SUPERPOWER is the complex and mesmerizing story of the most powerful country on earth, the United States, and what it has done with this unprecedented power since emerging from World War II with a strong industrial base and the lone ability to drop an atomic bomb. Going behind the scenes to review key moments in American history with archival footage, analysis of foreign policy, and interviews with notable experts and leaders, the film illuminates why people in other countries see the US as an aggressor in a quest for global dominance through economic expansion and military strategy. SUPERPOWER examines the US military-industrial complex about which President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned the public during his 1961 Farewell Address, and presents motives for US foreign policy decisions since World War II, military actions for regime change, and current legislation that is eroding American civil liberties. Key insights emerge from a pantheon of experts, including Noam Chomsky, William Blum, Chalmers Johnson, Michel Chossudovsky, Command Sergeant (Ret.) Eric Haney, former Chief Economist for the US Department of Labor, Morgan Reynolds, three-time Nobel Peace Prize nominee, Kathy Kelly, Lt. Col. (Ret) Karen Kwiatkowski, and Sergei Khrushchev, son of the former General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union during the Cold War period, Nikita Khrushchev, and others.