The book is split into three parts: Governments America overthrew in the pre-WW2 multi-polar world, governments overthrown in the Cold War era, and modern ‘regime changes’ in the unipolar world we live in today. Throughout the book, Kinzer does well retelling the basic facts about the conflicts he focuses on. However, his critiques and commentary reek of American apologetics. In the first section, he doesn’t really question the Monroe doctrine as the basis of American foreign policy, he doesn’t mention multiple instances of regime change that he just ignores, and downplays the impact of American imperialism on places like Hawaii and Puerto Rico. In the second section, Kinzer avoids critiquing the foreign policies like the domino theory that led to disastrous interventions, and hand waves invasions like Granada by saying “American needed a win”. In the final section, Kinzer is writing from 2006 and giving America a pat on the back for the interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq very prematurely. In all, this is a good list of the facts of many of America’s crimes, but I’d recommend the wikipedia list of American interventions as a better starting point.
Here’s some quotes that were the worst culprits:
“Most people on the islands, however, are pleased with the way their history has turned out. They enjoy the prosperity and freedom that comes with American citizenship, and especially with statehood. Their experience suggests that when the United States assumes real responsibility for territories it seizes, it can lead them toward stability and happiness. In Hawaii, it did that slowly and often reluctantly. The revolution of 1893 and the annexation that followed undermined a culture and ended the life of a nation. Compared to what such operations have brought to other countries, though, this one ended well.”
This is uttered only a page after he points out that only 10% of the population of Hawaii is Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander. So of course a majority of Hawaii’s population is pleased with the way history turned out - they aren’t Hawaiian. A few pages later, Kinzer discusses the resource extraction and spread of unemployment, illiteracy, and disease directly connected to the occupation of Puerto Rico - did the United States not assume real responsibility there?
"As colonial experiments go, American rule over Puerto Rico has been relatively benign. It did not produce the violent backlash that emerged in countries like Cuba, Nicaragua, and the Philippines. This is due mainly to the fact that the United States agreed to take direct political responsibility for governing Puerto Rico, rather than ruling it through local clients."
Patently false. I’d recommend “War against all Puerto Ricans” by Nelson A. Denis which discusses the four-year insurgency - where US forces bombed a Puerto Rican town from the air, and attempted assassination of the US president by Puerto Rican nationals.
Despite being a history of American regime change, Kinzer fails to discuss the occupations of Mexico in 1917, Haiti, or the Dominican Republic - all of which had regime change objectives. Kinzer also victim-blames nations ruined by American interventions and crony capitalism. “Honduras today faces a nightmare of poverty, violence, and instability. Hondurans bear part of the blame for this heartrending situation, but Americans cannot escape their share.” The American share was occupations in 1903, 1907, 1911, 1912, 1919, 1924 and 1925, and United Fruit continued to support dictators and coups throughout the 20th century.
“Two facts, however, snarl back at those who condemn this invasion [Granada]. First, there was a possibility, albeit remote, that New Jewel leaders who were crazy enough to massacre their own longtime comrades might also have been crazy enough to commit some outrage against Americans. Second, by 1983 the United States had been seared by a decade of defeats and humiliations, from Saigon to Tehran to Managua. Many Americans were eager to reverse that trend and had voted for Ronald Reagan because he pledged to do so. They wanted a victory. When Marxist fanatics in Grenada gave Reagan a chance to score one, he did not hesitate.”
Yes I understand you condemn this invasion, but did you ever think of the fact that Americans wanted a victory?
“A century of American "regime change" operations has shown that the United States is singularly unsuited to ruling foreign lands. Americans never developed either the imperial impulse or the attention span that allowed the Spanish, British, French, and others to seize foreign lands and run them for decades or centuries.”
This quote oddly slips into tacit approval of European colonization?
“Americans who think about and make foreign policy have traditionally been Eurocentric. Most of what they understand about the world comes from their knowledge of European history and diplomatic tradition. They grasp the nature of alliances, big-power rivalries, and wars of conquest. The passionate desire of people in poor countries to assert control over their natural resources, however, has never been an issue in Europe. This hugely powerful phenomenon, which pushed developing countries into conflict with the United States during the Cold War, lay completely outside the experience of most American leaders. Henry Kissinger spoke for them, eloquently as always, after Chilean foreign minister Gabriel Valdés accused him of knowing nothing about the Southern Hemisphere. "No, and I don't care," Kissinger replied.”
“John Foster Dulles, Henry Kissinger, and others who shaped United States foreign policy during the Cold War were utterly uninterested in the details of life in individual countries, and cared not the slightest whether the regimes that ruled them were dictatorships, democracies, or something in between. Their world was defined by a single fact, the Cold War confrontation between Moscow and Washington. Nations existed for them not as entities with unique histories, cultures, and challenges but as battlegrounds in a global life-or-death struggle. All that mattered was how vigorously each country supported the United States and opposed the Soviet Union.”
Unsurprisingly, this book made me angry; America has a long history of making the world a worse place for others. But I had expected that by the late date of 2006 we were done trying to make excuses for it. In true journalistic form, Kinzer takes the neutral stance on America’s history of overthrowing governments. But as pointed out in “The View from Somewhere,” journalistic neutrality only shields the powerful. You would think that after researching and writing a 300 page book about the sins of America in the last century, you would have to at least condemn these acts, not just lukewarmly recount them.
“The American invasion of Afghanistan produced a supremely positive result, the destruction of a regime that had allowed anti-Western terrorists to train and plot freely.”
My problem with the third section can be summed up in this: Copyright 2006. Kinzer is writing about the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan as if they were complete. This is 15 years before the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan and the return of the Taliban to power, 5 years before the first withdrawal from Iraq, 9 years before the second intervention in Iraq, and 11 years before the second draw down. Without the room for the dust to settle, his positivity for democracy in Afghanistan and mission accomplished in Iraq seems naive at the end of a book chronicling American failures in regime change.
“Americans have a spectacularly successful story to tell the world, and the world, despite its growing resentment of the United States, is still eager to hear it. As American presidents have invested hundreds of billions of dollars in weaponry and other blunt tools, however, they have systematically closed American diplomatic posts, libraries, and cultural centers around the world. During the Cold War, millions of people were exposed to American ideals through this dense information network, and many came to admire the United States deeply. Once the Cold War ended, Americans seemed to believe that they no longer needed to teach anyone about their way of life. They came to accept two great fallacies. First, they assumed that the collapse of Communism would lead people around the world to agree that the American political and economic model was best for everyone. Second, they imagined that their overwhelming military power would allow them to crush any power that dissented from this consensus.”
“If it were possible to control the course of world events by deposing foreign governments, the United States would be unchallenged. It has deposed far more of them than any other modern nation. The stories of what has happened in the aftermath of these operations, however, make clear that Americans do not know what to do with countries after removing their leaders. They easily succumb to the temptation to stage coups or invasions but turn quickly away when the countries where they intervene fall into misery and repression.”
There was a cognitive dissonance to this book that really feels like a relic of the “They hate us because of our freedom” Era post-9/11. Millions were exposed to American ideals, but I also just spent 300 pages outlining the death and destruction we wrought. They admire us - well except for the countries discussed in this book that tried to wrest some control back from US corporations and got coup’d for it. I do wonder what this book would be like written now, nearly 20 years later - and by someone not from America. It would be a vastly different book.