EBOOK

National Insecurity

The Cost of American Militarism

Melvin A. Goodman
(0)
Pages
464
Year
2013
Language
English

About

Upon leaving the White House in 1961, President Eisenhower famously warned Americans about the dangers of a "military industrial complex," and was clearly worried about the destabilizing effects of a national economy based on outsized investments in military spending. As more and more Americans fall into poverty and the global economy spirals downward, the United States is spending more on the military than ever before. What are the consequences and what can be done? Melvin Goodman, a twenty-four-year veteran of the CIA, brings peerless authority to his argument that US military spending is indeed making Americans poorer and less secure while undermining our political standing in the world. Drawing from his firsthand experience with war planners and intelligence strategists, Goodman offers an insider's critique of the US military economy from President's Eisenhower's farewell warning to Barack Obama's expansion of the military's power. He outlines a much needed vision for how to alter our military policy, practices, and spending in order to better position the United States globally and enhance prosperity and security at home.

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Reviews

"In this impassioned expose of the astronomical costs of America's defense policy, former CIA analyst Goodman demonstrates how post-cold war neoconservatives…promoted a pugnacious militarism that has led to a string of foreign policy debacles and unprecedented levels of military spending. Few will finish this precisely argued polemic without the uneasy feeling that military spending is out of cont
Publishers Weekly
"We have hundreds of military bases all over the world, Melvin A. Gordon observes in National Insecurity: The Cost of American Militarism. Few countries have any. Goodman, a former Army cryptographer and a longtime C.I.A. analyst who taught at the National War College for eighteen years, is one of a growing number of critics of U.S. military spending, policy, and culture who are veterans of earlie
Jill Lepore, The New Yorker
"Goodman's value added is his focus on the role of the militarization of intelligence…crucial to establishing that mortal threats to America perennially loom--out there--demanding bloated military budgets and frequent wars…With a convincing accumulation of examples, Goodman reveals how our political leadership's occasional impulse to arms-control accords or defense budget cuts have come to be thwa
San Francisco Chronicle

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