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Summary
Summary
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR 'A dystopian odyssey through the dark authoritarian landscape of the modern world' The Times To be born American in the late twentieth century was to take the fact of a particular kind of American exceptionalism as granted - a state of nature arrived at after all else had failed. In the span of just thirty years, this assumption would come crashing down. After the fall, we must determine what it means to be American again. In 2017, as Ben Rhodes was helping Barack Obama begin his next chapter, the legacy they worked to build for eight years was being taken apart. To understand what was happening in America, Rhodes decided to look outwards. Over the next three years, he travelled to dozens of countries, meeting with politicians, activists, and dissidents confronting the same nationalism and authoritarianism that was tearing America apart. Along the way, a Russian opposition leader he spends time with is poisoned, the Hong Kong protesters he comes to know see their movement snuffed out, and America itself reaches the precipice of losing democracy before giving itself a second chance. After the Fall is a hugely ambitious and essential work of discovery. Throughout, Rhodes comes to realize how much America's fingerprints are on a world it helped to shape: through the excesses of the post-Cold War embrace of unbridled capitalism, post-9/11 nationalism and militarism, mania for technology and social media, and the racism that shaped the backlash to the Obama presidency. At the same time, he learns from a diverse set of characters - from Obama to rebels to a rising generation of leaders - how looking squarely at where America has gone wrong only makes it more essential to fight for what America is supposed to be - for itself, and for the entire world.
Author Notes
Ben Rhodes is the author of the New York Times bestseller The World as It Is ; co-host of Pod Save the World; a contributor for NBC News and MSNBC; the co-chair of National Security Action; and an advisor to former president Barack Obama. He lives in Washington, DC.
Reviews (3)
Guardian Review
Ben Rhodes was Barack Obama's speechwriter and became one of the former president's closest aides, a constant presence at his shoulder as he toured the world and sat down with the powerful and famous. Three years ago, soon after leaving the White House, Rhodes wrote a compelling insider account of that era called The World As It Is. He has now written the sequel, and has opted for the apocalyptic title After the Fall. It is the story of an aftermath, of the acolyte still travelling the globe with the greying former president as he garners awards, mobbed by adoring fans. A rueful Obama muses about his transition from political force to celebrity, adored but virtually powerless. After the Fall is a cleverly chosen title. It is about the ending of an administration and the aspirations of those who served in it, who look on aghast at the reign of Donald Trump. But it also has the suggestion of original sin - in this case, the US's. The subtitle is Being American in the World We've Made, and the central theme of the book is a contemplation of the seeds of the country's fall from grace in the world. Trump's crassness is not the cause of the descent, but a symptom. Rhodes traces much of the decline to the 9/11 attacks and the George W Bush administration's reaction to them, which sought to "reorient America's entire national purpose to the task of fighting terrorism". The Iraq invasion, in pursuit of non-existent weapons of mass destruction, "cracked open the facade that elites in the United States knew what they were doing" and called into question "why Americans were the stewards of world order". Then came the largely made-in-America financial crash of 2008, destabilising politics-as-usual around the world. At home, a pivotal 5-4 vote by the US supreme court in 2010 opened the floodgates to unaccountable "dark money" saturating politics. Meanwhile ever more extreme politics were facilitated by Facebook, Twitter and the like. "Profit-driven social media algorithms, like unchecked political contributions, were treated as free speech beyond the reach of government regulations," Rhodes writes. He travels around the world observing the plight of other frail societies, such as Myanmar, Hungary, Russia and Hong Kong, where democracy is in retreat or has been routed altogether. He talks to dissidents trying to push back against the tide, and finds common strands in the American malaise and the rest of the world's. Little of the analysis is new or original, but it is certainly elegantly expressed. This is the man, after all, with a degree in creative writing, who wrote so many of Obama's soaring speeches. And Rhodes does have an interesting personal tale to tell. He found out from reporting by the Observer in May 2018 that a shady firm of Israeli ex-spooks-for-hire called Black Cube was sniffing around him and another Obama staffer, Colin Kahl. The firm had been hired by the Trump camp to discredit the top officials involved in the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran. The abortive smear effort involved sending creepy fake emails to Rhodes's wife. She did not fall for it but the experience so unnerved her that she insisted on moving their young family out of the political crosshairs to Los Angeles. Rhodes cannot help wondering if the family's decision to flee politics is what his persecutors wanted all along. To kill off political engagement and drive an activist generation towards apathy and cynicism. He comes to the realisation that he is "a casualty of a war over identity - who defines it and who doesn't, what is true and what isn't, what happened and what didn't, who you are and who you aren't." There is a very personal element to After the Fall in which Rhodes admits to disorientation and a desire for purpose in the long spiralling descent from the Oval Office. "I was a thirty-nine-year-old with as little idea what I was going to do with the rest of my life as I'd had as a twenty-three-year-old," he reflects. "History was no longer something that took place in rooms where I sat." The introspection, coupled with an itinerary of venerable European destinations, such as Paris, Budapest and Baden-Baden, sometimes gives the book the feel of a melancholy Chekhovian tale: the young courtier in the retinue of a revered, recently ousted monarch, touring old watering holes. He meets like-minded contemporaries, including Hungarian, Russian and Hong Kong dissidents, and they try to come to terms with the implosion of the world they had once hoped for. Throughout, Rhodes struggles with a certain ennui. On a trip to Yangon, he wanders into a pagoda and "sat staring at a Buddha, waiting to feel something". Some of the best passages arise when he is back together with his old boss, and we are given an insight into what Obama thinks of it all, including the acerbic and memorable observation that "Trump is for a lot of white people what OJ's acquittal was to a lot of black folks - you know it's wrong, but it feels good." We can also sit in while Obama considers the leadership challenge facing the progressive democratic cause in the US and further afield. Surveying the candidates in the 2020 Democratic primaries, the former president says he agrees with Bernie Sanders in his diagnosis of America's malaise, a system chronically rigged to benefit the very rich. "But there's something missing when Bernie talks about it," Obama adds. "A spiritual component, a national identity that's not nationalist." Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg are better at invoking national unity but don't have Sanders's and Elizabeth Warren's fire in the belly, their outrage. Searching for a historical precedent of a progressive leader who could offer both, Obama has to go all the way back to Bobby Kennedy. It illustrates a certain nostalgia pervading the book, looking back at the times before the fall, and the allure of the apparent certainties of Rhodes's youth, when America seemed to have all the answers. They still exert their pull on him, even though he now knows them to be hollow.
Kirkus Review
A former Obama administration adviser examines the slow fall from grace that led to Trump. The assumption that America was somehow different from the rest of the world was an article of faith in his childhood, writes Rhodes. "In the span of just thirty years, this assumption would come crashing down," he adds, undermined by the very thing that had heralded greatness: a robust capitalism that produced global inequality, undermined the working class, and encouraged official corruption. "To be an American in 2020 was to live in a country diminished in the world," he writes. With that diminution, other nations rose: Putin's Russia, but especially Xi Jinping's China. "In Singapore," writes Rhodes, who traveled the world to write this book, "a senior government official told me casually over drinks that Asia had moved on from America--speaking as if this gleaming capitalist construction had almost been seamlessly handed off to the Chinese." Meanwhile, other global leaders behaved like Trump--notably Hungary's Viktor Orbán, who was once an anti-communist liberal but found more opportunities to exercise power as a nationalist, quietly suppressing opposition while keeping the beer flowing. "Perhaps this was how fascists got away with it through history…there's enough normal life out there for people to grab on to," Rhodes writes. Even in the surveillance state of China, this holds true, at least for ethnic Chinese--and, notes the author, Trump is said to have approved of Xi's program of concentration camps for dissident Uighurs. The author clearly shows that fear and self-censorship work in the U.S. as well as anywhere in the world. As for the pandemic and Trump's failings there, the U.S. emerges as "a country that killed hundreds of thousands of people through our own unique blend of incompetence and irrationality," no model for anyone. It's a stinging, and entirely well-founded, rebuke of a political strain that shows no signs of disappearing. A powerful synthesis of recent world history that should disabuse readers of any notion of American exceptionalism. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Former deputy national security adviser to President Barack Obama and New York Times best-selling author of The World as It Is, Rhodes began traveling the world in 2017 so that he could better understand what was happening in his own country. He found rising nationalism, authoritarianism, and disinformation--and the will to fight back.