The Limits of Power by Col Andrew Bacevich, 2008, Excerpts
Just beneath the glitter of the Reagan years, the economic position of the
During the 1990s, the chief responsibility was to preside over a grand project of political-economic convergence and integration commonly referred to as globalization. Globalization served as a euphemism for soft, or informal, empire. Whatever means were employed, the management of empire assumed the existence of bountiful reserves of power – economic, political, but above all military.
The foreign policy implications of our present-day penchant for consumption and self-indulgence are almost entirely negative. Over the past six decades, efforts to satisfy spiraling consumer demand have given birth to a condition of profound dependency.