http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/books/review/16lievan.html
'
Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change From Hawaii to Iraq,' by Stephen 
Kinzer
Depose and Conquer 
By ANATOL LIEVEN

Published: April 16, 2006
A senior member of a Washington research group once told me that he "could not 
believe" that the United States would ever help the Pakistani military 
overthrow a democratically elected government in Pakistan if that government 
refused to help in the war on terror. Now there's a man who really needs to 
read the latest book by the former New York Times correspondent Stephen Kinzer. 
"Overthrow" is the history of forcible regime changes by the United States and 
its local allies over the past 110 years, starting with the undermining of the 
Hawaiian monarchy in 1893, passing through Cuba (1898), the Philippines (1898), 
Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954) and elsewhere, and ending with present-day Iraq. 

 
Deborah Donnelley
Stephen Kinzer. 

OVERTHROW 
America's Century of Regime Change From Hawaii to Iraq. 
By Stephen Kinzer. 

Illustrated. 384 pp. Times Books/Henry Holt & Company. $27.50. 

Readers' Opinions
Forum: Book News and Reviews 

Kinzer has written a detailed, passionate and convincing book, several chapters 
of which have the pace and grip of a good thriller. It should be essential 
reading for any Americans who wish to understand both their country's 
historical record in international affairs, and why that record has provoked 
anger and distrust in much of the world. Most important, it helps explain why, 
outside of Eastern Europe, American pronouncements about spreading democracy 
and freedom, as repeatedly employed by the Bush administration, are met with 
widespread incredulity.

What's most depressing about Kinzer's book, however, is not the drastic clash 
it describes between professed American morality and actual American behavior. 
For, after all, the historical record of other democratic imperial powers, like 
Britain and France, has been even worse than that of the United States. 
Operating in the real world as a great power is not a business for the overly 
fastidious.

But if you are going to use the argument that making a successful geopolitical 
omelet requires breaking eggs, you'd better have something edible to show for 
all the shattered shells lying around. As Kinzer makes clear, the problem is 
that all too many of the interventions he recounts were not just utterly 
ruthless; they were utterly unnecessary.

It should have been obvious that the damage to the countries concerned was 
likely to be out of all proportion to the possible gains to the United States. 
But during the cold war, ignorant and ideological official cliques in 
Washington repeatedly convinced themselves that "you are with us or you are 
against us," and that a range of nationalist governments around the world, 
anti-American to a greater or lesser degree, were part of the Soviet global 
conspiracy and had to be destroyed.

In several cases, while the coups themselves were highly successful, the 
long-term results proved disastrous - not just for America's reputation abroad 
but for American interests as well. That was true, for example, of the C.I.A.'s 
overthrow of the democratic nationalist prime minister of Iran, Mohammed 
Mossadegh - accused quite falsely of being pro-Communist - and the restoration 
of autocratic rule by the shah.

That operation, run by Kermit Roosevelt (Teddy Roosevelt's grandson) was 
brilliantly executed, bringing about Mossadegh's downfall even after the shah 
himself had lost his nerve and fled to Italy. But as a result, the role of 
opposition to the shah was assumed by religious fundamentalists, and ended in 
the disastrous revolution of 1979. The deep Iranian popular fear of the United 
States that was fed by the 1953 coup continues to haunt American-Iranian 
relations to this day.

In the case of Cuba, the decision in 1898 to betray the Cuban rebels against 
Spain and impose American hegemony on the island fueled an anti-American 
nationalism that continues to preserve the Communist regime. Mass support for 
governments like those of Castro and Hugo Chávez of Venezuela has also been fed 
by other American interventions in the region.

Of these, the ugliest was the overthrow of the democratic socialist government 
of Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán in Guatemala in 1954 and its replacement by a military 
dictatorship representing the interests of the local oligarchy and the United 
Fruit Company. The result was a genuinely Communist insurrection and a savage 
American-backed military campaign of repression that cost the lives of more 
than 100,000 Maya Indians - something that in other circumstances would 
certainly have been described in the United States as genocide. 

I must confess that I put down this fine book with a feeling of deep 
disheartenment. For what, after all, is the point of such meticulously reported 
studies if the American public is repeatedly going to wipe such episodes from 
its collective consciousness, and the American establishment is going to make 
similar mistakes over and over again, first in the cold war and now in the "war 
on terror" - each time covering its actions with the same rhetoric of spreading 
"freedom" and combating "evil"?

As Kinzer writes of the Iranian hostage crisis, "because most Americans did not 
know what the United States had done to Iran in 1953, few had any idea why 
Iranians were so angry at the country they called 'the great Satan.' " They 
still don't.

Anatol Lieven is a senior research fellow at the New America Foundation in 
Washington. His latest book is "America Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American 
Nationalism."


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