I expected this book, published 2000, to suffer the fate of many books of its kind. namely, that it was published before that fabled september morning that "changed everything."
it is a testament to feher's analytical rigor that it does not. that, or perhaps the events of the "arab spring" and the NATO 'intervention' in libya put paid to that always ridiculous notion that 9/11 changed everything. maybe for those that werent paying attention, but i digress.
reading this book during the aforementioned uprisings, was an interesting and illuminating exercise in cognitive frission. situations and terminology detonate like air-to-surface missiles in this new theatre of operations of the mind, shaping new configurations that reveal that the old and busted is once again the new hotness when it comes to the realpolitik machinations of the "international community".
but where the book really comes through is in its clear-eyed and fair critique of the oppositional response the praxis of power. both the liberal anti-war left and the radical anti-imperialist fractions are taken to task for their limpid response to the end of the cold war and their inability to adapt to the new conditions.
indeed, although it is now 10+ years old, the last chapter is an excellent jumping off point for all the ballers and brawlers that want to be shot-callers in the internationalist thunderdome.