Summary:
Few Americans today understand how the United States came to be owned by a London-backed neoconservative/right-wing alliance that grew out of the institutional turmoil of the post-Vietnam era. Even fewer understand how its internal mission to maintain the remnants of the old British Empire gradually overcame American democracy and replaced it with a “national security” bureaucracy of its own design.... Weekend reading, if you like intrigue.Disclaimer: I can't voucher for the factual claims, but I assume that the Counterpunch editors did due diligence before accepting it.CounterpunchThe Grand Illusion of Imperial Power Paul Fitzgerald and Elizabeth Gould
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: American Empire, British Empire
This could be interesting, too:
Few Americans today understand how the United States came to be owned by a London-backed neoconservative/right-wing alliance that grew out of the institutional turmoil of the post-Vietnam era. Even fewer understand how its internal mission to maintain the remnants of the old British Empire gradually overcame American democracy and replaced it with a “national security” bureaucracy of its own design.... Weekend reading, if you like intrigue.Disclaimer: I can't voucher for the factual claims, but I assume that the Counterpunch editors did due diligence before accepting it.CounterpunchThe Grand Illusion of Imperial Power Paul Fitzgerald and Elizabeth Gould
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: American Empire, British Empire
This could be interesting, too:
Mike Norman writes “America Exists Today to Make War” — Lawrence Wilkerson on Endless War & American Empire
Mike Norman writes The Empire, Trump and Intra-Ruling Class Conflict — Gary Olson
Mike Norman writes The Great Switch: The Geo-Politics of Looming Recession — Alastair Crooke
Mike Norman writes Pepe Escobar — How to kill 10 million Afghans and not win
Few Americans today understand how the United States came to be owned by a London-backed neoconservative/right-wing alliance that grew out of the institutional turmoil of the post-Vietnam era. Even fewer understand how its internal mission to maintain the remnants of the old British Empire gradually overcame American democracy and replaced it with a “national security” bureaucracy of its own design....Weekend reading, if you like intrigue.
Disclaimer: I can't voucher for the factual claims, but I assume that the Counterpunch editors did due diligence before accepting it.
Counterpunch
The Grand Illusion of Imperial Power
Paul Fitzgerald and Elizabeth Gould