Review by Choice Review
Those unfamiliar with Bacevich's work will be thrilled to encounter a first-rate thinker whose trenchant, objective, well-written analyses defy glib labeling. Here, he examines American politics during the quarter century bracketed by the collapse of the Soviet Union and the election of Donald Trump (1991--2016). The new American consensus that emerged at the end of the Cold War was, as he argues, undergirded by four things: a triumphant neoliberalism, a global leadership based primarily on military power, an emphasis on personal freedom (sans notions of obligations or responsibilities), and the growing supremacy of the executive branch. The author deftly pulls apart the promises and policies of each presidential candidate and/or administration during this period, clearly showing that, except for hard-fought battles against sexist, racist, and homophobic practices (seen as an American Kulturkampf), successive officeholders blithely nurtured this post--Cold War consensus--unaware of the hardships many Americans faced. Voter resentment of policies that exacerbated economic inequality propelled Trump, whose outsider pose and simplistic answers proved seductive, into the White House. No fan of the current president, Bacevich (emer., Boston Univ.) sees him as a symptom--not the cause--of the US's problems. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels. --Robert T. Ingoglia, St.Thomas Aquinas College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
America's post--Cold War hubris bred economic discontent, military quagmires, moral chaos, and Donald Trump's presidency, according to this sharp but unconvincing polemic. Boston University history professor Bacevich (The Limits of Power) posits a cohesive American identity built around middle-class prosperity, traditional morality, and anticommunism that lasted from WWII until the fall of the Berlin Wall. But after the Soviet Union's collapse, he contends, America pursued a deluded agenda of economic globalization that yielded inequality and insecurity, world leadership ambitions that hatched indecisive "forever wars," an unrealistic politics of "presidential supremacy," and divisive cultural and moral upheavals that privileged individual autonomy over self-discipline and social obligation. Bacevich traces these developments in tart sketches of the presidencies of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama, and of the resulting MAGA backlash. (He evenhandedly calls Trump "a noxious, venal blowhard" while disparaging the "protracted psychic orgasm" of the media's obsession with him.) Bacevich's assertion of a Cold War consensus is too pat--the era seethed with economic, military, and cultural conflict--and while his observations on the antagonism of modern-day politics sometimes hit home, they don't break new ground or suggest a plausible way around America's impasses. As a result, this righteous harangue fails to land many of its punches. (Jan.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A brief, painful, and thoughtful analysis of how "the passing of the Cold War could not have been more disorienting."More than three decades ago, the United States took credit for defeating communism, and pundits predicted wonderful things. Readers wondering why they never happened should turn to the latest from Bacevich (Emeritus, History/Boston Univ.; (Twilight of the American Century, 2018, etc.). He notes how pundits proclaimed that, as the sole superpower, we would lead the world to a better future with global corporate capitalism enriching everyone. Freedom, in this new era, required a new conception that emphasized individual autonomy. The author laments the decline of traditional morality, and he argues that completing the new order is the concept of presidential supremacy, including a freedom to make war, which presidents employ enthusiastically. Although still considered sacred, Bacevich writes, our Constitution no longer describes a government of three equal branches. The results? Military operations regularly fail at great expense. Unfettered free enterprise has enriched the middle class but excluded many. The most secure career for a high school graduate is the military. The author condemns Donald Trump's three predecessors, who embraced the new order despite admitting that there were problems that they declined to fix. "Himself a mountebank of the very first order, Trump exposed as fraudulent the triumphalism that served as a signature of the post-Cold War decades," writes the author. "On this score, Trump mattered and bigly." Few readers would argue with Bacevich's conclusion that today's critical issues are fettering free enterprise in favor of those it excludes, confronting China's new superpower status, and dealing with climate change, but they're not catching on. Many Republicans grouse about Trump, but no groundswell opposes him. Democrats promote programs to fight poverty and promote social justice, thrilling their faithful but not former Democrats, some of whom still appreciate Trump's flamboyant rhetoric.A brilliant but ultimately discouraging analysis of how America messed up its big chance. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.