Article:: This Journal Is Published by The American Political Science Association. All Rights Reserved
Article:: This Journal Is Published by The American Political Science Association. All Rights Reserved
Article:: This Journal Is Published by The American Political Science Association. All Rights Reserved
our Military Author: Judith Hicks Stiehm Issue: July 2007 Journal: PS: Political Science & Politics
This journal is published by the American Political Science Association. All rights reserved.
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SYMPOSIUM
Things Students and Political Scientists Might Consider about our Military
n Just Michael I ~1977! and Unjust WarsdemocracyWalzerstate argued that in a the citizen is responsible for the kind of military the possesses and how it is used. Osama bin Laden says the same. My proposition is that political scientists have a responsibility to prepare students to make sound judgments about what elected authorities decide about and do with our military. We need to consider with our students the kind of relationship a society committed to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness should have to a subgroup holding antithetical values; values which support the taking and sacrifice of life, which cherish duty and hierarchy, and which pursue neither riches nor power but something called honor. We charge this unAmerican subgroup, the military, with our protection and expect it to take direction from us through our elected officials. It does, although in many countries militaries are the government, give orders to the government, or are largely independent of the government. I argue that two questions must be continuously by addressed: 1! Are civilJudith Hicks Stiehm, ian authorities giving Florida International University the military wise direction, and 2! Are we citizens responsibly weighing the quality of that direction? The October, 2006 issue of PS (9234) published a quiz on the U.S. Military alongside a call for submissions on what we should be teaching students about our military. The essays here represent a fraction of the response. Other proposals have been incorporated in several panels that will be presented at the APSA Annual Meeting in Chicago this fall. Still others have been incorporated in a volume contracted to Palgrave Press and provisionally titled Inside Defense.
tor and almost in passing announced the preemptive use of force as an appropriate means.1 Additionally, he has declared that Iraq, Iran, and North Korea must be denied nuclear weapons. Even if these goals have some clarity, no strategy exists if there is no connection to the available means likely to achieve them. At present, strategists seem to have neglected the fundamental task of selecting appropriate means. The military does play an important role in security, but even if it performs its assigned tasks well the strategic goal will not be reached if the military is the wrong means or used in the wrong way. In his essay in this symposium, Steven Biddle, a former instructor at the U.S. Army War College, goes further when he argues that strategy is more than choosing ends and means. It must also function on a variety of levels, each of which requires careful analysis. Setting expansive goals is not strategic in a second way. When goals are overly broad, it is obvious that not all commitments will be met, that we will act selectively. This causes allies to doubt our reliability and others to judge us hypocrites. They ask: Why support democracy in Iraq but not in Saudi Arabia? Why suppress violence in Bosnia but not in the Democratic Republic of the Congo? Why pursue terrorists with aircraft? What has been learned about fighting terrorism from similar efforts in Italy, Spain, and Northern Ireland?
DOI: 10.1017/S1049096507070928
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describes the capacities of fighting forcestroops, equipment, and weaponsand compares the importance of their coordination with that of instruments in an orchestra. He also stresses that strategy dictates the weaponry and troops required. It is not, in fact, a matter of everything everywhere or of anything anywhere. It is a matter of fitting the means to the goal. In acknowledging that much of todays weaponry was designed for the doctrine of LandAir ~discussed by both Biddle and Wilson!, Wilson suggests ~which is all an Army officer can delicately do! that many high-tech, high-cost weapons cherished by the Navy and Air Force are no longer critical to our defensethat purchases might cease. Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld thought so too; he saw new procurement choices and procedures as an important part of his mission, but it was a goal he was not able to achieve. For example, Congress, whether because of pressure from the defense industry or because of uncritical support for anything military, this year put $4.6 billion for the F-22 stealth fighter ~the Raptor! in the budget against the wishes of the Department of Defense. The Air Force already possesses 74 of these fighter jets and has been promised more than 100 more. It wants 381. With development costs included, the cost is $350 million per plane ~New York Times, September 28, 2006!. Would knowledgeable citizens support this? Similarly, do we need five times the aircraft carrier acreage of all other nations combined? Are we engaged in over-kill as well as over-commitment? Full-spectrum dominance reflects our astonishing capacity, but is it necessary to our security? What is necessary should be defined by the threat, and vary with its nature. In fact, it may be that charm and economic entanglement which have the potential to reduce a threat are more important to security than is potent weaponry which tries to meet any and all threats. Spending on more and more capacity, on more and more intricate systems, on more and more armaments may be counter to good strategy. Even before the current war in Iraq we were spending nearly as much on our military as all other nations combined. Since George W. Bush took office, the Defense Departments budget has doubled. Even when war costs and personnel increases are set aside, next years budget will be increased by $40 billion ~New York Times, February 6, 2007!. Some argue that the Soviet Unions collapse was occasioned by its over-spending on armaments. Could we follow its lead by competing against ourselves, by over-spending on an over-kill capacity which decreases rather than increases our security? To effectively query officials about the Pentagons budget, citizens need to be able to analyze that budgetthe full budget, and the black budget too. Even if we can do anything we cannot do everything. Even if we have a third of the worlds GDP we have only 5% of the worlds population. It might be well to model ourselves after cooperating Norway rather than Imperial Rome.
Korb and Sean Duggan lay out in their article in this symposium the recent difficulties the Army has had in recruiting for a war which lacks citizen support. It might be argued that this is not really a problem, but an appropriate check on officials decisions about going to or continuing war. However, that check is being circumvented by an expansion of the amount and the kind of services the military is contracting for profit. Deborah Avant, in her essay for this symposium, describes the greatly increased role of private security services in U.S. military operations.2 The states monopoly on the use of force has been dissolved in some failed states. It is also being bartered away in a successful state. Should it be? Is giving up the monopoly on force a portent of our becoming a failed state and0or of an uncommitted citizenry? Issues about the importance of the representativeness of our troops ~racially, religiously, politically, geographically, and more!, about whether they have become citizen mercenaries, about whether every officer should first serve as an enlisted troop, and whether policy makers and opinion leaders believe that a link between citizen and soldier is still important ~i.e., would they encourage their children to join the Army?! merit informed debate.
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We are developing new nuclear weapons. We are building an anti-missile system. We have a space policy requiring U.S. freedom of action but opposing negotiations for a treaty intended to keep space free of weapons. All top U.S. intelligence posts are now in the hands of former military officers. Although she is surrounded by nuclear China, Pakistan, India, and Israel, we deny Irans right to such weapons.
Much of the above is not necessary to our own security. Its justification is our role as a protector of others. The problem is that one nations protector is another nations threat. As we ratchet up our ability to protect, we inevitably raise others perception of us as a threat. Truly strategic thinking would go beyond thinking about meeting threats to thinking about how to reduce them. Unfortunately, citizens may not want to know what they ought to know. Elsewhere ~Stiehm 1996!, I have described civilians willful ignorance. That ignorance includes the cost of war, the approved and unapproved, public and secret means of war, the certainty of atrocities, friendly fire and civilian deaths, the disconnect between wars justification and its product, and wars inevitable, negative unintended consequences ~NUCs!. The military is schooled in such matters and may not be surprised when, after a military campaign has been well launched, a now-attentive citizenry says This is not what we expected and we dont like it. When this happens, the military is, essentially, betrayed, whether by citizens who didnt know that they didnt know, or by officials who were either ignorant themselves or who failed to educate the public. No, it is not necessary to have firsthand experience of war to understand it, but our publics thinking about war is almost certainly warped by the fact that we have fought most of our wars in other peoples countries. There is real information to be had about the consequences and limits of the use of force. Citizens need it even if they do not ask for it.
Our principal use of economic policy is punitive. Too often we do not evaluate the actual effect of sanctions and use them more because they are something we can do rather than because they will have a particular effect. We should probably reflect more on how economic policy can be used as an inducement and also on how we are affected by our own policies. Who do we owe and how much? How do our policies affect current workers and those of the next generation? The State Department may still enjoy stature but does it have resources? Or has it been the victim of the Defense Departments policy of having no competitor? With the everincreasing emphasis on military to military relations, how can State retrieve its responsibility for winning hearts and minds, for negotiating, educating, offering assistance, promoting the rule of law, of learning? For playing the central role in the development of security strategy? Should States budget be pegged to, say, one-fifth of the total of the Pentagons? Writing during a civil war, Hobbes made a powerful argument for the states monopoly on the use of force. Having done so, and while continuing to acknowledge that a most important tool for analysis was cui bono?, he pronounced a series of natural laws which sound a good deal like the Golden Rule, Miss Manners, and the Boy Scout Creed rolled into one. If we so cherish justice and the rule of law among ourselves why do we not prize them between nations? Isnt justice important in any set of relations? Does not reason support the importance of moral behavior? Isnt just war theory still relevant? Shouldnt we assure that our wars are begun only by constituted authoritythat of the U.S. Congress? Shouldnt we insist that they be waged with right intention, i.e., for the stated reason not, for instance, as a demonstration project? And shouldnt we fight only when success is likely and the public believes the cause to be just? Once war has begun dont we need to debate the necessity of, for example, the harsh treatment of prisoners? Dont we need to discuss proportionality, the relationship between the end accomplished and the means? Dont we need to thrash out what is meant by discriminating between combatants and civilians? Most of all, dont we need to determine whether just war theory constrains, as the theory would suggest, or whether, in fact, its chief use is to justify whatever is done.
Conclusion
We need to help our students think carefully about that deviant subgroup which is willing to kill and to risk dying for us. They ~and we! would do well to consider the value that group places on cohesion, on the group, on the suppression of individuality. If members of the military are willing to offer their life and liberty for honor, it behooves us to ensure that they are, in fact, honored by giving them only worthy missions, missions which can be accomplished and which can be accomplished in a just manner. Just as our military is pledged to refrain from politics and to follow the direction of civilian officials, so too must those officials take care that they do not use the military recklessly or inappropriately, and that they neither politicize itor use it for political gain. Overseeing officials is, as Walzer argued, the responsibility of we citizens.
Notes
1. The National Security Strategy was updated on March 16, 2006. It reasserted the possibility of using force before attacks occur as self defense and proclaimed that We fight our enemies abroad instead of waiting for them to arrive in our country. 2. The growth of contracting in every area of government is reminiscent of the Jackson Eras spoils system.
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References
Avant, Deborah D. 2007. Contracting for Services in U.S. Military Operations. PS: Political Science and Politics 40 ~July!: 457 60. Biddle, Stephen. 2007. Strategy in War. PS: Political Science and Politics 40 ~July!: 461 6. Cloud, David. 2007. The Presidents Budget; Bushs 2008 Budget Requests Doubles Spending on Replacing Military Equipment, New York Times, February 6, A20. Korb, Lawrence J., and Sean Duggan. 2007. An All-Volunteer Army? Recruitment and its Problems. PS: Political Science and Politics 40 ~July!: 46771. Leal, David. 2007. Students in Uniform: ROTC, the Citizen-Soldier, and the Civil-Military Gap. PS: Political Science and Politics 40 ~July!: 47983. Stiehm, Judith Hicks. 1996. The Civilian Mind. In Its Our Military Too! Women and the U.S. Military, ed. Judith Stiehm. Temple University Press: Philadelphia, 27094. Walzer, Michael. 1977. Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical Illustrations. Basic Books: New York. Wayne, Leslie. 2006. Air Force Jet Wins Battle in Congress, New York Times, September 28, C14. Wilson, Isaiah III. 2007. What Weapons Do We Have and What Can they Do? PS: Political Science and Politics 40 ~July!: 4738.
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