The I Index

The Age of Illusions: How America Squandered Its Cold War Victory

Maybe someday

37

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

17/100

Critics

7/100

Scholars

89/100

Author:

Andrew J. Bacevich

Publisher:

Metropolitan Books

Date:

January 7, 2020

A historian and longtime U.S. Army official traces the three-decade downward spiral of the United States from Cold War victor to land of gaping inequality, permanent war, moral confusion, an increasingly angry and alienated population—all lead by a historically unfit president.

What The Reviewers Say

Beverly Gage,
The Washington Post
The Age of Illusions is a wry and dark book aimed at dissecting decades-long trends and first principles rather than moment-to-moment crises. Bacevich is as merciless toward liberals who he says are guilty of 'self-righteously posturing against Trump' as toward the president himself.
Noah Millman,
The New York Times Book Review
It’s a compelling narrative, and one congruent with the story of 'American carnage' that brought Donald Trump to the White House.
Richard Crepeau,
New York Journal of Books
Absolutely no one is spared in this powerful and highly readable indictment.
John S. Gardner,
The Guardian (UK)
Winston Churchill supposedly said: 'Americans will always do the right thing, only after they have tried everything else.' In his new book, Andrew Bacevich goes far towards proving the second half of that sentence and casts doubt on the first, without offering much in the way of alternatives. In what is mostly a social history of the post-cold war era—don’t expect to find an analysis of the Balkan wars—Bacevich seeks to chronicle how the US 'wasted little time in squandering the advantage it had gained.' Few would disagree.