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Bush in Babylon - The Recolonisation of Iraq (Paperback, 2nd ed.)
Loot Price: R472
Discovery Miles 4 720
You Save: R53
(10%)
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Bush in Babylon - The Recolonisation of Iraq (Paperback, 2nd ed.)
(2 ratings, sign in to rate)
List price R525
Loot Price R472
Discovery Miles 4 720
You Save R53 (10%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The assault and capture of Iraq-and the resistance it has
provoked-will shape the politics of the twenty-first century. In
this passionate and provocative book, Tariq Ali provides a history
of Iraqi resistance against empires old and new, and argues against
the view that sees imperialist occupation as the only viable
solution to bring about regime-change in corrupt and dictatorial
states. Like the author's previous work, The Clash of
Fundamentalisms, this book presents a magnificent cultural history.
Detailing the longstanding imperial ambitions of key figures in the
Bush administration and how war profiteers close to Bush are
cashing in, Bush in Babylon is unique in moving beyond the
corporate looting by the US military government to offer the reader
an expert and in-depth analysis of the extent of resistance to the
US occupation in Iraq. On 15 February 2003, eight million people
marched on the streets of five continents against a war that had
not yet begun. A historically unprecedented number of people
rejected official justifications for war that the secular Ba'ath
Party of Iraq was connected to al-Qaeda or that "weapons of mass
destruction" existed in the region, outside of Israel. More people
than ever are convinced that the greatest threat to peace comes
from the center of the American empire and its satrapies, with
Blair and Sharon as lieutenants to the Commander-in-Chief.
Examining how countries from Japan to France eventually rushed to
support US aims, as well as the futile UN resistance, Tariq Ali
proposes a re-founding of Mark Twain's mammoth American
Anti-Imperialist League (which included William James, W.E.B.
DuBois, William Dean Howells, and John Dewey) to carry forward the
antiwar movement. Meanwhile, as Iraqis show unexpected hostility
and independence, rather than gratitude, for "liberation," Ali is
unique is uncovering the depth of the resistance now occurring
inside occupied Iraq.
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