If you're an American citizen and you have an ounce of self-respect but you're not literate or rich enough to read Scahill's Dirty Wars, the documentary the book spawned is now up on Netflix Instant.
It covers the return of assassination to American foreign policy and the move over the last thirteen years (the Bush and Obama administrations have not really differed in this respect) to make assassinations faster, easier, and more directly linked to the executive branch.
Along the way (well, going off the book, at least!) you'll get to see American soldiers shoot apart the wedding of a major pro-American Afghan luminary, follow Donald Rumsfeld's efforts to build his own intelligence organization that would lose the CIA's pesky insistence on 'real world facts', explore America's rejection of its best chance at a secure Somalia and our willingness to be jerked around by a mid-level dictator who played us for chumps, and track an American imam's journey from critical anti-Al-Qaeda speaker to death in a drone strike. The adventure never ends!
I expect this thread will **** itself within six posts, but assuming we can scrape together enough sensitivity to nuance and complexity to talk about why this ****ed-up system emerged and whether it's actually achieving anything, we could have a good time. Dirty Wars did more than almost any single other book to help me make sense of American foreign policy and the incredible, paralytic inertia driving it.
So - American? Want to understand why your country adopted the Tarkin Doctrine? Check it out.
e: You will get to hear about a foreign journalist who'd written negatively about cruise missile strikes (he correctly identified the 'made in America' stamps on the debris as American, blowing the American cover story) being arrested at the request of the American government and held in jail when even his own military dictatorship of a government felt it had no cause because Barack Obama personally telephoned the dictator of the country and requested that his detention continue. The beacon of the free world