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"Straightforward, rigorous account of how President Barack Obama's
embrace of high-tech militarism is changing the parameters of the
presidency. Gardner (Emeritus, History/Rutgers Univ.; The Road to Tahrir
Square: Egypt and the United States from the Rise of Nasser to the Fall
of Mubarak, 2011, etc.) presents a deeper narrative than the title
implies, essentially utilizing the George W. Bush administration's
decision to pursue war in Iraq at the expense of the Afghanistan
campaign necessitated by 9/11 as a flash point that altered our ability
to respond to terrorist threats. Thus, though the author concurs that
Obama the constitutional scholar "fell into the embrace of Reaper and
Predator drones by circumstances beyond his control," he still holds
responsible the president and his various high-end deputies for blithely
advocating their increased use in controversial environments like
Pakistan and Yemen. Gardner excels at presenting a lucid narrative that
focuses on both dramatic military events--such as the pursuit of the
U.S.-born firebrand preacher Anwar al-Awlaki, put on the drone "kill
list" after the 2009 "underwear bomb" attempt against an American
airliner--and the complex ballet of political calculations that underlie
America's aggressive foreign policy stance. Attentive to the issue's
legal and moral complexities, the author depicts the insidious qualities
of drones' attractiveness to both Obama and his many advisers, beyond
the threat of imminent terrorism embodied by al-Awlaki: "Fighting
insurgencies was supposedly a different matter altogether, and there was
the rub." Ultimately, the high-tech lethality and legal obfuscation of
drone warfare both suggest a handy metaphor for American power and a
terrifying portent of the global future: By 2011, following American
dissatisfaction with the ground war in Afghanistan, it seemed "the drone
had replaced counterinsurgency." And even though the increased reliance
on drones appeared cost-free, "Obama found himself in danger of losing
control of the momentum of drone warfare" as he looked past his own
second term. An evenhanded yet grim assessment of the growing consensus
regarding "the lethal presidency." (Kirkus Reviews)
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