'Outstanding ... combines a glimpse behind the security screens with a sharp analysis of the real global insecurities - growing inequality and unsustainability' - New Internationalist
Written in the late 1990s, Losing Control was years, if not decades, ahead of its time, predicting the 9/11 attacks, a seemingly endless war on terror and the relentless increase in revolts from the margins and bitter opposition to wealthy elites.
Now, more than two decades later and in an era of pandemics, climate breakdown and potential further military activity in the Middle East, Asia and Africa, Paul Rogers has revised and expanded the original analysis, pointing to the 2030s and '40s as the decades that will see a showdown between a bitter, environmentally wrecked and deeply insecure world and a possible world order rooted in justice and peace.
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
Paul Rogers is Professor of Peace Studies at the University of Bradford and Global Security Consultant with Oxford Research Group (ORG). He has worked in the field of international security, arms control and political violence for over 30 years. He lectures at universities and defence colleges in several countries and has written or edited 26 books, including Global Security and the War on Terror: Elite Power and the Illusion of Control (Routledge, 2008) and Why We're Losing the War on Terror (Polity, 2008). Since October 2001 he has written monthly Briefing Papers on international security and the "war on terror" for ORG. He is also a regular commentator on global security issues in both the national and international media, and is openDemocracy’s International Security Editor.
In the 1960s he worked with the Haslemere Group, an early pressure group on trade and development issues before embarking on an academic career first at Huddersfield and then at Bradford. [wikipedia]
I find this short book very fascinating to read. One must be aware, however, that many of the author's information are a little dated and may distort or even omit some new realities since its publication in the year 2000. North Korea was still not a nuclear state, Iraq was still believed to have pushed forward the development of "biological weapons," the US was still grasping its strategy against the rise of China (China was seen as the new Soviet Union), etc. The two things that stand out are the author's analysis of the effects of income inequality and climate change to the future of social and political stability. Overall, this is a dated book but it is still useful if one is seeking for an understanding of the US military developments prior to the events on 9/11.
Read the 4th edition which was out this year. This book focuses on the post Cold War landscape, a landscape where the 'enemy' would change from the USSR to a number of small radical groups. It follows through to the attacks on the Twin Towers, the subsequent 4 failed wars (Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria), the rise of ISIS, and the COVID pandemic. A really good analysis of the west's infatuation with neoliberalism and their outright refusal to embrace environmental, economic, or military change.
Very interesting topic, but wastes too much time going into uninteresting details about various military equipment which ultimately quell the overall quality of this very short book.