How everything became war and the military became everything

tales from the Pentagon

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Rosa Brooks: How everything became war and the military became everything (2016)

438 pages

English language

Published Aug. 20, 2016

ISBN:
978-1-4767-7786-3
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OCLC Number:
940795371

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The Pentagon's a strange place. Inside secure command centers, military officials make life and death decisions--but the Pentagon also offers food courts, banks, drugstores, florists, and chocolate shops. When Rosa Brooks gave her family a tour, her mother gaped at the glossy window displays: "So the heart of American military power is a shopping mall?" In a sense, yes: the U.S. military has become our one-stop-shopping solution to global problems. Today's military personnel analyze computer code, train Afghan judges, build Ebola isolation wards, eavesdrop on electronic communications, develop soap operas, and patrol the seas for pirates. Rosa Brooks traces this seismic shift in how America wages war from an unconventional perspective. She is a former top Pentagon official and the daughter of antiwar protesters; a human rights activist and the wife of an Army Special Forces officer. Her book is by turns a memoir, a work of journalism, and a …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Government policy
  • National security
  • Just war doctrine
  • Operations other than war
  • Philosophy
  • War (International law)
  • Strategic culture
  • Militarism
  • Terrorism
  • Prevention
  • Armed Forces

Places

  • United States