01 December 2010

Chalmers Johnson

Excerpts from an obituary in the NYT:
Chalmers Johnson, an Asian studies scholar who stirred controversy with books contending that the United States was trying to create a global empire and was paying a stiff price for it, died Saturday at his home in Cardiff-by-the Sea, Calif. He was 79...

Dr. Johnson, who considered himself a longtime cold warrior, was a consultant to the Central Intelligence Agency for many years. But after the collapse of the Soviet Union he became concerned that the United States was increasingly using its military presence to gain power over the global economy...

In “Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire” (Metropolitan Books, 2000), Dr. Johnson wondered why America’s military spending continued to rise after the cold war had ended. He concluded that through a network of more than 700 strategic bases around the world, the United States was committed to creating global hegemony. And he worried about the consequences for American democracy...

Dr. Johnson said that “blowback” means more than a negative, sometimes violent reaction to United States policy. “It refers to retaliation for the numerous illegal operations we have carried out abroad that were kept totally secret from the American public,” he wrote.

“This means that when the retaliation comes, as it did so spectacularly on Sept. 11, 2001, the American public is unable to put the events in context. So they tend to support acts intended to lash out against the perpetrators, thereby most commonly preparing the ground for yet another cycle of blowback.”
More at the link. I've requested the book from the library. Has anyone read it?

Photo: K. Amemiya/Henry Holt and Company

2 comments:

  1. No, I haven't read it; but it's now at the top of my reading list!

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  2. I read all of Mr. Johnson's books and he has a very strong case as to the number one problem effecting America today.
    With talk of cutting social security and other entitlement programs in the news lately due to the deficit, there is no talk of closing some of the 800 bases the US has around the world. In Italy alone there are over 40 US bases that should be closed.
    If you don't know about it, the problem does not exist. More people should read Sorrows of Empire and Nemesis, for future historians, these books will surely be used as primarly source documents in explaining the decline of the American Empire.

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