ABSTRACT

If what is shaping up to be the worst foreign policy disaster in U.S. history has an upside, it is that the current war in Iraq should definitively, permanently settle a handful of critical questions about American conduct in the world. This book provides a list of those questions and even ventures some answers in the form of key lessons from Iraq. The idea of assembling lessons as tools for avoiding the next war is less of a stretch than it seems, given the group of writers represented here. They include a Nobel Prize-winning economist; the former chief UN weapons inspector; and an Iraqi American whose weekly conversations with his relatives have given him a grim education on what living through a war to spread democracy is like on the ground. Also here is a Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winner who traces the recurring American bad habit of starting wars as tryouts for big ideas. All societies need a ready reference handbook that draws some lines around its conduct of war. The Bush administration has produced a radical overhaul of the U.S. manual. Given the Iraq experience, it is urgent that we reject this version and think again. This book is a manageably sized, accessibly written, affordable compilation of key points that most urgently need to be rethought.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter |5 pages

Prologue

part |35 pages

Purposes

chapter Chapter 1|7 pages

The Dangerous Leap

Preventive War

chapter Chapter 2|6 pages

American Imperialism

Enabler of War

chapter Chapter 3|7 pages

Ideas Floating Free

War as Demonstration Model

chapter Chapter 4|8 pages

A Motive Hiding in Plain Sight

War for Oil

part |53 pages

Ways and Means

chapter Chapter 6|17 pages

Hidden Wounds and Accounting Tricks

Disguising the True Costs

chapter Chapter 7|7 pages

Lies, Spies, and Legends

The Politicizing of Intelligence

chapter Chapter 8|6 pages

Media Flagstones on the Path to War

chapter Chapter 9|10 pages

America's Slide

From Leadership to Isolation

chapter Chapter 10|6 pages

Inspections or Invasion

Lessons from Iraq

chapter Chapter 11|6 pages

Coalitions of the Coerced

part |37 pages

Collateral Damage

chapter Chapter 12|6 pages

Monarchic Pretensions

The War Power Grab

chapter Chapter 13|8 pages

Torture No More

chapter Chapter 14|8 pages

The Shadow Army

Privatization

chapter Chapter 15|5 pages

Invitation to Steal

War Profiteering in Iraq

chapter Chapter 16|5 pages

The (Iraq) War on Civil Liberties

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

War for Peace