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The Plot to Scapegoat Russia: How the CIA and the Deep State Have Conspired to Vilify Russia Paperback – June 6, 2017
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Since 1945, the US has justified numerous wars, interventions, and military build-ups based on the pretext of the Russian Red Menace, even after the Soviet Union collapsed at the end of 1991 and Russia stopped being Red. In fact, the two biggest post-war American conflicts, the Korean and Vietnam wars, were not, as has been frequently claimed, about stopping Soviet aggression or even influence, but about maintaining old colonial relationships. Similarly, many lesser interventions and conflicts, such as those in Latin America, were also based upon an alleged Soviet threat, which was greatly overblown or nonexistent. And now the specter of a Russian Menace has been raised again in the wake of Donald Trump’s election.
The Plot to Scapegoat Russia examines the recent proliferation of stories, usually sourced from American state actors, blaming and manipulating the threat of Russia, and the long history of which this episode is but the latest chapter. It will show readers two key things: (1) the ways in which the United States has needlessly provoked Russia, especially after the collapse of the USSR, thereby squandering hopes for peace and cooperation; and (2) how Americans have lost out from this missed opportunity, and from decades of conflicts based upon false premises. These revelations, amongst other, make The Plot to Scapegoat Russia one of the timeliest reads of 2017.
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSkyhorse
- Publication dateJune 6, 2017
- Dimensions6 x 0.8 x 9 inches
- ISBN-10151073032X
- ISBN-13978-1510730328
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Editorial Reviews
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"The Plot to Scapegoat Russia is a beautifully written, uncommonly coherent, and very compelling treatise on the issues facing America today... a troubling indictment of where we've been and where we're headed. Moreover, this book is profoundly important, and a timely retrospective review of American foreign policy misadventures since the advent of the Cold War.” --Phillip F. Nelson, author of LBJ: The Mastermind of the JFK Assassination and LBJ: From Mastermind to “The Colossus”
"The Plot to Scapegoat Russia underscores how the CIA’s infiltration and shaping of the media, which began in the 1950s, successfully continues today. A very worthwhile account for anyone who wants to understand how ‘reality’ is manufactured, while ‘real truth’ is murdered and buried." --Peter Janney, author of Mary’s Mosaic: The CIA Conspiracy to Murder John F. Kennedy, Mary Pinchot Meyer, and Their Vision for World Peace
"At a time when the U.S. military budget is again soaring to enrich the oligarchs, this timely and thought-provoking book turns Orwellian ‘double-think’ on its head in a cogent analysis of what's really behind all the saber-rattling against Russia. In a scholarly but also deeply personal and fluidly written work, Dan Kovalik pulls no punches in dissecting the history of how America has justified its own imperialistic aims through the Cold War era and right up to the current anti-Putin hysteria.” --Dick Russell, New York Times bestselling author of Horsemen of the Apocalypse: The Men Who Are Destroying Life on Earth and What It Means to Our Children
"The Plot to Scapegoat Russia confronts the timeliest of subjects, the effort to resuscitate the Cold War by blaming Russian president Vladimir Putin for interfering in the 2016 presidential campaign on behalf of Donald Trump, an effort pursued by CIA and the Democratic Party working in tandem. Kovalik establishes... that not a scintilla of evidence has emerged to grant credibility to this self-serving fantasy... [and he] deftly eviscerates the mainstream press. Reading [this book] will be salutary, illuminating and more than instructive." --Joan Mellen, author of Faustian Bargains: Lyndon Johnson and Mac Wallace in the Robber Baron Culture of Texas
From the Author
I think the reader will find the book to be unique and surprising, connecting numerous issues and ideas in ways which I hope will lead to a greater understanding of our country's historic relationship with Russia and the rest of the world.
It was a whirlwind writing the book because we wanted to make sure it got out in a timely way while also being of the highest quality. With the help of Skyhorse Publishing, I think we accomplished this goal.
This is my first book, and I am quite excited about it. I am donating 50% of my proceeds of the book to UNICEF's project in eastern Ukraine which is in grave crisis, with over 1 million children in grave need of food support.
About the Author
David Talbot is the New York Times bestselling author of Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years and The Devil’s Chessboard. He is the founder and former editor-in-chief of Salon and has written for the New Yorker, Rolling Stone, and Time. He lives in San Francisco.
Product details
- Publisher : Skyhorse (June 6, 2017)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 151073032X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1510730328
- Item Weight : 11.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.8 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,344,581 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,608 in National & International Security (Books)
- #1,709 in Political Intelligence
- #5,307 in History & Theory of Politics
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I am a labor & human rights attorney. I have been writing since I was in college and have never stopped. I feel compelled to write about matters of public concern, and truthfully, to be a dissident voice. Since travelling to Nicaragua in 1987, and seeing U.S. intervention up close, I have been against U.S. intervention in other countries and against the process of vilifying other countries in order to justify such intervention. That is really how this, my first book, came about. I am sincerely grateful to my publisher, Skyhorse Publishing, for making this happen.
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Customers find the book provides relevant information and context on US-Russia relations. They describe it as a valuable, compelling read with clear and concise prose that is easy to understand. Readers also mention that the book is worth reading and an important resource for understanding the current war in Russia.
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Customers find the book informative and relevant. They appreciate its context, research, historical knowledge, and analyses. Readers describe it as an important non-fiction work of 2017.
"...whole, he gives them weight and thus provides an intellectual weapon for the anti-imperialist cause...." Read more
"...research, historical knowledge and perspective, personal insights shared with candor and clarity, all of the foregoing assembled by an author of the..." Read more
"...Still, all the context is a good reminder, and the bit of the book that addresses Russia directly is helpful...." Read more
"...is by no means a one sided account but it will hopefully help the reader to understand what has happened in Russia during and after the cold war...." Read more
Customers find the book valuable and informative. They describe it as a compelling read that cuts through the hype on US-Russia relations. The book is well organized and to the point, providing a comprehensive overview of the topic.
"...Lawyer and human rights activist Dan Kovalik has written a valuable book...." Read more
"...high caliber of Dan Kovalik, into an immensely readable and superbly informative book like The Plot To Scapegoat Russia: How the CIA and the Deep..." Read more
"...This is a great primer...." Read more
"...Dan Kovalik’s wonderful little book should help a great deal if only enough people will get a chance to read it." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and understand. They appreciate the clear prose and presentation, which makes for a comfortable reading experience.
"...The writing is clear, evocative, and eminently readable; his narrative is that of a story – teller...." Read more
"...by an author of the high caliber of Dan Kovalik, into an immensely readable and superbly informative book like The Plot To Scapegoat Russia: How the..." Read more
"...Despite all the topics and history it covers it is an easy read and has a wonderful heartfelt quality rare in books on these topics...." Read more
"...with regard to Russia, is to collect, analyze and report in a simply readable format that is neither too long nor too short for the average person..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2017Beating up on Russia; history tells why
By William T. Whitney Jr.
.
Lawyer and human rights activist Dan Kovalik has written a valuable book. He looked at a recent U. S. political development in terms of history and then skewered it. His new book, “The Plot to Scapegoat Russia,” looks at mounting assaults against Russia that increased during the Obama administration and that spokespersons for the Democratic Party, among others, are promoting.
The CIA, he claims, without going into specifics, is engaged in anti-Russian activities. For Kovalik, “the CIA is a nefarious, criminal organization which often misleads the Ameri¬can public and government into wars and misadventures.”
Kovalik devotes much of his book to what he regards as precedents for the current dark turn in U.S. – Russian relations. Toward that end, he surveys the history of U.S. foreign interventions since World War II. He confirms that the United States government is indeed habituated to aggressive adventurism abroad. That’s something many readers already know, but Kovalik contributes significantly by establishing that U.S. hostility against Russia ranks as a chapter in that long story.
But what’s the motivation for military assaults and destabilizing projects? And, generally, why all the wars? The author’s historical survey provides answers. He finds that the scenarios he describes are connected. Treating them as a whole, he gives them weight and thus provides an intellectual weapon for the anti-imperialist cause. Kovalik, putting history to work, moves from the issue of U.S.-Russian antagonism to the more over-arching problem of threats to human survival. That’s his major contribution.
His highly-recommended book offers facts and analyses so encompassing as to belie its small size. The writing is clear, evocative, and eminently readable; his narrative is that of a story – teller. Along the way, as a side benefit, Kovalik recalls the causes and outrage that fired up activists who were his contemporaries.
He testifies to a new Cold War. Doing so, he argues that the anti-communist rational for the earlier Cold War was a cover for something else, a pretext. In his words: “the Cold War, at least from the vantage point of the US, had little to do with fighting ‘Communism,’ and more to do with making the world safe for corporate plunder.” Once more Russia is an enemy of the United States, but now it’s a capitalist country.
That’s mysterious; explanation is in order. Readers, however, may be hungry to know about the “plot” advertised in the book’s title. We recommend patience. History and its recurring patterns come first for this author. They enable him to account for U. S. – Russian relations that are contradictory and, most importantly, for the U.S. propensity for war-making. After that he tells about a plot.
Kovalik describes how, very early, reports of CIA machinations from former agents of the spy organization expanded his political awareness, as did a trip to Nicaragua. There he gained first-hand knowledge of CIA atrocities, of deaths and destruction at the hands of the Contras, anti- Sandinista paramilitaries backed by the CIA. His book goes on fully and dramatically to describe murders and chaos orchestrated by the United States and/or the CIA in El Salvador, Colombia, and in the South America of Operation Condor. Kovalic discusses the U.S. war in Vietnam, occupation and war in Korea, nuclear bombs dropped on Japan, nuclear testing and dying in the Marshall Islands, and the CIA’s recruitment of the anti-Soviet Mujahedeen in Afghan¬istan. He recounts U. S. - instigated coups in Iran, 1953; Guatemala, 1954; and Chile, 1973.
These projects were about keeping “the world safe from the threat of Soviet totalitarianism” – in other words, anti-communism. But then the USSR disappeared, and the search was on for a new pretext. The Clinton administration evoked “humanitarian intervention,” and continued the intrusions: in Ruanda, Democratic Republic of the Congo (on behalf of “US mining interests”), Yugoslavia, and Libya.
In Kovalik’s telling, the U. S. government eventually settled upon the notion of “American exceptionalism,” that is to say, “the belief that the US is a uniquely benign actor in the world, spreading peace and democracy.” Thus armed, the U. S. military exported terror to Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen (via its Saudi Arabian proxy), and Honduras, through a U. S. facilitated military coup. The book catalogues other episodes, other places. Along the way on his excursion, Kovalik contrasts U. S. pretensions and brutal deeds with the relatively benign nature of alleged Russian outrages.
Good relations with Russia, he says, would be “simply bad for business, in particular the business of war which so profoundly undergirds the US economy … As of 2015, the US had at least 800 military bases in over 70 nations, while Britain, France and Russia had only 30 military bases combined.” And, “under Obama alone, the US had Special Forces deployed in about 138 countries.” Further, “The US’s outsized military exists not only to ensure the US’s quite unjust share of the world’s riches, but also to ensure that those riches are not shared with the poor huddled masses in this country.”
Kovalik highlights the disaster that overwhelmed Russia as a fledgling capitalist nation: life expectancy plummeted, the poverty rate was 75 percent, and investments fell by 80 percent. National pride was in the cellar, the more so after the United States backed away from Secretary of State Baker’s 1991 promise that NATO would never move east, after the United States attacked Russia’s ally Serbia, and after the United States, rejecting Russian priorities, attacked Iraq in 2003 and Libya in 2011.
The author rebuts U. S. claims that Russian democracy has failed and that Putin over-reached in Ukraine. He praises Putin’s attempts to cooperate with the United States in Syria. The United States has abused peoples the world over, he insists, and suffers from a “severe democracy deficit.”
By the time he is discussing current U. S. – Russian relations, readers have been primed never to expect U.S. imperialism to give Russia a break. The author’s instructional course has taken effect, or should have done so. If readers aren’t aware of what the U. S. government has been up to, the author is not to blame.
Kovalik condemns the Obama administration and particularly Secretary of State Hilary Clinton for intensifying the U. S. campaign against Russia. He extends his criticism to the Democratic Party and the media. The theme of anti – Russian scheming by the CIA comes up briefly in the book in connection with hacking attributed to Russia and with WikiLeaks revelations about the Democratic Party. Nothing is said about possible interaction between personnel of the Trump campaign and Russian officials.
Kovalik’s historical excursion takes in the Soviet Union. Clearly, many of the U. S. military interventions described in this valuable book wouldn’t have occurred if the Soviet Union still existed. Beyond that, Kovalik says, “the Soviet Union, did wield sizable polit¬ical and ideological influence in the world for some time, due to the appeal of its socialist message as well as its critical role in winning [World War] II.”
Kovalik acknowledges “periods of great repression.” He adds, however, that “the Russian Revolution and the USSR … delivered on many of their promises, and against great odds. …. In any case, the goals of the Russian Revolution—equality, worker control of the economy, universal health care and social security— were laudable ones.” And, “One of the reasons that the West continues to dance on the grave of the Soviet Union, and to emphasize the worst parts of that society and downplay its achievements, is to make sure that, as the world-wide economy worsens, and as the suffering of work¬ing people around the world deepens, they don’t get any notions in their head to organize some new socialist revolution with such ideals.”
Ultimately, Kovalik sides with Martin Luther King, who remarked that, ‘The US is on the wrong side of the world-wide revolution’ – and with Daniel Ellsberg’s clarification: ‘The US is not on the wrong side; it is the wrong side.’”
- Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2019It takes enormous courage to write a book like this, which goes completely against the narrative promoted by America’s foreign policy and military establishments. Courage because now any defense of Putin and Russia as actors on the world stage will not be met with polite rebuttal and rational well-supported refutation, but personal vilification, marginalization, attacks on character and integrity, aspersions about disloyalty and lack of patriotic commitment, allegations of treachery and even sedition. Lacking anything—e.g. facts—with which to rebut and refute the message, opponents of a balanced, objective, truthful analysis of Russian-American relations must resort to attacking the messenger.
Early in the book, Mr. Kovalik describes the process which radicalized him, what personal events opened his eyes to the barbarity and hypocrisy which has been centerpieces of America’s history from its earliest days. His transformation occurred during a visit to Nicaragua during his college years. He learned then to question and always be highly skeptical of the “official rationale” inflicted on the general public in the U.S., with the covert intent of obtaining—often manufacturing out of thin air—consent for America’s bullying, manipulations, aggressions, destructive interference, regime changes, and outright subjugation of countries across the planet.
History is the best teacher for understanding the present. Our history, as is thoroughly documented in this short but incisive volume, is riddled with false flags, misrepresentations, distortions, propaganda and outright lies, carefully calculated to serve the real agenda of our government, which exclusively is unambiguous support for U.S. corporate interests, ruthlessly undermining any nation which dares to consider even the most diluted iteration of socialism, and punishing—all too frequently destroying—any country and its leaders for independently adopting policies which don’t disproportionately benefit the U.S. and honor the authority of the U.S. as world hegemon.
What has Russia under Putin done? It put Russia’s interests first, it openly criticized the U.S. for its wanton aggression and disregard for international law, called out the U.S. for its consistent meddling in the affairs of other nations, including all too often violently overthrowing governments it doesn’t approve of, and had the audacity to deploy national defense mechanisms which frees it of being blackmailed by U.S. military might. For the U.S., which regards itself as the “exceptional” nation selected by destiny to control the world, these constitute an affront which must be answered, a challenge which must be eradicated, even if this requires a world war which likely will go nuclear.
So it’s Russia bad, Putin badder. Every imaginable and imagined accusation, typically presented as fact, is spewed out and flung at Putin and Russia. And thus what we get as “news” these days is a childish white hats vs. black hats depiction of the necessary battle of Great Good America vs. Scary Evil Russia, a facile scenario now dubbed as the Second Cold War.
The extremes our government spokespersons and the obsequious media has gone to in order to strike fear in all of us about Russia and to incite a personal hatred for Vladimir Putin, should by themselves raise suspicions and reasonable doubts about what’s going on. But when the media is controlled by six major corporations with unshakeable deference to official government propaganda and those who fabricate it, and political leaders from both major parties are owned by Wall Street, the big banks, the corporations, the ruling elite who obscenely profit from perpetual war, all everyday people get 24/7 is yarns about the Russian threat, Putin’s bloodthirsty desire to return to the glory days of Russia as a great power, Russian aggression, Russian invasions, Russian meddling in our otherwise perfect democracy, Russian targeted assassinations, Russian plots to subvert and destroy freedom-loving countries, Russian blame for everything from STDs to plugged sinks and family squabbles. It’s a premeditated program of brainwashing inflicted on a gullible and generally hapless American public.
The only possible pre-revolutionary antidote is thorough, unbiased investigative journalism, potent research, historical knowledge and perspective, personal insights shared with candor and clarity, all of the foregoing assembled by an author of the high caliber of Dan Kovalik, into an immensely readable and superbly informative book like The Plot To Scapegoat Russia: How the CIA and the Deep State Have Conspired to Vilify Putin.
Top reviews from other countries
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WedmaReviewed in Germany on April 13, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein sehr lesenswertes Werk! Unbedingte Lesepflicht!
„The Plot to scapegoat Russia“ gehört zu den Büchern, die man gelesen/gehört haben muss, bevor man überhaupt anfängt, eigene Meinung zum Thema Russland, Putin, Konflikte in Syrien, Ukraine, etc. zu bilden.
Wer allerdings seine Meinung über die o.g. Themen lieber aus den sog. Leitmedien erfährt und das allgegenwärtige Russland- bzw. Putin-bashing treudoof gern weiterplappert, der kann sich getrost weiter vom Mainstream veräppeln lassen. Dem wird dieses Buch zu hoch sein: Das wird nicht in den von der offiziellen „Linie“ gesetzten Rahmen passen. Es ist etwas für diejenigen, die frei und selbst denken können.
Wer auch so „schlau“ ist und die abgenutzte Klamotte namens Verschwörungstheorie aus der alten Mottenkiste der offiziellen Meinungsmacher bemüht, dem sei gesagt, dass diese längst ausgedient hat. Klare Worte und unverfälschte Bilder sind heute gefragt. Alles andere ist Volksverdummung, davon gab es bereits reichlich.
Wer aber die Version der Leitmedien schon mal als wenig befriedigend empfunden, diese hinterfragt und nach Antworten zu brennenden Fragen der Gegenwart in guten Sachbüchern gesucht hat, für solche Leser/Hörer kann dieses Buch u.U. zum Augenöffner werden. Vieles, was man in den offiziellen Medien vergeblich sucht, ist hier klar, logisch nachvollziehbar und wohl begründet dargelegt worden. Spätestens ab der Mitte begreift man, warum der Titel dieses Buches so lautet. Passt prima zum Inhalt.
Wie Paul Schreyer in seinem ebenso sehr lesenswerten Buch „Die Angst der Eliten“ (2018) schreibt: „Das lateinische Motto divide et impera – ‚teile und herrsche‘ – bleibt weiter aktuell. Wem es gelingt, Menschen, Völker, Kulturen oder auch Anhänger von Parteien gegeneinander aufzuhetzen, so dass sie ihre grundlegenden gemeinsamen Interessen vergessen, der kann sie mühelos alle miteinander beherrschen.“ S. 158.
Diese These vertritt auch Dan Kovalik. Er sucht nach Ursachen der heutigen weniger erfreulichen Situation und findet sie im weltweiten, flächendeckenden Machtanspruch der superreichen Eliten.
Kovalik fängt damit an, dass er auch mal ein Kind der US- Propagandamaschinerie war, die Russen fürchtete und ihnen keine Butter aufs Brot gönnte, milde gesagt. Noch in seinen Studienzeiten aber kam er mit den Kriegen in Berührung, die USA in vielen Ländern wie Iran, Kuba, Haiti, Brasilien, Chile, Panama, uvm. aus o.g. Gründen führte. An die Öffentlichkeit wurde der Unfug als etwas Nobles verkauft: erst unter dem Mäntelchen des Kampfes gegen Kommunismus, und als dieser Grund entfiel, unter der Soße der Verbreitung demokratischer Werte. Kovalik sagt auch, wer und wann auf diese glorreiche Idee kam, bzw. von wem er diese abgekupfert hatte.
Kovaliks erzählt auch von seinen Bekannten, ehem. CIA Mitarbeitern, die aus patriotischen Gründen der Organisation beigetreten waren, um später völlig desillusioniert und zutiefst enttäuscht ihr den Rücken zu kehren und zu denjenigen zu werden, die über die Gräueltaten der US-Politik, z.B. über die illegalen Kriege, hier nach Terminologie von Daniel Ganser („Illegale Kriege“ (2016)) , die Öffentlichkeit aufklären und die Abkehr vom aggressiven Militarismus der Supereichen fordern.
Kovalik erklärt auch plausibel, dass Russland rein gar kein Interesse an Konfrontation mit dem Westen hat, vielmehr betont er, es kann sich auch aus rein wirtschaftlichen Gründen solche Allüren nicht leisten. Da gibt ganz andere, dringende Probleme, die gelöst werden müssen. Die Finanzmittel werden eher dort benötigt, statt sie im Militärsektor verschwinden zu lassen. Er gibt auch die Zahlen an, wie viel USA in Aufrüstung investiert und wie viel Russland. Da sind zwei verschiedene Dimensionen.
Der Autor stellt auch klar, dass die US-Wirtschaft auf der Rüstungsindustrie fußt, d.h. je stärker die Nachfrage hier, desto reicher werden die schon ohnehin Reiche, die von den Kriegen in vielerlei Hinsicht (Macht und noch mehr Geld) profitieren. Hier kann man auch die potentielle Bereitschaft, die Aggression zu zügeln, ablesen, sowie die Gründe für Russland-bashing finden, das seit einigen Jahren in den Leitmedien omnipräsent ist. Russland hat (noch) viel an Bodenschätzen, Landflächen, etc., von denen die Eliten kaum ihre Finger lassen können.
Kovalik sagt auch, egal in welches Land USA eingefallen war, ob Kuba, Chile, Lybien, Syrien, uvm. überall wurde der Machtinhaber im Amt sofort der öffentlichen Diffamierung unterzogen. Man sieht also, die Herrschaften verfügen über feste Abläufe in Sachen Unterwerfung anderer Länder. Diese werden checklistenartig von Land zu Land wiederholt. Putin-bashing gehört also zum Geschäft.
Etliche pikante Details, die das aggressive Verhalten der Superreichen offenlegen, über die verdeckten Kriege unter Regierungen Clinton, Obama, z.B. in der Ukraine, Syrien, sowie über H. Clinton und ihre Rolle in der Destabilisierung des Weltfriedens, i.e. über ihr unermüdliches Engagement bei der Entfachung des Konflikts in Lybien uvm. erfährt man einiges in diesem Buch ebenfalls.
Über die so breit diskutierten angeblichen Cyber- und andere „Angriffe“ der Russen sagt der Autor auch paar klare Worte.
Um Fazit zu ziehen, zitiert Kovalik zunächst New Yorker: „‘[t]he C.I.A., for ist part, worked to overthrow regimes in Iran, Cuba, Haiti, Brazil, Chile, and Panama. It used cash payments, propaganda, and sometimes violent measures to sway elections away from leftist parties in Italy, Guatemala, Indonesia, South Vietnam, und Nicaragua,‘“, und fährt fort: „While the New Yorker, as most other media sources, warns nonetheless of making ‚false moral equivalences‘ between the conduct of the US and Russia in such respects, let me say that I wold never do that: the US conduct ist so much worse that equating the two wold not at all be fair to Russia.“ S. 158.
Kovaliks Analysen haben mir kraft seines messerscharfen Verstandes sehr zugesagt. Da denkt einer klar und weiß es auch zum Ausdruck zu bringen, musste ich vielerorts denken.
Das Buch ist in einem hochprofessionellen Schreibstil verfasst worden: klar, knapp, griffig, präzise. Das Vokabular ist nicht sonderlich kompliziert, sodass man mit gutem, etwa B2 Level, da gut zurechtkommen würde.
Der Sprecher Alex Hyde-White hat sehr gut gelesen: alles sehr klar artikuliert, sodass es keinen Raum für Missverständnisse gegeben hatte. Seine Stimme, wie auch seine Art vorzutragen, ist angenehm, ich konnte da stundenlang völlig problemlos zuhören.
Beide Ausgaben, Hörbuch und TB, habe ich geholt. Das passiert mir bei manchen, besonders guten Büchern.
Fazit: Sehr lesenswertes Werk für all diejenigen, die die heutige polit. Situation, v.a. ihre Ursachen besser verstehen wollen. 5 hell leuchtende Sterne und unbedingte Lesepflicht.
Bezeichnend ist, dass dieses Buch nur in der Originalfassung zu haben ist. Das gibt zu denken. Es fand sich bisher also kein Verlag, der dieses Buch dem deutschsprachigen Publikum zugänglich machen würde. An Brisanz, sowie lesenswerten Inhalten, mangelt es hier bestimmt nicht.
Erfreulich ist, dass Kovalik mit seinen Ansichten nicht allein dasteht. Mit u. g. Autoren stimmt er in weiten Strecken überein:
„Illegale Kriege“ von Daniel Ganser,
„Lügen die Medien?“ von Jens Wernicke,
„Fassadendemokratie und Tiefer Staat“ von Ulrich Mies, Jens Wernicke,
„Die Angst der Eliten“ von Paul Schreyer,
„Wir sind die Guten“ von Mathias Bröckers und Paul Schreyer,
„Eiszeit“ von Gabriele Krone-Schmalz,
Werke von Noam Chomsky
- Mrs Mary B SwainReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 24, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars but it is very interesting and easy to read
I haven't finished the book yet, but it is very interesting and easy to read. For a person who wants to look more deeply into US Foreign Policy and not just accept what the media reports, then they will find this book eye opening. Sacrifices have been made to be able to tell the truth in this format.
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Marcelo UchôaReviewed in Brazil on May 12, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Me fez lembrar Mark Twain
Este livro do prestigiado professor norte-americano Dan Kovalik não é apenas revelador, é, também, uma crítica contundente a uma política de Estado posta em prática ao longo dos anos pelos EUA, que fortalece e, por outro lado, é fortalecida, à base de apelos geopolíticos falsos, para não dizer criminosos. Parabéns ao autor pela coragem de elaborar uma crítica dessa sobre o próprio país. O sentimento anti-imperialista me fez lembrar Mark Twain. Recomendo muito.
- nelhelenReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 10, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, informative book
Excellent, informative book.
- FlopadooReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 5, 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars I found this book to be a good read and to present a lot of context about ...
I found this book to be a good read and to present a lot of context about the behaviour of the US in world affairs. There doesn't seem to be a lot new in this however - those familiar with the work of Chomsky will probably not pick up a great deal of extra information.
The reason I have scored this book 4/5 is that I expressly read it to better understand the way that interested parties in the US and beyond have been looking to set up a convenient enemy in Russia, thereby justifying the expansion of NATO membership, increased military spending and more intrusive online snooping and other things that people would not usually accept.
However I feel the author missed a trick here because most of the effort is expended in showing the dichotomy between generally stated motivations of the US (spreading democracy, freedom, human rights etc) and its actual behaviour and results. Personally, that was already very clear, so it's a shame there really isn't more content in the book establishing the way in which the scapegoating is actually being done. I felt that where this was discussed it was fairly cursory.
So overall - if you'd like an eyeopener about how the US actually behaves in the world versus it's claimed behaviour, this is a good read. If you want a thorough analysis of how various groups are setting up a false 'enemy' in order to justify their goals (as I'd understood from the book's title), it may not tick all the boxes for you.
Some other points would have been worth mentioning in the book as I think they help paint a picture of deliberate and apparently disparate attempts to scapegoat Russia:
- That the group Pussy Riot / Femen are apparently funded through Soros.
- In 2014 Sweden identifying a 'Russian sub' in their waters, having a big press scare about it, then right after announcing a military budget increase. Later admitting they knew it was a “Swedish object” after all.
- Mentioning that US-educated Saakashvili seems to constantly turn up in US-backed regime change operations, and that he started the Georgia war in 2008 despite the US/UK media pretending for a number of days that it was Russian forces that had started it.
- There's a passing mention of Joe Biden's son being named as a director of a Ukrainian gas company right after the Euro Maidan coup, but it's not really followed through to explain the US law changes to sell LNG overseas, the building of the LNG terminal in New Orleans, and the violence in the fossil-fuel rich Donbass.
- The massive difference between how the liberation of Aleppo was reported in our media compared to the contemporaneous liberation of Mosul.
- How the annexation of Crimea happened at the same time as Israel announced further settlement building in the West Bank - only one of this cases triggered urgent cries from our politicians for sanctions. The other was quietly overlooked.
... and so on.