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Age of Danger

Keeping America Safe in an Era of New Superpowers, New Weapons, and New Threats

Contributors

By Andrew Hoehn

By Thom Shanker

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Price

$30.00

Price

$38.00 CAD

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around May 9, 2023. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

An urgent look at how America’s national security machine went astray and how it fails to keep us safe—and what we can do to fix it.

Again and again, American taxpayers are asked to open their wallets and pay for a national security machine that costs $1 trillion operate. Yet time and time again, the US government gets it wrong on critical issues. So what can be done? Enter bestselling author Thom Shanker and defense expert Andrew Hoehn. With decades of national security expertise between them and access to virtually every expert, they look at what’s going wrong in national security and how to make it go right.

Age of Danger looks at the major challenges facing America—from superpowers like Russia and China to emerging threats like pandemics, cybersecurity, climate change, and drones—and reimagines the national security apparatus into something that can truly keep Americans safe. Weaving together expert analysis with exclusive interviews from a new generation of national security leaders, Shanker and Hoehn argue that the United States must create an industrial-grade, life-saving machine out of a system that, for too long, was focused only on deterring adversaries and carrying out global military operations. It is a timely and crucial call to action—a call that if heeded, could save Americans lives, money, and our very future on the global stage.

  • “In the years after the 9/11 attacks, terrorism became the zoom-like focus of our government and military. Hoehn and Shanker make a powerful case that our national security leadership requires a more panoramic definition of what is a threat to the United States. Russia and China are back in view but other problems less so. National security has to include food security, climate security, disease security. They clearly define a new outlook, and the new set of institutional tools to manage the Age of Danger in which we find ourselves today.” 
    Chuck Hagel, former Secretary of Defense, former U.S. Senator, Vietnam veteran
  • Age of Danger makes a compelling case that we need to re-architect our national security processes and institutions to deal with the challenges of this new era, from great power competition to climate change and pandemics.  Creative and thought-provoking, this book is a must read for students, policy practitioners and concerned citizens alike.”
    Michele Flournoy, former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
  • “Tomorrow’s threats are likely to include Great Power competition, cyber, disease, and climate – and we are far from prepared to meet them. In this timely volume, two leading experts help us think through new approaches to tune up the vast machine of national security to make ourselves more secure. Time is of the essence!”
    Admiral James Stavridis, former NATO Supreme Allied Commander and author of 2034: A Novel of the Next World War
  • Age of Danger leaves us with no excuses. The new, serious threats it describes demand our attention and, more importantly, our action. We are out of time for delay. This is a clear, direct, and understandable must-read for anyone concerned about the nation’s security.”
    William “Mac” Thornberry, former chairman of the House Armed Services Committee
  • “Admiral Bill Crowe used to say ‘At times like this, it’s important to remember there have always been times like this.’ That might have been true in the Admiral’s day, but, as Hoehn and Shanker point out in their gripping and persuasive book, we are now living in unprecedented times. Age of Danger makes a clear, rational, and urgent case for a significant reevaluation of our national security strategy.”
    Admiral Timothy J. Keating, former Commander, US Pacific Command and US Northern Command
  • “Our national security structures were built more than seventy years ago. They served us well over time, but, like an old car, there is only so much tinkering you can do. It’s time to put the old Chevy in the garage and build a modern national security machine. Hoehn and Shanker offer solutions on how to do it.”
    Nadia Schadlow, former Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategy
  • “Andy Hoehn and Thom Shanker provide an urgent wake-up call that the range of national security challenges facing the United States is both expanding and growing ever-more dangerous—and that we are not adequately prepared to address them. Until the US national security apparatus recognizes that “the future needs a seat at the table,” the United States and its people will face increasingly grave dangers from these new and deeply underestimated threats.”
    Nora Bensahel, Visiting Professor of Strategic Studies, The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and coauthor of Adaptation Under Fire: How Militaries Change in Wartime
  • "An instructive deep dive into a system that requires vast improvement efforts."
    Kirkus
  • "A knowledgeable and convincing tour of where and how America’s safeguards should be strengthened."
    Publishers Weekly

On Sale
May 9, 2023
Page Count
368 pages
Publisher
Hachette Books
ISBN-13
9780306829109

Andrew Hoehn

About the Author

Andrew Hoehn is Senior Vice President and Director of Research at the RAND Corporation.  He was the deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy, responsible for developing and implementing U.S. defense strategy, force planning and assessments, and long-range policy planning.

Thom Shanker is the director of the Project for Media and National Security. He was the National Security/Foreign Policy Editor for the New York Times’ Washington Bureau, and is co-author of the New York Times bestseller Counterstrike: The Untold Story of America’s Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda.

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Thom Shanker

About the Author

Thom Shanker is the director of the Project for Media and National Security (PMNS), an initiative within the George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs that works to deepen public understanding of national security. Previously, he was the National Security/Foreign Policy Editor for the New York Times' Washington Bureau, after serving for for 13 years as the newspaper’s Pentagon and military correspondent. He is co-author of Counterstrike: The Untold Story of America’s Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda, a New York Times bestseller. For the war in Afghanistan, Shanker embedded with Army Special Forces at Kandahar during the initial invasion of Afghanistan, and later conducted numerous reporting trips to Afghanistan and Iraq. Prior to joining the Times in 1997, he was foreign editor of the Chicago Tribune. He was the Tribune's senior European correspondent, based in Berlin, from 1992-1995, with most of that time spent covering the wars in former Yugoslavia. He was the Tribune's Moscow bureau chief from 1985-1988, covering the first years of the Gorbachev era and issues of superpower arms control. He returned to Moscow from 1990-1992 to cover the death of the USSR and the collapse of the communist empire in Eastern Europe.

Andrew Hoehn is senior vice president for research and analysis at the RAND Corporation. He is responsible for all U.S.-based research and recruitment of RAND's 1,300 research staff. He is author of several RAND volumes, including the recent “Strategic Choices for a Turbulent World” (RAND, 2017). Mr. Hoehn previously served as a RAND vice president of Project AIR FORCE (PAF), where he oversaw research and analyses on strategy, force employment, personnel and training, and resource management. Previously, Hoehn was the deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy, during the years just preceding and following 9/11, responsible for developing and implementing U.S. defense strategy, force planning and assessments, and long-range policy planning. Earlier, he had several management and staff positions in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Prior to joining government, Hoehn was associate editor of the Marine Corps Gazette.
 

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