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Hegemony or Survival : America's Quest for Global Dominance

Hegemony or Survival : America's Quest for Global Dominance
By Noam Chomsky

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From the world’s foremost intellectual activist, here is an irrefutable analysis of America’s pursuit of total domination and the catastrophic consequences that are sure to follow. The United States is in the process of staking out not just the globe, but the last unarmed spot in our neighbourhood – the skies – as a militarized sphere of influence. Our earth and its skies are, for the Bush administration, the final frontiers of imperial control. In Hegemony or Survival, Noam Chomsky explains how we came to this moment, what kind of peril we find ourselves in, and why our rulers are willing to jeopardize the future of our species. In our era, Chomsky argues, empire is a recipe for an earthly wasteland.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #58500 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-05-27
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Scholarly polemicist Noam Chomsky's latest book Hegemony or Survival argues that America's strategy for the future is nothing less than the maintenance of American hegemony through the use or threat of military force--a strategy that threatens to leave the world a more dangerous and divided place. He goes on to claim that the only other world superpower with any chance whatever of curbing America's ideologically driven quest for global dominance is World Public Opinion. Recent books on American involvement in Middle East affairs, books such as Dilip Hiro's Iraq, Rampton and Stauber's Weapons of Mass Deception, and, more recently, The Guardian sponsored The War We Could Not Stop have also drawn attention to the propaganda war waged upon the American public by the Bush administration. For Chomsky this is by no means a new development. He sees American foreign policy historically showing a remarkably pattern of hypocrisy, racism, exploitation, and cynical manipulation of public opinion by successive US administrations. What is new and disturbing about the events leading up to the invasion of Iraq, he says, is the precedent America and Britain have set for establishing new norms of international law. The concept of "preventative war" must have its victims and those victims must be weak, yet important enough to be worth the trouble. Any country that is opposed to US interests but is capable of defending itself--i.e., those with nuclear capabilities--will be left alone. He leaves us with the terrifying assessment that the clear and catastrophic message to opponents of American hegemony is to get nuclear--quick. It's the only way to keep the bully off our backs.

One of Chomsky's special talent remains his ability to undermine comforting platitudes--such as the idea that we Westerners have become more "humanitarian" over the last few decades or that we have been making steady moral progress. As with Greg Palast's The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, Chomsky's Hegemony or Survival is relentlessly damning of the American political and economic elite and highly sceptical of the idea that virtue is to be found there. But if you're looking for a more balanced and hopeful examination of America's excursion into modern empire building and the problems it poses try Michael Ignatieff's Empire Lite. --Larry Brown

Observer Nov 30 2003
"America's greatest dissenter, a one-man cultural revolution whose writing on globalisation has mobilised a generation."

Bono - U2
"The Elvis of academia"


Customer Reviews

All we need is love...5
Those new to Chomsky�s view on American dominance of the world will find this book a revelation. Those who�ve been reading Chomsky for years will find an unsatisfying familiarity; not with his eminently straightforward writing style, but with the fact that little in the world seems to have changed. All who read this book will turn off their bedside lamp with a will to change the world tomorrow.

Chomsky tends to write his books as updates to previous books, therefore those familiar with his past works will inevitably find themselves being exposed to facts they�ve already heard. However, as these facts are so numerous and noteworthy, only the most retentive brain will mind hearing them for a second or third time. And for newcomers what this man has to say about America�s intentions for the world will require two or three reads to soak in, and a further session of research to determine whether his meticulously documented facts could possibly all be true.

The book itself does exactly what Amazon�s synopsis says, so those in the know will click on add to basket straight away. For those unfamiliar with Chomsky, I�ll say only this: if you still question whether the US administration is willing to sacrifice innocent lives for oil, this book provides an intelligent answer.

STUBBORN FACTS5
Chomsky again presents a coherent, fact based account of US foriegn policy and its catastrophic affect on third world nations who are the main victims who have to endure its terror. As time passes the list of affected peoples grows. What is saddening is that policy is not changing and the more involved you become in the debate of the conflict between human rights & democracy and US Imperial hegemonic dominance what becomes apparent is that there isn't really anyone who engages in debate with Chomsky. That is not to say there is no-one who opposes Chomsky but instead of engaged debate rely on the tried and tested traditional method of slander, mis-information and character assasination hoping that it will disuade people to read his books.

Chomsky is an heroic intellectual who is bent on exposing Imperial deceit and injustice and promote the values of Democratic Freedom and Justice for all human beings that as a Jewish American he so values. There is no hidden agenda with Chomsky, he finds the mass murder of innocent civilians unjustifiable whether they be hundreds of thousands in a East Timor, tens of thousand Palestinians in a ghetto in Gaza, a few hundred Israelis in Tel Aviv or three thousand office workers in the twin towers.

Chomsky's main message is - How do we stop Terrorism ?

For Chomsky if the US and UK governments were to STOP participating in Terrorism they will reduce terrorism by a very substantial amount ? The logical precision of a philosopher.

Uncomfortable truth - US survival or survival of the planet?5
This book is only indirectly about corporations. It is about the United States of America and the neo-conservative political project to shape the world according to the preferences of the US military-industrial complex that is hand in glove with the political elite that runs the world's only hyper-power.

Chomsky produces a clear and eminently well documented rationale for his critique of US ambition. Those who denigrate Chomsky do so because the truth is too uncomfortable. They may dismiss his writing as a rant, but that is because they choose to ignore the overwhelming use of insider statements, Pentagon reports, CIA findings, White House utterances, and all the rest of the horse's mouth. Chomsky merely puts it all together in a couple of hundred terrifying pages. Reading Chomsky it becomes harder for us to miss the true intentions behind the US quest for dominance. And of course it is also a quest for survival, because without its overwhelming military control (the US spends as much on defence as the next dozen or so countries combined, about 37% of the world total) the US would suffer a dramatic decline since its population is too small and its trade balance too severe, its social tensions too great, for it to realistically compete with anyone else except through employing its overwhelming military and technological superiority in order to exert control. That this military power is also employed to ensure economic compliance is part of what makes US policy so frightening. Chomsky warns of the risks of nuclear proliferation as a consequence of the US commitment to Balistic Missiles Defence, a project which despite its name is about offensive capability. In this book he barely touches on the environmental impact of the neo-conservative preferences, but anybody who cares about Blair's support for Bush, about the risks of nuclear war, about terrorism and about the future of our planet would do well to read this magnificent book.