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Tristan Quinn

Published 10 April 2008

The New Rome: the Fall of an Empire and the Fate of America
Cullen Murphy
Icon Books, 272pp, £14.99

According to the author, recent US history – in particular the country's status as the world's only superpower – has fired a revival of the Roman empire in the American imagination, in which "Rome serves as either a grim cautionary tale or an inspirational call to action". In answer to his question "Are we Rome?", Murphy contends that both Rome and America are the most powerful actors in their respective worlds, are of similar size, see themselves as a chosen people, and revel in grandiose engineering – the space shuttle echoes the emperor Hadrian's vast sun-god statue.

Identifying lessons for the US in Rome's demise, Murphy examines the solipsism of the elites of Rome and Washington, the blindness of both to the outside world and the problems of managing such sprawling powers.

While Rome brought in the barbarians, today America hires private contractors – "not the Visigothi . . . but the Halliburtoni". Murphy is critical of the short-termist nature of both decisions. Concluding this thoughtful, sometimes whimsical book, he insists that America will survive precisely because it is America. The country will not ossify like Rome did, because "it is very consciously a constant work in progress".

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1 comment from readers

writeon
13 April 2008 at 21:27

Unfortunately the country has ossified like Rome did and most other empires, Spain and Britain spring to mind. This seems to be the characteristic of successful empires. A ruling elite evolves that becomes self-perpetuating and in the end comes to believe in its own foundation myth and propaganda. Unreality becomes the core value system and this is disasterous in the end leading towards catastrophe and terminal decline, precisely the situation the United States finds itself in. About the only thing that can save the US now would be some kind of popular revolt or revolution, injecting 'fresh blood' into the ossifying veins of the body of the state and shaking up the system sufficiently to allow much needed root and branch structural reform before its too late and decline becomes irriversable no matter what one does.

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