Dealing with the "Drift"
I have just finished reading/listening to Rachel Maddow's book "Drift: The Unmooring of American Military Power." I know some will immediately want to dismiss it because of Ms. Maddow's public liberal leanings. However, this book is a thoughtful must read for every American. As a historian Ms. Maddow brings a powerful view of the history or our growing ability to wage war without "bothering" the American people. In short, she argues that it has become far too easy for America to wage war without fully vetting the process our founding patriots envisioned.
As reviewer Catherin Lutz noted: "Maddow sounds an alarm this country needs to hear more than almost any other. It is a warning about the deep erosion of perhaps the central aim and claim of the country's founding document: A standing army is a threat to freedom, and a government of free people must place the responsibility for deciding to use force in the hands of multiple actors if we are to prevent the rash recourse to violence. Until we reverse that loss, we will continue to have a government of, by and for war."
And from Chris Barsanti: "In a time of crushing deficits, political cowardice and demagoguery, near-permanent ground war in Central Asia, and an expanding worldwide ghost war of drones and special forces kill teams, Drift bears a lot of weight on its narrow shoulders, more than a work this short and occasionally unfocused can bear. When Maddow writes about how the metastasis of the “the national security state” caused decisions to go to war to “become painless and slick, almost automatic,” it’s a smart prescription for change that requires no snarky asides to make it go down easier."
Scott Shane of the NYT summarizes: "Yet as the United States extracts itself from two wars of uncertain achievement — and with politicians, not generals, threatening military action against Iran — “Drift” is a thought-provoking and timely book. And many readers, conservative and liberal alike, will embrace one of Maddow’s practical prescriptions: that taxes should be raised or war bonds sold to pay for any conflict, since “going to war, being at war, should be painful for the entire country, from the start.”"
Regardless of your political views, this book is well worth the read or listen. As citizens, we need to know.
KAW