cover image Top Secret America: The Rise of the New American Security State.

Top Secret America: The Rise of the New American Security State.

Dana Priest and William Arkin. Little, Brown, $29.99 (384p) ISBN 9780316182218

Priest and Arkin, columnists for the Washington Post and other media outlets, won the 2010 George Polk Award for their expos%C3%A9 of the surveillance state. Here, they blow the whistle on how, since 9/11 and the adoption of the Patriot Act, the government and its contractors use classification and security screens to conceal expenditures that have failed to enhance national security. Volumes of information defy efforts to be processed or analyzed as layers of bureaucratic intermediaries dilute command and control. For instance, Northcom (Norad%E2%80%99s re-placement) has no command over other agencies while former Defense Secretary Gates refused to lead the new National Intelligence Directorate because the position had no real power. Furthermore, the authors contrast the disorganization of stateside security with methods employed by General Stanley McChrystal in Iraq and Afghanistan%E2%80%94where, for example, social networks generated cell phone user data to provide target lists for Exord special teams. Overall, this is an important book that should receive greater attention. (Sept.) Agency: Ross Youn