years of state-sponsored violence at a blistering pace, creating a near-constant cycle of recollection and frustration for the reader. Ackerman’s real achievement is a commitment to scale, an expansiveness that encourages readers to see the long view. . . . Ackerman has sketched a chilling first draft of this part of American history, and he has done so with an implicit challenge: how do we make it right?”
—Los Angeles Review of Books
“Even readers who think they already know all there is about the legacy of 9/11 will find Ackerman’s incisive book an eye-opening experience.”
—Variety
"Attempting the near impossible . . . Ackerman offers a book stuffed to the brim with details. . . . A deeper-than-headlines take. . . . This book does a masterful job communicating how nothing is as it seems."
—Booklist (starred review)
"Ackerman delivers a tour-de-force about the transformation of the United States in the two decades since the September 11 attacks, that thoroughly and comprehensively examines how the post-9/11 security state has engulfed society. . . . An essential work that encapsulates the trajectory of American politics in the first two decades of the 21st century, and the lasting impact on everyday life."
—Library Journal (starred review)
"Ackerman capably connects seemingly disparate elements without forcing issues so that readers will see how such matters as the Branch Davidian siege of 1993 helped fuel White supremacist movements today. . . . An intelligent, persuasive book about events that are all too current."
—Kirkus Reviews
"Spencer Ackerman’s brilliant, discerning Reign of Terror initiates the urgent process of truth and reconciliation with the ugly facts of a 'War on Terror' that condemned a young 21st century America to the darkness of a surveillance society driven by the militarization of everyday life and dependent upon surveillance capitalism for pervasive monitoring and control of people. Ackerman is at the top of his game, revealing with vivid detail, investigative force, and unswerving moral clarity how the reign of terror rained on us, replacing freedom with fear and neighborliness with suspicion, as it poisoned cherished principles, diminished rights, and weakened democratic institutions. Every citizen and lawmaker yearning for a joyful inclusive democratic future must confront this toxic legacy and its chokehold on our expectations and our politics. That journey begins here with this courageous, necessary book."
—Shoshana Zuboff, author of The Age of Surveillance Capitalism and Professor Emeritus, Harvard Business School
"Journalists are said to write the first draft of history and Spencer Ackerman has been one of the most important reporters in exposing the horrors, abuses and wars as they unfolded in the post-9/11 world. In Reign of Terror, Ackerman weaves together his groundbreaking reporting with a searing analysis of the consequences of waging borderless, global wars abroad and assaulting civil liberties at home."
—Jeremy Scahill, author of Blackwater and Dirty Wars
"America started the war on terrorism twenty years ago. It wound up at war with itself. Reign of Terror shows how the nation went down that road to hell. You've never read a book like it."
—Tim Weiner, Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winning author of Legacy of Ashes
"Ackerman rivetingly shows how America's response to the 9/11 attacks turned presidents into kings, institutionalized cruelty, exacerbated racism, and made a continual state of terror the hallmark of our political culture. Reign of Terror is a profoundly valuable contribution to the historical record—and, let us hope, the opening chapter of a long-overdue national reckoning."
—Rick Perlstein, author of Reaganland and Nixonland
"Ackerman's Reign of Terror is breathtaking and essential. By connecting the threads of American exceptionalism, white supremacy and the War on Terror, Ackerman's book provides an invaluable lens to understanding the post-9/11 era, and the United States' violent embrace of torture, endless war and military occupations, presidential drone assassination hit-lists, and global mass surveillance"
—Laura Poitras, Academy Award and Pulitzer-winning filmmaker and journalist
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The culture of 9/11 echoed the jihadism it sought to destroy: brutal, messianic, aggrieved, censorious, and eschatological. Conservatives had long used New York City as a synecdoche for the cosmopolitan decadence they saw corrupting America. But now that New York could serve as a rallying cry for war, it was a city of martyrs. On “the Pile,” as the ruins of the World Trade Center became known, Bush stood beside rescue workers and shouted through a bullhorn, “The people who knocked down these buildings will hear us all soon.” The response was not only political. Americans drove hundreds of miles to Manhattan to stand in solidarity with New Yorkers, donating whatever skills they had to an impromptu rescue effort. Their embrace contrasted conspicuously with how Bush treated New Yorkers’ basic material needs. The fires at Ground Zero burned for one hundred days, filling the air over lower Manhattan and beyond with carcinogenic toxins for locals, and particularly firefighters, to inhale. Christine Todd Whitman, the former New Jersey governor who ran Bush’s Environmental Protection Agency, blithely assured residents and rescue workers that “air samples we have taken at all levels . . . cause us no concern.” The residential deep cleaning that was recommended to mitigate the risk by health experts was left by the government to be performed by landlords, who did the sort of job familiar to generations of local renters. New Yorkers mattered less than did enlisting their suffering for a war that possessed an ominous spiritual component. The Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan marveled at “God Bless America” sung on Park Avenue and concluded, “God is back. He’s bursting out all over.” Subway trains put on American flag decals that would remain twenty years later. The flag was now a shroud.
It also became a border, segregating those who were authentically American from those who were not. A thirty-three-year-old Palestinian-born woman raised in Chicago, Lina Elayyan, told reporter Tram Nguyen that people who wore hijab, like her mother, felt as if “they had a bullseye on their forehead.” Hate crimes against Muslims—or those, like Sikhs, perceived to be Muslims by whites uninterested in distinctions—skyrocketed from 28 incidents in 2000 to 481 in the final months of 2001. A generation of Arab and Desi children were called “Osama” by white classmates. With racism came conspiracy. False rumors spread that Jews who worked in the World Trade Center warned one another to stay home on 9/11. A durable conspiracy theory called 9/11 trutherism, which took root on both the far left and the far right, held that the towers were destroyed by a treasonous globalist government that sought to gin up an imperial war. “Larry Silverstein, the owner of the WTC complex, admitted . . . that he and the NYFD decided to ‘pull’ WTC 7,” wrote a rising conspiracist named Alex Jones, who twisted Silverstein’s words. More respectable versions of the post‑9/11 fury were no less vicious. Commentators, and hardly only conservative ones, pathologized Arabs and Muslims, whose critiques of America were proof of their conspiratorial thinking. Within days of 9/11, the right-wing radio host Dennis Prager told the Fox News host Bill O’Reilly, “It is very sad to say, but a significant percentage of the Muslim world hates us.” Before September ended, O’Reilly urged, “I think we should put troops on the border right now.” Enemies were everywhere.
A Palestinian man named Adham Amin Hassoun worked at a Miami technology company. Born in Lebanon, Hassoun had lived through the horror of the Lebanese civil war. A youth spent surviving bombings, beatings, and even kidnappings taught him both the fragility of civilization and the resilience of humanity. Hassoun was active in his mosque, quick to open his wallet to Muslim refugee charities, and he found inspiration in the solidaristic community aid efforts after Hurricane Andrew demolished much of South Florida in 1992. “All that bullshit I used to hear” in the Middle East about the perfidy of Americans lay in ruins, he recalled, since “these people were like us.” After 9/11 Hassoun knew that there would be a backlash against Muslims—the lessons Lebanon taught were indelible—but he couldn’t accept the enormity of what was coming. “I got phone calls from overseas, ‘Leave the country.’ All the time I would say, ‘No, no, no, they’re wiser, it’s not like with the Japanese,’” Hassoun recalled.
For entire months afterward, when cable news wasn’t rebroadcasting footage of the towers collapsing or the burnt facade of the Pentagon, it documented a cascade of disasters following 9/11. Powderized anthrax spores were mailed to the U.S. Capitol, and around the country, bearing the message You cannot stop us; the FBI never did. In December, a college student, Monique Danison, noticed that a fellow passenger aboard an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami attempted to ignite a fuse in his shoe, but the passengers and crew restrained him. Reports about the fear gripping American Muslims, like Elayyan and her mother, received less emphasis and made little impact on the direction of the country. Particularly in New York, people retreated indoors and watched the unfolding violence on TV in a kind of catatonia. It augured a phenomenon that would last for a generation. The overwhelming majority of Americans—the ones who did not serve in the military or the security services; the ones who were not pursued by the security services—experienced the 9/11 era as a media event. Those Americans could disengage from it when it grew unbearable.
An America in a fugue state went looking for heroes. Vanity Fair dispatched Annie Leibovitz to photograph Bush’s war cabinet. New York’s reactionary mayor, Rudy Giuliani, not three years removed from the police slaying of Amadou Diallo, was apotheosized on the cover of Tina Brown’s latest venture, Talk magazine, as the mayor of america. Giuliani had catastrophically placed his command center in the World Trade Center, the only place in New York known to have been a terrorist target. He echoed Whitman in insisting that the air was safe to breathe—elbowing federal agencies out of the way to get workers back on the job, regardless of the health risks—and passed through Ground Zero with his face protected by what Village Voice journalist Wayne Barrett recalled as no more than “a dust mask on his mouth.” Brown was hardly the only media figure to wash Giuliani’s brutal mayoralty in the blood of 9/11. Giuliani had always been a media creation, propelled by journalists who might have found him incorrigible but generally treated him as a necessity to control an out‑of‑control city—something that, in practice, meant repressing Black, brown, and poor New Yorkers. In short order the Fox network began airing a smash hit TV show about a counterterrorist who each season combated another imminent apocalyptic attack by torturing its perpetrators. Jack Bauer’s more resilient enemies on 24 were the bureaucrats, lawyers, and politicians attempting to prevent him from saving America. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, the right’s guiding legal light, used the show to champion impunity for torture. “Jack Bauer saved Los Angeles,” Scalia told an Ottawa legal conference. “Are you going to convict Jack Bauer?”
Never had a people thrust into an avowedly epochal conflict been asked to do less in response to it. The NFL paused its week-two games the Sunday after 9/11, then resumed. Bush urged people to go shopping as a way to stimulate a wartime economy. Vice President Dick Cheney invoked the “wrath” of the United States emerging and, simultaneously, hoped Americans would not “let what’s happened here in any way throw off their normal level of economic activity.” It was a decisive message that the wealthy would not have to make any sacrifices—Bush pressed on with cutting their taxes in wartime—while the working class would, as ever, be a different story. Manhattan plastic surgeons marveled that rich New Yorkers viewed a tummy tuck as therapy for 9/11‑induced stress. One cosmetic surgery consultant explained, “Some of them are telling me, ‘I may not have a face-lift this year, but whether there is a bomb or not, I’m going to be a blonde. And I’m not going to give up my Botox.’” Wall Street made sure to hang a giant flag outside the New York Stock Exchange.
The flag was an intellectual border as well, and it would be policed.
Within days of the attacks Susan Sontag, a titan of American literature, wrote in The New Yorker that bin Laden had shown that America’s global domination sowed the seeds of atrocities like 9/11. She warned that the country was choosing martyrdom over understanding the bitter lesson of the attack. “Where is the acknowledgment that this was not a ‘cowardly’ attack on ‘civilization’ or ‘liberty’ or ‘humanity’ or ‘the free world’ but an attack on the world’s self-proclaimed superpower, undertaken as a consequence of specific American alliances and actions? How many citizens are aware of the ongoing American bombing of Iraq?” In three paragraphs Sontag summarized the emerging “Soviet Party Congress” mode of American politics that would shape a generation: a faith in the righteousness of violence and a deliberate ignorance of both its origins and its effects.
The vilification Sontag reaped lasted until her death in 2004. Joan Didion recalled reading three separate denunciations of Sontag on a single page of the neoconservative Weekly Standard. Eminent conservative pundit Charles Krauthammer devoted a Washington Post column to Sontag’s “moral obtuseness.” The neoliberal New Republic, which saw its role as policing a left it considered indecent and unreliably American, sneered at Sontag’s “self-flagellation.” Sontag was correct that 9/11 was about American power, conceded the magazine’s Lawrence F. Kaplan. But rather than dismantling it, the time had come to “wield it effectively in the coming struggle.” Rejecting Sontag ensured that no one could respectably argue that stopping the next 9/11 required relinquishing American hegemony. Anything resembling that suggestion would be considered not only anti-American but morally deficient. “In the wake of a massacre that killed more than 5,000 innocent Americans in a single day,” Krauthammer sniffed, “one might expect moral clarity.”
That funneled American responses to 9/11 down a bellicose and censorious path. The country star Toby Keith released an anthem heralding the epic ass-kicking coming “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue.” It captured the national mood. People in uniform, from the military to police to firefighters, were valorized to the point of civic worship, an impulse most conspicuous in those whose lives intersected with such people rarely. To criticize the national mobilization was to disrespect the troops, to disrespect the 9/11 dead. The Strokes, on the cusp of contending for the title of the city’s dominant rock band, pulled their September debut album to remove a song whose chorus went “New York City cops, but they ain’t too smart.” Being Muslim in public was treated as a disreputable political act. Harvard’s 2002 valedictorian, Zayed M. Yasin, was compelled to change the title of a speech about justice from “American Jihad” to “Of Faith and Citizenship”; students protested Yasin anyway. In the months after 9/11, Didion, taking the banner from the canceled Sontag, wrote that “inquiry into the nature of the enemy we faced . . . was to be interpreted as sympathy for that enemy. . . . Pathetic fallacy was everywhere.”
One such fallacy concerned the Qatar-based Arabic-language satellite news channel Al Jazeera. In the months following 9/11, al‑Qaeda issued its communiques through the channel. Osama bin Laden even granted its Taysir Allouni an interview in October 2001. For years afterward, American political and media classes treated Al Jazeera, a news organization, as little more than al‑Qaeda’s amplifier, providing critical aid to an enemy. That meant treating Al Jazeera not primarily as a forum where the War on Terror was treated more critically than most, but as a combatant. When the U.S. invaded Afghanistan in November, it bombed Al Jazeera’s bureau in Kabul and said it had indications that the building was “a known al‑Qaeda facility.” The next month, Pentagon communications chief Victoria Clarke claimed that the U.S. did not have indications that the channel operated out of the building, though Al Jazeera had said it provided the Americans with their location.
During the apogee of American geopolitical supremacy in the 1990s, national politics had devolved into a culture war. Now elites, needing to make 9/11 meaningful, treated the trauma as a path to a longed-for national unity. Commentators spoke of a frivolous “holiday from history” coming to a close, as if the country were a young man recognizing the need to put aside childish things. “One good thing could come from this horror,” wrote Roger Rosenblatt in Time, “it could spell the end of the age of irony.” Now it would be an age of iron.
It was in this context—outwardly receiving deference from a frightened public; threatened with scapegoating for 9/11 by fearful politicians; expected to act as an instrument of both vengeance and deterrence—that the Security State constructed what became known as the War on Terror. Its name reflected what both Sontag and Didion had diagnosed: exceptionalist euphemism that masked a boundless, direful ambition.
Product details
- ASIN : B08NFTPQDP
- Publisher : Viking (August 10, 2021)
- Publication date : August 10, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 3343 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 446 pages
- Lending : Not Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #124,933 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #43 in Terrorism (Kindle Store)
- #87 in 21st Century History of the U.S.
- #150 in Terrorism (Books)
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In his acknowledgements section, the author allows that he did not include some topics in this book by reason of word count limitations and the requirements of his thesis. He says that if people think he missed some topics in this book, they are more than free to write about such topics themselves. One subject that was not covered by the author but which I think illustrates well the War on Terror’s barbarism leading the road to Trump is the nature of the November 2004 retaking of Fallujah. While most of the city’s population fled, the US military committed such crimes as preventing several hundred military age males from leaving the city, invaded Fallujah General Hospital and forced staff and patients to lie tied up on the ground, having a policy of shooting on sight any military age male out after dark and unleashing radioactive ordnance on the city which has subsequently caused an epidemic of childhood leukemia. The author mentions none of this, though he mentions US casualties in the operation. Another subject ignored by the author is the fact that a major part of the 2007-08 Surge in Iraq was based on the violence of ethnic cleansing between Shiite and Sunni. The author discusses the Surge but doesn’t mention this fact.
Despite my feeling that the author occasionally takes too much space giving rather obvious and overly labored retellings of certain events of the War on Terror, I think the book has enough good qualities for me to give it four stars. The book’s accounts of specific domestic and international incidents during the War on Terror generally combine well, by the time one is done with the book, to validate the author’s arguments about the barbarities of the War on Terror paving the way for Trump--well as the War’s erosion of basic civil liberties.
Perhaps the book’s biggest virtue is recounting of incidents related to the War on Terror which are relatively unknown to the public. Here is an account of some of those unknown incidents as well as some of the other points made by the book:
--Trump was not an anti-militarist opponent of the War on Terror as some claimed. His position was that the War should be conducted without any pretense of civilized restraint in terms of the air war, interrogation through torture or other tactics in dealing with suspected terrorists. He argued that family members of the latter should be murdered. According to a December 2020 study, civilian casualties in Afghanistan increased 330 percent through Trump’s bombing campaign. Trump sent an additional 14,000 troops to the Middle East in 2019 to ramp up the pressure on Iran, a campaign which culminated in the assassination of Qassem Soleimani. Soleimani, the author observes, had been an unofficial ally of the US in Iraq in fighting ISIS.
--The Bush administration authorized torture on detainees at official facilities like Guantanamo Bay as well as at black sites scattered around the world. Other detainees were handed over to allied governments for torture. The legal justification for torture was addressed by the 2002 memo of John Yoo and Jay Bybee which argued that any treatment of detainees which did not cause death or organ failure was not torture. The author refers to the death from hypothermia of Gul Rahman at the Kabul Salt Pit in November 2002. Rahman was suspected of knowing something about the Taliban and his dead body was found chained naked to a wall. He had also been subjected to forced sleep deprivation, auditory overload, cold showers and other scientific methods of torture recommended by the eminent psychologists Bruce Jessen and James Mitchell. In 2002-03 Abu Zabaydah was tortured with water boarding—while his interrogators guffawed and made fun of his suffering--and forced stress positions at a black site in Thailand which was soon overseen by Trump’s future CIA director Gina Haspel. Zabaydah seems to have been at most someone who facilitated travel to a terror training camp in eastern Afghanistan before 9/11 and not the top Al Qaeda commander which the US government claimed. In an endnote the author notes that the US government eventually backed away from claiming that Zabaydah was a top Al Qaeda commander. Abdel Rahim Al Nishiri apparently had something to do with the attack on the USS Cole in October 2020 and provided actionable intelligence on his first day in captivity. However, he was waterboarded anyway and subjected to other fun such as being suspended in the air with his hands tied and raised behind his back. Other detainees had rape threats against their mothers. One guy at Guantanamo was put in a boat, had ice put in his jacket and beaten while being interrogated by Richard Zulay, who had been a notoriously racist Chicago cop. Overall, the US tortured 119 individuals during the Bush administration and facilitated the torture of many more by sending them on extraordinary renditions to ally Middle Eastern dictatorships and other countries. The Guantanamo detainees were presented in demonized fashion to the American public as being the most beastly terrorist but the author notes that many, perhaps most only had nebulous connections to the terrorists. The author notes that a claim about Saddam’s regime training Al Qaeda in chemical weapons appeared in Colin Powell’s infamous February 2003 presentation to the UN—however, as the Senate Intelligence Committee confirmed in 2006, the detainee Ibn Shaikh Al-Libi told his interrogators this so they wouldn’t torture him.
--Details on the ordeal of Adham Hassoun are scattered throughout this book. Hassoun was imprisoned for 18 years after 9/11 by US authorities. He was a victim of the tightening of guilt by association penalties for donating money to charities that the US government alleged to have terrorist links. The links Hassoun had during the 90’s had been legal at the time. Hassoun was accused of providing material support for Jose Padilla’s journey to Afghanistan. Padilla was a member of Hassoun’s Mosque and Hassoun had encouraged him to accept an offer from another member of the congregation to travel to Egypt so Padilla could rejuvenate his troubled life. Hassoun was blocked from presenting evidence that another man had sent Padilla to Afghanistan and not him. The evidentiary standard used by the federal government in the 2007 trial was demonstrated by the following: introducing a late 90’s CNN interview of Osama Bin Laden because Hassoun was wiretapped during the late 90’s as saying he would watch the interview. The prosecution led by future Trump Labor Secretary Alex Acosta claimed that Hassoun’s decision to watch the Bin Laden interview illustrated his state of mind at the time i.e. pro Al Qaeda. The prosecution also claimed that a discussion Hassoun participated in about aiding Kosovo refugees was actually code for planning violent jihad and that Hassoun’s instructions to another to “go and smell some fresh air “was code for “travelling to a jihad area.” The prosecution argued that Hassoun’s refusal to talk with the FBI in June 2002 was evidence of his commitment to religious extremism. The Trump administration tried to keep him in prison indefinitely, but their case was destroyed when they admitted that a jailhouse snitch (Shane Ramsundar) against Hassoun had told virtually the same tale about Hassoun as the snitch had told about a prisoner in another case. The US government released him and deported him to Rwanda.
--The first drone strike launched under Obama’s regime, on January 23, 2009, killed 9 civilians and severely injured the teenage Faheem Qureshi, who remained in a coma for forty days. In another case, in March 2011 a tribal jirga council in rural Pakistan considering the disposition of a chromite mine was attacked by a US drone, killing forty people. The author talks extensively about Obama’s drone policy.
The book contains extensive coverage of the issue of NSA spying on American phone calls and e-mails after 9/11. He starts with the launching of STELLARWIND after 9/11, moves through Edward Snowden’s revelations and ends (more or less) with the 2018 congressional authorization (with Congressional Democrats leading the way) to extend Patriot Act surveillance powers for Trump, despite the often-repeated Democratic belief that Trump was a unique threat to the Constitution.
--The WikiLeaks revelations produced by Chelsea Manning are also referenced. Manning’s document dump including revelations of US war crimes. The author notes that in a secret 2011 Pentagon study, it was concluded that Manning’s links presented no real threat to national security.
--A few war crimes that the US committed are mentioned including the murder for sport of an Iraqi civilian by soldiers under the command of Colonel Nathan Sassaman, former Quarterback of West Point. Sassaman was kicked out of the army because of his attempt to cover up the atrocity but was not imprisoned. Another is the torture of an Iraqi policeman by Lieutenant Colonel Allen West, who was most recently the chair of the Texas Republican Party and who called for succession from the US after Trump failed to steal the election.
--The author has written for several publications about Russiagate issues. He writes that Trump’s right-wing supporters ignored a second report by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz which stated that the FBI’s stretching of the truth in securing additional FISA Court surveillance authority on Carter Page was quite typical of FBI operations during the War on Terror. Of course, right wing Trump fans have never had any interest in the violation of rights committed against Muslims or any people of color. They tend to support violation of such rights.
--The author notes that Michael Flynn saw no contradiction between posing as a heroic enemy of the Islamist menace while serving—immediately before he went into the Trump administration—as an un-registered agent for Erdogan’s Islamist regime in Turkey, being paid around half a million dollars for his labor.
--The author writes about the conflict involving the CIA, the Obama administration, and the Senate Intelligence Committee over the release of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s report on CIA torture in 2015.
--The author places the War on Terror as part of white supremacy and settler colonialism. One of the points he makes in this regard is how the US treats white terrorists like Timothy McVeigh versus Muslim terrorists.
--The book mentions the schism within Salafist Islam because of the emergence of ISIS.
--The book also quotes General Stanley McChrystal as writing that Islam did not substantially fuel the Iraqi insurgency against the American occupation. Islam served as an amorphous unifying banner, but Iraqi rebels were more deeply affected by issues like US support for dictatorships like in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
--The author writes that Bush’s Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA in Iraq allowed $8.8 billion to go missing and unaccounted for by the time Paul Bremer resigned as CPA chief. He also quotes the Texas businessman Howard Lowry who said he provided Blackwater soldiers in Iraq with steroids “by the case.” Blackwater soldiers would consume large amounts of cocaine and hashish and run around naked. They’d go out to balconies in the Green Zone, scream and fire AK-47’s in the air.
--The book states that Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR), the subsidiary of Dick Cheney’s Haliburton, built barracks in Iraq for the 101st Airborne Division that cost twice as much if the division had built the barracks themselves.
For sourcing, the author relies heavily on mainstream news reports—including a few of his own written for such outlets as the Guardian and the Daily Beast—as well as some primary sources like congressional documents and a personal interview or two. The endnotes are not numbered in the text but listed by chapter at the book’s end.
If you are left of center and part of the "#Resistance", you'll find yourself vigorously nodding in agreement to everything, regardless of the fact that at this point it reads more like propaganda or a liberal fantasy that sees bogeymen in everyone that isn't "left" enough. If you are right of center, I'd be surprised if you can actually finish this book.
Frustratingly, the final chapter concerning the pandemic, 2020 election, and the Jan 6 assault on the Capitol felt rushed and somewhat disjointed from the rest of the book as well.
If you want to read something that simply aligns to your worldview but won't help expand it, this is for you. If you want more nuance or objective reporting, you'd be better served by reading "Trumpocracy", "Dark Territory" and "Relentless Strike" to understand the War on Terror, the rise of mass surveillance, and Trump's rise to power.
Although I'm still skeptical about some of the left's over-enthusiastic use of white supremacy as some sort of Dan Brown key to all of history, I have to admit that Ackerman makes an extremely compelling case that racism constitutes one of the most important threads of the process of deterioration and destabilization that he describes.
What I'm still working to digest is how we can make sense out of all this. It's strange to have this sort of intense fracturing of a democracy without any ideological substance whatsoever. The Civil War happened because there was an underlying problem of slavery that couldn't be ignored. The strife of 1968 was about the war in Vietnam, which in turn sprung from the conflict with communism. But the post-9/11 breakdowns in our democracy seem to be completely self-inflicted wounds arising from problems that essentially required no response whatsoever. Maybe the lesson is just that tribalism, panic, and self-deception are elemental forces in and of themselves.
If he had minimized the political posturing, it could have been an interesting and helpful look at a fascinating and important period, which would have made it a book worth buying and reading. sadly, this was a missed opportunity. (It is spun so hard you might want to avoid reading it in a swivel chair without a seat belt.)














