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The New American Militarism: How Americans…
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The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War (2006. Auflage)

von Andrew J. Bacevich (Autor)

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395764,691 (4.17)5
This is an updated edition of Andrew J. Bacevich's valuable examination of the dangerous obsession that has taken hold of Americans: a marriage of militarism and blind utopian ideology, of unprecedented military might and a blind faith in the universality of American values.
Mitglied:bnmak
Titel:The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War
Autoren:Andrew J. Bacevich (Autor)
Info:Oxford University Press (2006), Edition: First PB Edition, First Printing, 288 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek, Lese gerade, Noch zu lesen, Gelesen, aber nicht im Besitz (inactive)
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The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War von Andrew Bacevich

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Sobering view of how the military and the government has evolved over the years. And the status quo seems quite depressing. The cycle of war seems never ending. Bacevich had a lot to say in the book. Found it dense reading. But love his insights. As to how to fix it? Thats a bit tougher. ( )
  bermandog | Apr 16, 2016 |
Status quo, according to an old joke, is Latin for “the mess we’re in.” Andrew Bacevich—a retired U. S. Army colonel turned historian of international relations—dissects the status quo in this wide-ranging, erudite book and concludes that we are, as a nation, very deep in a very serious mess of our own making.

The mess has been decades in the making, and both political parties—along the public—bear a measure of responsibility for it. It is rooted in the Wilsonian ideal of using American power to remake the world in America’s image, reinforced by Americans’ embrace of a lifestyle based on the availability of cheap oil, exacerbated by the shift from an army with a large percentage of draftees to one composed solely of volunteers, and sustained by the rise of a pathological “national security culture” that magnifies the influence of the military-industrial complex over the president while diminishing that of Congress. Bacevich outlines these and other contributing causes, one-by-one, in a series of crisply written, clearly argued, and thoroughly documented chapters. His primary goal is to advance an argument, but in the course of doing so he offers a surprisingly comprehensive meta-analysis of American foreign policy since 1917.

Bacevich’s principal goal is to define a problem, rather than offer a solution, and the book is, accordingly, longer on analysis than on policy prescriptions. Dissatisfying on one level—this is not a reassuring book—it is true to the material and the conclusions that the Bacevich draws from it. The mess we’re in is a complex, tightly knotted problem: decades in the making and likely to be decades in the undoing. The value of The New American Militarism lies in its insistence on that complexity, and its warning that anyone proffering quick and easy solutions, or blaming The Other Party, is missing the point. ( )
  ABVR | Feb 22, 2014 |
I picked up "The New American Militarism" because I wanted a way to navigate around the odd mixture of obsequiousness, guilt and genuine respect that I've detected around so many discussions of the American military lately. Bacevich, does, after a fashion, mention this element of civilian-military relations, but his focus is deeply historical and his analysis is very acute. The book describes, explains, and examines the changes that have taken place in the American military since Vietnam, some of which have taken place pretty much out of public view. The author covers the birth of the all-volunteer military, the enormous growth of the military budget, the compromises involved in foreign policy's determination to avoid another Vietnam, the ways that high technology has changed the military and the foreign policy establishment the birth of the neo-conservative movement, and more. The last of these is particularly useful: Bacevich, something of a lapsed conservative himself, provides a succinct history of a term that has, in the past decade, become more of an insult than a meaningful political designation and explains what sets them apart from older conservatives. He also charts the continual expansion of America's foreign policy responsibilities, particularly in the Middle East, where he considers America to be waging a decades-long, strategically vital global conflict, and and argues that these more-or-less commit Americans to a more militarized foreign policy and a more military-friendly society.

Bacevich is a good writer and struck me as having a strong command of his ideas -- unsurprisingly, since he used to align himself with many of the intellectuals he criticizes here and is a former officer himself. He's also cognizant of what he presents as a series of sad ironies: how, for example, the military's understandable desire to avoid casualties may have kept it from completing foreign policy objectives, therefore setting the stage for future wars with casualties of their own, or the gigantic human costs of being seduced by the promise of a technologically advanced form of warfare. He also seems to care deeply about preserving what he sees as both the integrity of the military and the most important facets of American democracy. A book that, though it was published ten years ago, still seems necessary and important. ( )
  TheAmpersand | Sep 22, 2013 |
Prof. Bacevich offers coherent, systematic insights into why American citizens accept every larger defense expenditures as well as wars (by any other name) that are not in defense of the nation. He also offers ten suggestions about approaches to remedying our fascination with all things military. Essential reading, I believe. ( )
  nmele | Apr 6, 2013 |
Nobody escapes criticism in this historical look at how the military came to play such a large role in American foreign policy, and how the military has drifted increasing further away from American society. ( )
  lorin | Jan 3, 2010 |
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This is an updated edition of Andrew J. Bacevich's valuable examination of the dangerous obsession that has taken hold of Americans: a marriage of militarism and blind utopian ideology, of unprecedented military might and a blind faith in the universality of American values.

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