He claims that the constitution has been perverted by the expansion of the presidency and by national security, at the expense of Congress. Concluding that America’s military power “turns out to be quite limited”, he argues that the country “doesn’t need a bigger army. It needs a smaller—that is, more modest—foreign policy, one that assigns soldiers on missions that are consistent with their capabilities..."This could be very interesting. Maybe even enough so to get me to write a review?
He expresses his judgments, some grumpy, some anguished, in sharp, epigrammatic language. “A grand bazaar”, he writes, “provides an inadequate basis upon which to erect a vast empire.” Americans have recast the Jeffersonian trinity—life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness—to read: “Whoever dies with the most toys wins”; “Shop till you drop”; and “If it feels good, do it.”
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Lost in exceptionalism...
It is not often that a book review makes me immediately place an order, but the Economist on Bacevich's new work, The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism sent me to Amazon straightaway.
Labels:
books,
Economics,
Foreign Policy,
International Politics,
politics,
rEalpoliticK
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