War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

by Norman Solomon

Narrated by Joe Barrett

Unabridged — 5 hours, 50 minutes

War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

by Norman Solomon

Narrated by Joe Barrett

Unabridged — 5 hours, 50 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$19.99
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $19.99

Overview

More than twenty years ago, 9/11 and the war in Afghanistan set into motion a hugely consequential shift in America's foreign policy: a perpetual state of war that is almost entirely invisible to the American public. War Made Invisible, by the journalist and political analyst Norman Solomon, exposes how this happened, and what its consequences are, from military and civilian casualties to drained resources at home.



From Iraq through Afghanistan and Syria and on to little-known deployments in a range of countries around the globe, the United States has been at perpetual war for at least the past two decades. Yet many of these forays remain off the radar of average Americans. Compliant journalists add to the smokescreen by providing narrow coverage of military engagements and by repeating the military's talking points. Meanwhile, the increased use of high technology, air power, and remote drones has put distance between soldiers and the civilians who die. Back at home, Solomon argues, the cloak of invisibility masks massive Pentagon budgets that receive bipartisan approval even as policy makers struggle to fund the domestic agenda.



Necessary, timely, and unflinching, War Made Invisible is an eloquent moral call for counting the true costs of war.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

04/17/2023

Journalist Solomon (Made Love, Got War) offers a sharp critique of Republicans and Democrats who advocate for military action, U.S. media coverage that makes it easier to sell wars to the public, and the often-hidden cost of civilian casualties from errant U.S. attacks. He claims that when Russia targeted Ukrainian cities during the recent invasion, the U.S. media was “all-hands-on-deck with empathetic, poignant reporting.... But, when American missiles and bombs hit population centers over the previous two decades, the human tragedies rarely got anything more than short shrift.” (He also notes that the architect of the U.S. military’s “shock and awe” strategy in the 2003 Iraq has “judged the Russia effort to be of inferior quality, with mild impact compared to what he had pushed the Pentagon to inflict on Baghdad.”) Elsewhere, Solomon critiques the Biden administration for providing weapons and logistical support to Saudi Arabia while the country wages war in Yemen, notes that the Pentagon’s annual funding for special operations has increased by $10 billion since 2001, and calls out the “U.S. media establishment” for giving “full-throated support” to the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, only to offer a much harsher judgment 20 years later. Though Solomon paints U.S. journalism and foreign policy in broad strokes, he builds a convincing case that too many secrets are being kept from the public. It’s a troubling and worthwhile call for change. (June)

The Progressive

An edifice of evidence showing deliberate, consistent, coordinated, and well-funded efforts to squelch movements opposing the vicious consequences of war…His highly worthwhile book invites readers to embrace his clarity and campaign to end all wars.”

Booklist

An engrossing story of governmental hubris and media compliance…Solomon offers a necessary beam of light on an important subject shrouded in darkness.”

Peace News

Full of illuminating quotes and facts.”

Truthout

Offers a powerful framework for understanding geopolitical crises, as well as the unseen yet enduring costs of militarism."

author of The Doomsday Machine Daniel Ellsberg

No one is better at exposing the dynamics of media and politics that keep starting and continuing wars. War Made Invisible will provide the fresh and profound clarity that our country desperately needs.”

New York Times bestselling author James Bradley

Today dozens of conflicts are unseen and unknown by us the taxpayers who pay for them. Norman Solomon now explains how this seemingly impossible situation has become our everyday reality.”

From the Publisher

Praise for War Made Invisible:

"An important new book . . . [War Made Invisible] reveals how we are taught to ignore U.S. war spending, war making, and those others our country wages war against."
Rethinking Schools

"Norman Solomon has done the nation a great service by collecting this information to try to make our wars a little more visible."
Radical Philosophy Review

"Norman Solomon has written a new book that deserves to be widely read . . . replete with important insights into how the media establishment and government officials from both major political parties promote the interests of the military-industrial complex. In War Made Invisible, readers will also find an eloquent moral call to end this state of affairs."
Monthly Review
 
"A very readable reality check about post-9/11 U.S. foreign policy . . . full of illuminating quotes and facts."
Peace News

"Solomon offers a powerful framework for understanding geopolitical crises, as well as the unseen yet enduring costs of militarism."
—Truthout

 "Norman Solomon’s War Made Invisible erects an edifice of evidence showing deliberate, consistent, coordinated, and well-funded efforts to squelch movements opposing the vicious consequences of war. . . . His highly worthwhile book invites readers to embrace his clarity and campaign to end all wars."
—The Progressive

“[War Made Invisible] builds a convincing case that too many secrets are being kept from the public. It’s a troubling and worthwhile call for change.”
Publishers Weekly


“A powerful, necessary indictment of efforts to disguise the human toll of American foreign policy.”
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“An engrossing story of governmental hubris and media compliance. . . . Solomon offers a necessary beam of light on an important subject shrouded in darkness.”
Booklist

“For decades Norman Solomon has been one of the most insightful critics of the incestuous and war-addicted American press. His new book gives us reason to weep and also to cheer. Weep to see how eagerly our media promotes foreign wars and the politicians and arms makers who design them. Cheer to know that a few clear-eyed Americans see what they are doing and write about it.”
Stephen Kinzer, award-winning journalist and bestselling author of All the Shah’s Men

“I couldn’t put it down. This book, written in an easy-to-read style, gets to the heart of the matter. The Pentagon (with an annual PR budget of more than $600 million) has a cardinal rule: Above all do not allow American families to actually see the death and destruction that our government is inflicting on mothers, fathers, sons, and daughters in other countries.”
—Ben Cohen, co-founder, Ben & Jerry’s

“The great African writer Chinua Achebe recounts an African proverb that ‘until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.’ In Norman Solomon’s gripping and painful study of what the hunter seeks to make invisible, the lions have found their historian, who scrupulously dismantles the deceit of the hunters and records what is all too visible to the lions.”
—Noam Chomsky

“With an immense and rare humanity, Solomon insists that we awaken from the slumber of denial and distraction and confront the carnage of the U.S.’s never-ending military onslaughts. A staggeringly important intervention.”
—Naomi Klein, bestselling author of The Shock Doctrine

“Solomon exposes how media lies, distortions, and misdirections represent the abandonment of journalism’s promise to connect human beings to one another.”
—Janine Jackson, program director, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting

“Norman Solomon exposes the cant and lies that underpin the global war on terror, indicting the policymakers, functionaries, and media propagandists who perpetuate this ‘political license to kill.’ Read it to understand how Americans were deceived and at last end what was designed to be a perpetual campaign of global violence and surveillance.”
—Charles Glass, former ABC News chief Middle East correspondent and author of Syria Burning and Deserter

“One of the singular achievements of the U.S. military industrial complex has been its relative invisibility. Enabled by a complicit media, our bloody wars fade into the backdrop of most Americans’ everyday lives, as does the insidious militarization of our culture and economy. Even in Washington, DC, the heart of the complex, one rarely sees a uniform. Norman Solomon performs a vital service with his vivid depiction of the reality behind the artfully crafted veil, and its grim consequences for all of us.”
—Andrew Cockburn, author of Kill Chain and The Spoils of War, and Washington editor, Harper’s Magazine

“When my father hit the black sands of Iwo Jima, the photograph of the flag raising atop Mount Suribachi took 48 hours from the snap of the camera to mothers and fathers viewing their sons on the front pages of their hometown newspapers. Today dozens of conflicts are unseen and unknown by us the taxpayers who pay for them. Norman Solomon now explains how this seemingly impossible situation has become our everyday reality.”
—James Bradley, author of Flag of Our Fathers

“No one is better at exposing the dynamics of media and politics that keep starting and continuing wars. War Made Invisible will provide the fresh and profound clarity that our country desperately needs.”
—Daniel Ellsberg, bestselling author of The Doomsday Machine

“It has been impossible to build an ongoing, effective anti-war movement when the mainstream media in this country has refused to explain to the American people the mendacious pretexts and horrific consequences of U.S. military adventures. War Made Invisible pulls back the curtain on the warmakers and the fawning journalists who enable them to lie and kill with impunity. It exposes the tangled web between the lives we destroy abroad and violence that tears at the heart of our community back home. The book is an antidote to twenty years of U.S. media malpractice and should be required reading for journalists and all those who long to live in peace. ”
—Medea Benjamin, co-founder of CODEPINK

“Norman Solomon has been speaking necessary truths about America’s addiction to military power for decades, with clarity, directness, and unswerving principle. The message he delivers here is especially urgent in our era of extreme political division: Almost no Americans understand the true costs of our war machine, and both parties are actively deceiving us.”
Andrew O’Hehir, executive editor, Salon

“‘The first casualty when war comes is truth,’ Senator Hiram Johnson of California said in 1929. Almost a century later, corporate media ever more closely conforms to the dictates of Pentagon planners, shutting out whistleblowers, dissenters, and those at the target end of U.S. military might. Cutting through this manufactured ‘fog of war,’ Norman Solomon eloquently casts sunlight, the best disinfectant, on the propaganda that fuels perpetual war. War Made Invisible is essential reading in these increasingly perilous times.”
Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!

"In this brilliant and timely book, Mr. Solomon courageously exposes America for having veered tragically off course, leaving behind its sacred ideals and betraying the very roots of its revolutionary past. In these difficult times when truth and justice seem to have lost their way, a very special and daring book appears out of the darkness of this seemingly endless night, giving us all as a nation and people a reason to hope."
—Ron Kovic, Vietnam veteran and author of Born on the Fourth of July

Library Journal

05/01/2023

Political analyst/journalist Solomon (War Made Easy) is the author of 12 books about the military and related media issues. In this book, he asserts that media outlets and the U.S. military sometimes closely coordinate the release of information. He contends that rosy press releases that journalists receive from the DOD are often accepted without much scrutiny and with little respect for the victims of the wars. The book describes notable bombing campaigns, and the author argues that dead civilians in faraway countries are barely noticed and that the American public largely ignores the cost in dollars and foreign blood. This work provides a much needed, if sometimes overwrought, cautionary approach to mainstream journalism. VERDICT Ideal for libraries with military or political collections. Valuable for libraries with journalism titles.—Edwin Burgess

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2023-01-28
The role of government and media in concealing the consequences of war.

With formidable clarity, Solomon, the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy and author of War Made Easy, documents how the so-called war on terror has spawned an endless and secretive program of foreign interventions. The author is particularly eloquent in explaining how the media’s exclusive focus on past and potential “American suffering” in framing such activities has meant that “there [isn’t] much room to see or care about the suffering of others, even if—or especially if—it was caused by the United States.” Solomon points out that this pattern of selective moral attention accompanies a widespread ignorance of the actual policies being carried out by the American military and its numerous contractors. Particularly persuasive are the author’s illustrations of how media outlets have been coopted into producing what is essentially war propaganda and how journalists who seek to question the honesty of government officials are routinely silenced. Solomon makes a striking comparison between the American media’s strong interest in the losses endured by Ukrainian civilians after the recent Russian invasion and its indifference to the fate of Iraqi civilians after America’s invasion in 2003. As such, it should be no wonder how fantasies of an incorruptible national innocence—or what the author memorably dubs “the standard Manichean autopilot of American thought”—have been perpetuated. Solomon may have offered a somewhat deeper analysis of why American journalism fails to live up to its ideals in reporting on war and the reasons why political leaders might feel compelled to traffic in deception when addressing the public. Nonetheless, the author presents an incisive and provocative overview of the consequences of the media’s appalling failures in making important truths known.

A powerful, necessary indictment of efforts to disguise the human toll of American foreign policy.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940160418490
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 02/20/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews