“Rogue State” is a quick run-down of the unseemly things that the United States did between 1945 and 2000. The first 90 pages cover major foreign human rights violations by the American government and the support of human rights violations in other countries. The next 30 pages focus on our use of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons, as well as depleted uranium, cluster bombs, and other bombings of civilian populations, and our encouragement of chemical/biological weapons in other countries. The next 110 pages focus on all the ways in which we've tried to interfere with the governance of other nations, specifically through military intervention, intervening in elections, UN vetoes, and a whole host of CIA malfeasance. The book then ends with a 30-page rundown of the ways in which the American government limits democracy within its own borders.
Overall, the number of ridiculously immoral things that can be attributed to the American government over that 65 year period becomes stunning.
In some sense the book feels thrown-together. There's no clear flow, and subjects are often wedged in just to get them in there. In that sense it feels like a reference manual for American atrocities. However, the writing isn't too dense and the author throws in dark humor regularly, so it's still a decent read.
As far as accuracy of the facts goes, there isn't nearly enough room to adequately reference all the accusations, though there are a decent number of references. I can say from my own study of history from many different sources that I didn't see anything particularly controversial within the pages. The truth of specific events here and there might be in question, but the overall tactics and types of incidents are certainly part of the history of the American government. The author does a decent job of distinguishing between cases where there is evidence that the US government committed the acts in question and when there is only the suggestion that they may have done so.
This book was written in 2000. Strikingly, that was before 9/11, the “War on Terror”, the Patriot Act, the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, Abu Gharib, Guantanamo Bay, the torture of terror suspects, the assassination of US citizens, drone attacks in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia, and the exposure of almost universal NSA spying. It is clear that the tactics employed from 1945 to 2000 have not abated in the slightest. In fact, the final two paragraphs of the book show an almost prescient foreshadowing by the author of what was about to come:
“In place of finding a commie under every bed, they now find a drug possessor, user, dealer, shipper or courier. Instead of the Soviet Evil Empire, they now see Rogue Nations out there, Outlaw Nations, Pariah States—enemies need catchy name—with their regiments of terrorists, supporters of terrorists, acquaintances of terrorists, nuclear smugglers, questionable asylum seekers and other anti-American and un-American types. In place of civil rights agitators, the Authority Juggernaut now zooms in on youth gangs, immigrants, environmentalists, welfare recipients, prisoners, and a host of other folks with a glaring deficit of political power.
What keeps most Americans from being shocked by the shredding of the Bill of Rights is that they have yet to feel the consequences, either personally or through someone close to them. It would appear, however, that they only have to wait. America's foreign groupies, in the meantime, remain blissfully unaware of the above and in need of a reality transplant.”
The foreign groupies only needed 3-5 more years to finally lose their unawareness. Most Americans took another 10 years after that, but it looks like they may finally be getting the message as well.