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Blueprint for an American Empire

By Greg Grandin, AlterNet. Posted September 27, 2006.


U.S. interventions in Latin America have served as the training grounds for White House military theorists to practice their imperial designs on the rest of the world.
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Editor's note: This is an edited excerpt from Greg Grandin's new book, "Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism."

For many of the policy and opinion makers who seized on 9/11 to promote their vision of an imperial America, placing the nation on a permanent war footing was as much a form of domestic collective therapy as it was an international crusade to reshape the world. “Nothing less than the soul of this country is at stake,” Norman Podhoretz wrote a month after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. “Nothing less than an unambiguous victory will save us from yet another disappointment in ourselves and another despairing disillusion with our leaders.” The attacks provided a chance for Americans who “crave ‘a new birth’ of the confidence we used to have in ourselves and in ‘America the Beautiful.’” Such desires to overcome the factionalism and disenchantment that had plagued America since the 1960s were not confined to the political right, as many liberals likewise hungered for a renewed sense of national purpose. The New Republic’s Peter Beinart, for instance, called on Democrats to join the struggle against Islamic fascism and to rediscover their “fighting faith” in political liberalism. For their part, essayists Max Boot and Charles Krauthammer have expressed optimism that the brutality of a protracted global war on terrorism would finally form a callus over the national psyche, dulling the undue sensitivity to pain that spread in the wake of Vietnam.

But decades before 9/11 raised hopes that a galvanized domestic constituency for perpetual war could at last be forged, Reagan’s Central American policy offered the opportunity to contain, and begin to roll back, the anti-militarism that had infected U.S. political culture and institutions since the Vietnam War. More than any other 20th century conflict, Vietnam highlighted the porous border between foreign and domestic policy. Escalating protest, much of it linked to a reinvigorated internationalism, not only helped end the war but led to legislative measures that curbed the power of government security institutions, most notably the Central Intelligence Agency. At home, a deep skepticism shattered the governing consensus that had held sway for the first two decades after World War II. In what seemed a remarkably short period of time, the institutional pillars of society—universities, churches, newspapers, movies, Congress, and the judiciary—that had previously buttressed government legitimacy began to lean against it, advancing what some conservative critics came to deride as a permanent “adversary culture.” It was not just military defeat that brought about such a turnaround but also revelations of brutality committed throughout the Third World in the name of national security and of perfidy conducted under the cloak of government secrecy and executive privilege.

By the end of the 1980s, defense intellectuals and activists had achieved a revolution in the mechanics and morals of special warfare doctrine abroad. But for their revolution to take hold, they knew they had to confront this culture of dissent at home. In the face of persistent and growing opposition to U.S. policies in El Salvador and Nicaragua, militarists countered with a series of actions that eroded the boundary between imperial policies and national politics. Making little distinction between foreign enemies and domestic opponents, the Reagan administration put in place what one government official described as a “psychological operation of the kind the military conducts to influence a population in denied or enemy territory.” The operation unfolded on three fronts.

First, to confront an adversarial press, tame a presumptuous Congress, and make inroads on college campuses, the administration orchestrated a sophisticated and centralized “public diplomacy” campaign that deployed techniques drawn from both the PR world and the intelligence community. Second, the White House either loosened or circumvented restrictions placed on domestic law-and-order surveillance operations against political dissidents, reviving tactics that the FBI and other intelligence agencies had used to intimidate the anti-war movement in the 1960s, tactics that were thought to have been repudiated by the Rockefeller Committee and other congressional investigations into domestic covert actions in the mid-1970s. Finally, and most consequentially, the administration built countervailing grassroots support to counter what seemed a permanently entrenched anti-imperialist opposition, mobilizing militarists and evangelicals on behalf of a hard-line foreign policy. Such a campaign allowed the White House to go forward with its Central American program. More critically, it also helped create the ideas and infrastructure that turned the Republican Party into a mass movement and transformed the New Right into the dominant political force in America today.

Media education

In January 1983, Reagan signed National Security Decision Directive 77, creating a domestic interagency task force “designed to generate support for our national security objectives.” Five months later, the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean was born under the direction of Cuban émigré Otto Reich.


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Greg Grandin teaches Latin American history at New York University and is the author of a number of books, including the just published "Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism."

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And what about the "free" trade sellout deals.
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 27, 2006 12:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Without them, the White House and their rubber-stamp slave dogs in Congress and the Senate wouldn't be continuing it. Both parties are responsible for this kind of pathetic neoliberal ideology as are the neoconservatives for being the warmongers they've shown themselves to have been for 6 years or even 26 to be honest.

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Architecture
Posted by: talkville on Sep 27, 2006 12:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The 'blueprint' (or nowadays the 'model') was produced as far back as the post WWII era. We're already involved in a much advanced construction phase of the project. I'm fairly sure the top floors are already reserved.

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» RE: Architecture Posted by: logansafi
buildup
Posted by: rsaxto on Sep 27, 2006 2:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So the deliberate buildup of terrorist enemies began with Reagan and continues at fever pitch in the Bushies who are using the Iraq war to make terrorists even more potent. Remove our troops from Iraq for they are only making terrorists more experienced and capable. The Bushie idiots are destroying democracies instead of building them. Like the Moonies the Bushies are Loonies.

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time to wake up
Posted by: Rshaw on Sep 27, 2006 4:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's time to wake everyone up - spread this and other independent media to everyone you know. This is how we change the country.

Find a list of other independent new sources HERE


And get updates from a diverse group of independent news providers HERE

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How much more
Posted by: harris on Sep 27, 2006 9:45 AM   
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nazi sounding can a name be than "Otto Reich"?!

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Spotlight Should Shine on Bankers
Posted by: StuartH on Sep 27, 2006 1:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone reading this should think about their savings,
and find someone with savings to talk about this with.

Every S&L in the US has been involved, whether any
savings account holders know it or not, in financing
the adventures of empire builders in Latin and South
America.

Loan Syndications are put together by the largest
multinational banks under a Federal authority. The
most an individual bank can loan is strictly regulated,
so that savings can be protected. However, banks
can join together and create massive loans that
might involve forty of fifty banks.

These tend to be hundreds of millions or billions,
with a payback period that can be 200 years (yes,
that is two centuries) or perhaps longer.

The concern with stability of the government that
these loans are made to (usually for government
owned enterprises like iron mining or sugar
refining) leads bankers to conclude (they are
after all, elitists) that the more authoritarian
governments are the best ones to do business
with. The WTO most likely arose to ensure that
some backup plan for enforcement was in place.

The history of Loan Syndications probably goes
back to around the time of the Nixon administration
but the involvement of elite bankers in Latin and
South American affairs goes back a good deal
further than that.

Take the case of the United Fruit company in
Guatemala. Through the 1930s and '40s the
company had worked through corrupt officials
and Presidents to wrest land away from the
local peasants who had worked tribal land
holdings since ancient times. By the '50s, a
Presidential candidate arose who promised
land reform - getting the peasants their land
back.

United Fruit convinced Washington that this
traditional tribal outlook was communism,
and caused the CIA to be put to work in
overthrowing the democratically elected
government. The result was a civil war in
which the military dicatorship, in order to
hang on to office, resorted to murdering
tens of thousands of citizens.

The NeoCons apparently draw the lesson
from this history that it needs to be more
aggressively pursued and that we as
Americans must shed our sensitivity to
tyranny.

Does anybody here think it merely a
coincidence that Wolfowitz was given the
World Bank position by Bush?

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Let's get someplace nice to visit
Posted by: eddie torres on Sep 27, 2006 4:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great work, but can't someone persuade the key actors to conquer something pretty, like Salvador or Recife? Nicaragua and Guatemala are such armpits.

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» Key "actors" indeed Posted by: thoughtcriminal
Manifest Destiny
Posted by: lafrance on Sep 27, 2006 5:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This country has been in love with Manifest Destiny since the Mexican War. During the 1980s it was the Phillipines. Whenever we get involved in dreams of Manifest Destiny it's to overpower the cultures of darker races. We never beat our chests talking about manifest denstiny in overpowering european countries. Or canada.
And it's always okay to do torture to these races but, not to the whiter races.
You have to wonder...

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» RE: Manifest Destiny Posted by: Melvin
There's always a smoke screen.........
Posted by: Smiggsy on Sep 27, 2006 7:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are probably 1000s of reasons why the US gov't acts & dictates which & what to other less fortunate nations. Unless you are a "fly on the wall", who really knows of why the US gov't behaves like a degenerative, being immorally disruptive & constantly causing global chaos with its head-in-the sand tactics. Unfortunately it cannot all be blamed on immaturity or stupidity. Pure greed is a good start. Jesus would see the USA not as good christians but an absolute disgrace (there's a bumper sticker..) Has anybody in the good ole US looked at themselves in the mirror lately?

The beauty of propaganda is that nobody really knows the reasons why many things happen until the dusts of history & time work through the science & facts. Did anybody know what a dinosaur bone was when first they were initially dug out of the soil (golly wow, a giant dog-bone?) Before it was acknowledged that giant lizards once roamed the planet it would have been a long-shot guess at best.

We are all still guessing at the reasons behind Bush Snr this & Bush Jnr that & the other. Though this does not excuse the Bush Executive for their inexcusable & abhorrent behaviour.

Given that they all represent YOU, it is ultimately the fault of the american populas. Stop slinging around the mud & grow a pair - kick the cabal of theives & cretons out of the executive you bunch of morons. Did anybody in the 1920's predict the rise of hitler & the nazi party? BTW does anybody notice how companies like IBM, Dupont, BMW & so on (the Bush Family Trust) thrive in these evil circumstances......same shit sandwich, different era.

Ain't life interesting in hindsight........

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Every Empire has its own Caligula
Posted by: ng1944 on Sep 28, 2006 10:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This Empire will come to an end as any other
corrupted Empire.
Eventually madness prevails and
we have Dubua as result.

(Caligula probably turning in his grave
to be compared with W)

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Damn, we’re smart.
Posted by: shangrilalad on Sep 29, 2006 6:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How is it that with the rabid right’s endless and overwhelming brainwashing campaign going on, so many of us can still recognize truth from lies?

We have no political leaders or media organizations even attempting to oppose this fascist behemoth, and yet we courageously resist on an individual level.

Talk about David and Goliath.

Give yourselves a pat on the back, progressives.

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Wrong! They could careless about America
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Oct 1, 2006 7:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Their goal is self-aggrandisment of their personal and corporate fortunes (many of which initially were made in Europe and are now trans-national entities.) They have no loyality to the USA. Otherwise why the open-borders, elimination our civil rights, making profiling (that is identifying the proper targets) illegal, allowing our enviroment to be polluted, selling our jobs overseas, and allowing foreign countries to, essestially buy out the US (they buy all our bonds and securities. Oh yeah, let's not forget eminent domain, the NAFTA 'super' highway, the devaluation of the dollar, and the purposeful dumbing down of our children by poor school funding, political correct indoctrination instead of teaching math/science, etc etc.

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