Chapter 1 Introduction: War and State Terrorism Chapter 2 The United States and Japan in Twentieth-Century Asian Wars Chapter 3 State Terror versus Humanitarian Law Chapter 4 American Air Power and Nuclear Strategy in Northeast Asia since 1945 Chapter 5 When God(s) and Buddhas Go to War Chapter 6 Japanese Racism, War, and the POW Experience Chapter 7 The Waters Covered the Earth: China's War-Induced Natural Disasters Chapter 8 Drugs and Oil: The Deep Politics of U.S. Asian Wars Chapter 9 War, Genocide, and Resistance in East Timor, 1975-99: Comparative Reflections on Cambodia Chapter 10 Resisting State Terror: The Anti-Vietnam War Movement Chapter 11 Resisting Nuclear Terror: Japanese and American Antinuclear Movements since 1945
Mark Selden is professor of sociology and history at Binghamton University and professorial associate in the East Asia Program at Cornell University. Alvin Y. So is professor in the Division of Social Science at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.
These perceptive and deeply informed essays should be studied
carefully by those who hope to comprehend the past and play a
constructive part in shaping a better future.
*Noam Chomsky, MIT*
An important book both because it restores the centrality of Asian
wars in twentieth-century history and because it examines critical
aspects of modern combat—the deliberate targeting of civilians, the
utilization of ever-more lethal methods of human slaughter, the
role of state terror—that concern us today.
*Michael Klare, Hampshire College*
With the term "terrorism" recently being used in contexts that have
become frighteningly more arbitrary and irresponsible, this volume
appears as both timely and essential to understanding a post-911
worldview. War and State Terrorism includes perspectives that are
often thought-provoking and always well documented through
historical fact. With a number of notable scholars of Asian affairs
contributing to this work edited by Mark Selden-himself one of the
most renowned experts in his field-the volume contains
contributions that provide the reader with some very interesting
background to the major conflicts of the twentieth century.
*Pacific Affairs, Volume 77, No. 4 - Winter 2004/2005*
essential reading for those interested in how war affects not only
the individuals caught at its centre, but also those at its
periphery.
*Pacific Affairs, Volume 77, No. 4 - Winter 2004/2005*
This provocative examination of state terrorism asks readers to
reconsider their assumptions about who are the 'bad guys' and to
question why so many outrages are committed against innocent
civilians with impunity.
*The Japan Times*
This is a book to read—and assign—now. The smart, graphically
detailed set of case studies uses new documentation and fresh
historical analysis to question the assumption that it is wayward
individuals and 'rogue regimes' that wield terror.
*Cynthia Enloe, author of Maneuvers: The International Politics of
Militarizing Women's Lives*
This timely volume will interest all who seek to apply the "lessons
of history," as they are often called, to contemporary events.
*H-Us-Japan*
War and State Terrorism provides an excellent overview of the
historical cases that characterize a rarely explored concept of
state terrorism in the Asian context. I cannot over praise the
density of case presentation in each article. The comparative
nature of the volume is definitely valuable, providing readers
detailed illustrations of wars and international conflicts that
took place in Asia throughout the twentieth century. This is a
must-read for academic audiences and any humanitarian actors
concerned about the possibility of reckless destructive crusades by
great powers.
*Contemporary Sociology*
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