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Curzon
Author

Curzon

Date

July 31st, 2005

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Just 44 more days

The cover for Kaplan’s new book Imperial Grunts : The American Military on the Ground (first noted here) is now public, as is the book blurb.

America is no less an imperial power than Britain and Rome in their times, claims veteran journalist Kaplan (Balkan Ghosts, etc.)””?one that is backed by the same sort of enforcers. To illustrate, he travels to seven nations and describes how American troops are, if not ruling the world, working to persuade it to follow our lead. The author joins elite units (generally marines or special forces) sent to shore up friendly governments, win people’s hearts, train security forces and defeat terrorism””?an increasingly vague term that includes narco-guerrillas, local warlords, unruly tribes and criminal gangs. Living among working soldiers, Kaplan makes no secret of his admiration for their camaraderie, practicality and rational if politically incorrect views. All roll their eyes when our leaders proclaim that defeating terrorism requires democratic governments; according to Kaplan, they believe this is nonsense in Colombia, Kenya, Yemen and the Philippines””?all democracies. Forbidden to fight in these countries, Americans are building infrastructure and gathering intelligence as they instruct local units, hoping American-trained leaders will eventually rise to positions of authority. Military buffs will prefer the chapters on Iraq and Afghanistan, where the soldiers are slugging it out. Stabilizing all these nations may take decades, these men and women say””?except in Iraq, where it may take longer.

The release date has also been finalized: September 13, 2005. And yes, Amazon.com is taking orders now.

Comments to this entry

Younghusband
July 31, 2005
6:09 pm
As soon as I get an address in Kingston I will order this book! w00t!!
Eddie
July 31, 2005
7:06 pm
Having spent all summer on deployment, enjoying all of Kaplan's books (along with Victor Davis Hanson and a few notable others) for the first time, how fitting my odyssey will end with a new Kaplan book. Now if only military mail service was fast....
lirelou
August 1, 2005
4:45 am
Pity that Kaplan does not understand the difference between an Empire, which rules its colonies and overseas territories, and a hegemon. But then, why let a pesky meaning get in the way of that wonderfully emotive Imperial?
Curzon
August 1, 2005
4:51 am
"A political scientist's job is to describe the world as it is... that's what I'm doing, explaining the reality as it is, with no fluffy language to pad what I'm saying."
lirelou
August 2, 2005
7:59 am
Sorry, but I fail to see that ipsa qua non of empire, that centralized control by which the metropoly controls its colonies or territories. I see U.S. influence being exercised, but not dictated. In sum, a much looser and more messier process than that of imperial fiat, with its implied or explicit "... or else". Were all political scientists to be in agreement an this new definition of empire, I'm sure that Webster and Black would follow suit. While you hardly appear to be slaying the Jabberwocky, I still detect a hint of " When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less." I dissent, but look forward to reading the book.