Why We Fight was first screened at theSundance Film Festival on January 17, 2005, exactly forty-four years after PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower'sfarewell address. Although it won the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary, the film received alimited public cinema release on January 22, 2006. It also won one of the 2006Grimme Awards in the competition "Information & Culture"; the prize is one of Germany's most prestigious for television productions[2] and aPeabody Award in 2006.[3]
Why We Fight describes the rise and maintenance of the United Statesmilitary–industrial complex and its 50-year involvement with the wars led by the United States to date, especially its2003 invasion of Iraq. The documentary asserts that in every decade since World War II, the American public was misled so that the government (incumbentAdministration) could take them to war and fuel the military-industrial economy maintaining American political dominance in the world. Interviewed about this matter are politicianJohn McCain, political scientist and formerCIA analystChalmers Johnson, politicianRichard Perle,neoconservative commentatorWilliam Kristol, writerGore Vidal, and public policy expertJoseph Cirincione.
Why We Fight documents the consequences of said foreign policy with the stories of aVietnam War veteran whose son was killed in theSeptember 11, 2001 attacks, and who then asked the military to write the name of his dead son on any bomb to be dropped in Iraq; a 23-year-oldNew Yorker who enlists in theUnited States Army because he was poor and in debt, his decision impelled by his mother's death; and a military explosives scientist (Anh Duong) who arrived in the U.S. as arefugee child fromVietnam in 1975.
The producer's list included "more than a dozen organizations, from theCanadian Broadcasting Corporation to the United Kingdom's BBC, Estonia's ETV and numerous European broadcasters" but no U.S. names.[4] TheSundance Institute did, however, provide completion funding.[4] Writer and director Jarecki said "serious examination of Eisenhower and the aftermath of his speech proved 'too radical' for potential American funders for his film" and except for Sundance, he "could not raise a dollar in the U.S."[4]
Richard Perle, Chairman, Pentagon Defense Policy Board (2001–03): worked in the U.S. Government for three decades, and is an architect of the George W. Bush Administration'sforeign policy. As a writer, he regularly is published in conservative news publications.
Gwynne Dyer: military historian, writer, and journalist who has worked for the Canadian, British, and American militaries. He published books, articles, information papers, and a radio series, aboutinternational affairs.
John Eisenhower, son of President Eisenhower, Military Historian: A military historian member of White House staff during his father's administration. He is a retiredBrigadier General (USA) and served as U.S. ambassador to Belgium, 1969 and 1971.
Charles Lewis, Center for Public Integrity: Founder, and ex-executive director,Center for Public Integrity—non-profit, non-partisan "watch-dog" organisation established in 1989—investigating and reporting their research about U.S. public policies
Wilton Sekzer, retired police sergeant,New York City Police Department, Vietnam veteran: Vietnam veteran, door gunner from the 13th Combat Aviation Battalion, whose son was killed on 9/11. After the attacks, he says the Bush Administration made him believeSaddam Hussein was responsible. He e-mailed every military branch, asking if his son's name might be written on a bomb to be dropped on Iraq. Later, he is uncertain if he should regret his actions, after hearing President Bush claim he does not know from where people got the idea that there was a link betweenSaddam Hussein and the 9/11 attacks.
William Solomon: twenty-three-year-old soldier. Deployed to Iraq on January 10, 2005, for 18 months, as a helicopter mechanic. It appears Solomon made it to Sergeant in the1st Battalion 52nd Aviation Regiment,Fort Wainwright, Alaska, according to a website that reports on different activities of soldiers. There is a photo of Solomon[5] and a specialist talking to basketball coaches in Kuwait at Camp Virginia. The coaches are on their way to Iraq to participate in Operation Hardwood 5 which is a program that brings US basketball coaches to the American troops in the Middle East.
Frank "Chuck" Spinney, retired military Analyst:Lehigh University-schooled mechanical engineer (class of 1967), worked in the USAF, in Ohio, before working in the Pentagon's Office of Program Analysis and Evaluation in 1977. He became a harsh critic of the Pentagon, later known as the "Conscience of the Pentagon", when he attacked the spiraling spending increase in the report "Defense facts of life", published in 1982, later known as the "Spinney Report", which earned a cover on "Time" magazine.
Gore Vidal, author ofImperial America: writer, playwright, screen writer, novelist, and essayist, he has written books on American foreign policy explaining the American empire.
Colonel Walter W. Saeger, Jr., director, U.S. Air ForceMunitions Directorate: Director of the Air-to-Surface Munitions Directorate, Ogden Air Logistics Center,Hill Air Force Base in Utah.
ColonelLawrence Wilkerson, Chief of Staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell: From 1984 to 1987, Col. Wilkerson was Executive Assistant to Admiral Stewart A. Ring, USN, Director for Strategy and Policy (J5) USCINCPAC. In the 1990s Col. Wilkerson was Director of the USMC War College, Quantico, Virginia. He has written much about military and national security affairs in mainstream and professional journals.[6]