readiness at Barksdale, I have relied in the main on the official reports commissioned by the Air Force and the Pentagon in the debacle’s aftermath. Thank you to the pseudonymous “Nate Hale” for shaking loose the “Limited Nuclear Surety Inspection Report” that followed the September 2007 Air Combat Command inspection at Barksdale. Reporting by Joby Warrick and Walter Pincus in the
Jaya Tiwari and Cleve J. Gray have compiled a most useful index of nuclear near-disasters in their paper “U.S. Nuclear Weapons Accidents.” For those particularly interested in the North Carolina incident, it’s worth poking around the website Broken Arrow: Goldsboro, NC, The Truth Behind North Carolina’s Brush with Disaster at www.ibiblio.org/bomb/index.html.
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Epilogue: You Build It, You Own It
Although I have not used them as sources per se, readers interested in exploring the basic thesis here from different analytical and historical vantage points might find useful the writings of James Fallows (
Acknowledgments
I’m the slowest writer on earth. I make sloth look blurry with speed. First thanks therefore go to Crown and the very patient Rachel Klayman for letting this whole process take as long as it needed to.
Thanks to Mark Zwonitzer for expert research, assistance, and yet further calm, good-humored patience. With Mark: book; without Mark: no book. And thanks to Sierra Pettengill for appropriately ferocious fact checking.
If I ever write a sequel to this book that’s just about the inadvertently hilarious policy and culture of nuclear weapons, it will be thanks to the early and very fun research I did on that topic with my friend Shelley Lewis.
Laurie Liss at Sterling Lord Literistic has been a stalwart pal as well as an extraordinarily effective noodge; I’m thankful also to the SLL office staff for letting me essentially take up room and board in their conference room on Bleecker Street for months at a time.
My boss at MSNBC, Phil Griffin, my executive producer, Bill Wolff, and the whole staff of
Thank you to Penny Simon at Crown for deftly ushering the book into the world in a way that I’d have no clue how to arrange on my own.
But mostly I am thankful to my beloved Susan, for letting this project and my obsession with these ideas take up so much space in our lives. Without family support, I never would have been able to do this.
And without the genuine inspiration I get from my generation of veterans, I never would have wanted to do this. Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are less than 1 percent of the US population. But they are a huge part of why I’m bullish on America’s capacity to adapt, lead, and succeed in the twenty-first century.
About the Author
Rachel Maddow has hosted the Emmy Award–winning
Copyright
Copyright © 2012 by Rachel Maddow
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
CROWN and the Crown colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Maddow, Rachel.
Drift: the unmooring of American military power/Rachel Maddow.—1st ed.
p. cm.
1. National security—United States. 2. United States—Military policy.
3. United States—Armed Forces—Appropriations and expenditures.
4. Militarism—United States. 5. Political culture—United States.
6. United States—Foreign relations—1989– 7. United States—Politics and government—1989– I. Title.
UA23.M17 2012
306.2?70973—dc23 2012000998
eISBN: 978-0-307-46100-1
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