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Writing in The Guardian on 18 October, Powell asserted that due to the Falklands War, " Britain no longer looked upon itself and the world through American spectacles " and the view was " more rational ; and it was more congenial ; for, after all, it was our own view ".
He quoted an observation that Americans thought their country was " a unique society ... where God has put together all nationalities, races and interests of the globe for one purpose -– to show the rest of the world how to live ".
He denounced the " manic exaltation of the American illusion " and compared it to the " American nightmare ".
Powell also disliked the American belief that " they are authorised, possibly by the deity, to intervene, openly or covertly, in the internal affairs of other countries anywhere in the world ".
Britain should dissociate herself from American intervention in the Lebanon: " It is not in Britain's self-interest alone that Britain should once again assert her own position.
A world in which the American myth and the American nightmare go unchallenged by question or by contradiction is not a world as safe or as peaceable as human reason, prudence and realism can make it ".

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