Landau's The Pre-Emptive Empire: A Guide to Bush's Kingdom, offers an incisive, bold, and witty portrait of the lingering parallels, contradictions and dramatic shifts in U.S. foreign policy under President George W. Bush before (Part I, "Leaving the Republic Behind") and after the 9/11 attacks (Part II, "The Empire Strikes Back"). Whether analyzing the U.S. war against terrorism and erosion of civil liberties at home, the Israeli-Palestinian crisis, terrorism and corporate globalization in Latin America, U.S.-Cuban relations or the road to the Iraq War, Landau's journal-like entries (coupled with his experiences of directing/producing over 40 documentary films throughout the U.S., Latin America and Middle East and as a radio commentator, author and journalist) provide compelling evidence for what he identifies throughout his work as the transformation of a nation founded on Republican fabric to its current, alarming manifestation: a "pre-emptive empire."
Unlike the sheepish, flag-waving media coverage of the 9/11 events and Iraq War or the current reactionary-infused works by Ann Coulter or Daniel Pipes, The Pre-Emptive Empire offers readers a refreshing platform for analyzing the domestic and international scope of the 9/11 attacks and Bush's ensuing wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in the context of the historical, political and economic dimensions that have helped shape the 21st Century U.S. Empire.
In particular, the chapter on "Latin America: The Imperial Economic Model, Obedience and Terrorism" relates the past and present U.S. double standards on terrorists in Chile and Cuba, respectively, in the midst of Bush's pursuit of "fighting" worldwide terror to his simultaneous promotion of the IMF-backed economic model, as Landau observes: "It is not just the culture of McDonald's, but the long-standing pattern of U.S. domination, indeed intervention, of Latin America that continues to prevail on the political as well as the economic front" (Part IV, pg .57).
Interspersed throughout Landau's chapters, such as on the long-running Middle East debacle (Part III, "Between Iraq and a Hard Place: The Oily Empire Stomps Through the Middle East") and the latest Iraq War (Part VI, "The Road to War"), are entertaining and humorous anecdotal transitions--demonstrating the book's greatest strength in helping readers cope with such dismal realities by laughing out loud while also reminding them of their humanity at stake.
Fans of progressive writers/activists Howard Zinn and Noam Chomsky will find The Pre-Emptive Empire just as intellectually stimulating and thought provoking, but with a glaring difference: Landau's work is an inspiring call for citizens--from college students, blue collar workers, activists and the politically disillusioned alike--to reclaim their Republic and participate in shaping their history.