Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic (71 page)

BOOK: Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic
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Wald, Charles,
137

Wall Street Journal
,
275
–76

war,
274
,
279
.
See also
preemptive or preventive war

      of choice,
20
–22

      Congress and,
16
,
253

      liberty and,
18
,
62

      powers of presidency and,
249
–53

War Crimes Act (1996),
37

war crimes tribunals,
39
–40,
200
–201

Warden, John A., III,
27

Warner, John W.,
34
,
45

War of the Triple Alliance (1865-70),
170

war on drugs,
164
–65

war on terror,
35
–37,
91
,
99
,
152
,
164
,
167
–68,
199
,
231
–32,
244
–45,
255
,
261
,
275
–78

War Powers Act (1973),
13
,
250

Washington, George,
15
,
16

Washington Post
,
26
,
38
,
45
,
98
,
106
,
112
,
124
–26,
160
,
163
,
209
,
214
,
257

Wastrels of Defense
(Wheeler),
265
–66

Watergate scandal,
92
,
94
,
247
,
249

weapons.
See also
defense contractors; defense spending;
and specific weapons

      Afghanistan and,
113
–14,
116
–17

      corruption and,
229
–30

      domestic bases and,
138

      of mass destruction,
98
–100

      military Keynesianism and,
273
,
275
–76

      prepositioned,
147

      space and,
209
–18,
233
,
240
–42

Weekly Standard
,
38

Weiner, Tim,
135
,
209
–10

Weldon, Curt,
212

Weller, Jerry,
262

Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (
formerly
School of the Americas),
163

West Germany,
94

Westmoreland, William,
96
–97

Wheeler, Winslow,
265
–66

White, Thomas D.,
208

“White Man’s Burden, The” (Kipling),
74

Wicksell, Joshua,
52

Wiesbaden, Germany, military bases in,
153

Wilkes, Brent,
260
–62

Will, George,
244

Williams, Tennessee,
271

Wilson, Charlie,
113
–17,
175

Wilson, Joseph C.,
99
–100

Wilson, Woodrow,
244

Wilson v. Girard
,
175
–76

Wimert, Paul,
107

Wingo, Jonathan,
230

Winter, Bill,
14

Wireless World
,
238

wiretapping,
254
–56,
266

Wolfowitz, Paul,
29
,
58
,
191
,
208

Woodland, Timothy,
182
–84

Woodward, Bob,
38
,
95

Works Projects Administration,
272

World Bank,
81
,
164

World Factbook
,
167

World Is Flat, The
(Friedman),
80

World Policy Institute,
212
,
230

World Trade Center.
See
September
11
, 2001, attacks

World Trade Organization,
164

World War I,
20
,
46
,
87
,
244

World War II,
15
,
20
–21,
24
,
39
–40,
76
,
85
,
126
,
145
,
157
,
176
,
200
,
211
,
238
,
263
,
271
,
273
–74

“worldwide findings,”
103
–4

Würzburg, Germany, military bases in,
153

X-band radars,
221
,
223
–24

Yamashita, Tomoyuki,
39

Yasukuni Shrine,
200
–201

Yemen,
35

Yokosuka, Japan, military base in,
178
,
202
,
206
–7

Yokota, Nobuyuki,
187
–88

YokotaAir Force Base (Japan),
202

Yongsan Garrison (South Korea),
145

Yoo, John C.,
36
–38,
251
–53

Young, Adam,
14

Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company v. Sawyer
,
253

Yugoslavia,
19

Yunis, Fawaz,
122

Zahir Shah, king of Afghanistan,
111

Zaitchik, Alexander,
210

Zapatero, José Luis Rodriguez,
10
,
154

Zawahiri, Ayman al-,
112

Zawhar Kili camp,
119

Zery, Muhammed al-,
129
–30

Zhou Enlai,
54
–56

Zia-ul-Haq, Mohammed,
112
–13,
115
–17

Zimansky, Paul,
47

Zinni, Anthony,
15

Zulus,
74

About the Author
 

CHALMERS JOHNSON
, president of the Japan Policy Research Institute, is the author of the award-winning
Blowback
and
The Sorrows of Empire
. A frequent contributor to
Harper’s Magazine, the London Review of Books
, and the
Nation
, he appears in the 2005 prizewinning documentary film
Why We Fight
. He lives near San Diego.

The American Empire Project
 

In an era of unprecedented military strength, leaders of the United States, the global hyperpower, have increasingly embraced imperial ambitions. How did this significant shift in purpose and policy come about? And what lies down the road?

The American Empire Project is a response to the changes that have occurred in America’s strategic thinking as well as in its military and economic posture. Empire, long considered an offense against Americas democratic heritage, now threatens to define the relationship between our country and the rest of the world. The American Empire Project publishes books that question this development, examine the origins of U.S. imperial aspirations, analyze their ramifications at home and abroad, and discuss alternatives to this dangerous trend.

The project was conceived by Tom Engelhardt and Steve Fraser, editors who are themselves historians and writers. Published by Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company, its titles include
Hegemony or Survival
by Noam Chomsky,
The Sorrows of Empire
by Chalmers Johnson,
Crusade
by James Carroll,
How to Succeed at Globalization
by El Fisgon,
Blood and Oil
by Michael Klare,
Dilemmas of Domination
by Walden Bello,
War Powers
by Peter Irons,
DeviVs Game
by Robert Drey-fuss,
In the Name of Democracy,
edited by Jeremy Brecher, Jill Cutler, and Brendan Smith,
Imperial Ambitions
by Noam Chomsky,
A Question of Torture
by Alfred McCoy,
Failed States
by Noam Chomsky, and
Empire’s Workshop
by Greg Grandin.

For more information about the American Empire Project and for a list of forthcoming titles, please visit
www.americanempireproject.com

A
NEW YORK TIMES
BESTSELLER,
NEMESIS
IS CHALMERS JOHNSON’S “FIERCEST BOOK – AND HIS BEST
(ANDREW J. BACEVICH).

In his prophetic book
Blowback,
Chalmers Johnson linked the CIA’s clandestine activities abroad to disaster at home. In
The Sorrows olEmpire,
he explored the ways in which the growth of American militarism and the garrisoning of the planet have jeopardized our stability. In
Nemesis,
the bestselling and final volume in what has become known as the Blowback Trilogy, he shows how imperial overstretch is undermining the republic itself, both economically and politically.

Delving into new areas—from plans to militarize outer space to Constitution-breaking presidential activities at home and the devastating corruption of a toothless Congress—
Nemesis
offers a striking description of the trap into which the reckless ambitions of America’s leaders have taken us. Johnson confronts questions of pressing urgency: What are the unintended consequences of our dependence on a permanent war economy? What does it mean when a nation’s main intelligence organization becomes the president’s secret army? Or when the globe’s sole “hyper-power” becomes the greatest hyper-debtor of all time?

Writing “as if the very existence of the nation is at stake”
(San Francisco Chronicle),
Johnson offers his most bracing and important exploration of the crisis facing America.

‘IN THE THIRD VOLUME IN JOHNSON’S BLISTERING TRILOGY. HE WANTS THE SCALES TO FALL FROM AMERICAN EYES SO THAT THE NATION CAN SEE THE TRUTH ABOUTTTS ROLE IN THE WORLD. HIS IS A PATRIOTS PASSION: HIS MOTIVE IS TO SAVE THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC HE LOVES.’’

—JONATHAN FREEDLAND,
THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS

“LET US HOPE THE HISTORIANS OF WHATEVER FUTURE EMPIRES MAY ARISE WILL HAVE CAUSE TO FILE JOHNSON’S GLOOMY PROGNOSTICATIONS UNDER ADMIRABLY INTENDED BUT ERRONEOUS—AND NOT UNDER PROPHETIC AND ASTOUNDINGLY PRESCIENT.”

—TROY JOLLIMORE,
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

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