Tuesday, April 11, 2006

MORE PRAISE FOR "OVERTHROW - AMERICA'S CENTURY OF REGIME CHANGE - FROM HAWAI`I TO IRAQ"

Here's a brief except of a review by Kelly McEvers, a fellow at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.

"To be shocked and awed by history is not a common reading experience.

One usually reserves such reactions for edgy fiction, juicy memoirs or newsy exposes.

Yet Stephen Kinzer's "Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change From Hawaii to Iraq" is as gripping as any of these.

The book is more than just a retelling of American intervention abroad: rogue diplomats and covert agents, a malleable press, ignorance of local cultures, the influence of multinational corporations, the rhetoric of American righteousness.

What's new here is how adeptly Kinzer draws the dotted line from each story to the next.

The result is that while it may seem as if a new foreign-policy doctrine fueled the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, justifications for American-sponsored "regime change" date back more than 100 years.

Each of the book's cautionary tales -- set in the Pacific, the Caribbean, Central and South America, Southeast Asia and the Middle East -- repeat the same suspect themes and in some cases the same suspect characters.

Kinzer begins his indictment in 1893, when American diplomats, missionaries and sugar planters orchestrated the overthrow of Hawaii's monarchy and installed as president Sanford Dole, who later helped build a family fruit empire.

It was the beginning of America's expansionist-imperialist age, an age "propelled largely by the search for resources, markets, and commercial opportunities" and the "missionary instinct" to improve the lives of faraway people...."

Here's Where To Read The Entire Reveiw
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/04/09/RVGNSGUDRI1.DTL