July 25, 2005

Standing armies

A genuinely interesting editorial in today's Times asserting the validity of the founding father's Republican Rome-influenced citizen farmer ideal of which was recently mentioned on this blog.

After reading it, the questiong must be asked, why shouldn't we have a much smaller standing army and, when armed force is needed, a draft instituted? Obviously speed is a factor, but is this idea really as antiquated as it first seems?

Wouldn't the nation think extra long and extra hard about an elective war if the President's conflict didn't mean distant aquaintences fighting, but our own family members?

This is the point Jeff made a while back wondering, if this is a just conflict, why there were not lines of young men elbowing each other out of the way for the honor of enlisting. As we've seen, the polar opposite of this scene is occuring.

A question worth asking. Read on.

The Best Army We Can Buy
By DAVID M. KENNEDY

Published: July 25, 2005

THE United States now has a mercenary army. To be sure, our soldiers are hired from within the citizenry, unlike the hated Hessians whom George III recruited to fight against the American Revolutionaries. But like those Hessians, today's volunteers sign up for some mighty dangerous work largely for wages and benefits - a compensation package that may not always be commensurate with the dangers in store, as current recruiting problems testify.

Neither the idealism nor the patriotism of those who serve is in question here. The profession of arms is a noble calling, and there is no shame in wage labor. But the fact remains that the United States today has a military force that is extraordinarily lean and lethal, even while it is increasingly separated from the civil society on whose behalf it fights. This is worrisome - for reasons that go well beyond unmet recruiting targets.

One troubling aspect is obvious. By some reckonings, the Pentagon's budget is greater than the military expenditures of all other nations combined. It buys an arsenal of precision weapons for highly trained troops who can lay down a coercive footprint in the world larger and more intimidating than anything history has known. Our leaders tell us that our armed forces seek only just goals, and at the end of the day will be understood as exerting a benign influence. Yet that perspective may not come so easily to those on the receiving end of that supposedly beneficent violence.

But the modern military's disjunction from American society is even more disturbing. Since the time of the ancient Greeks through the American Revolutionary War and well into the 20th century, the obligation to bear arms and the privileges of citizenship have been intimately linked. It was for the sake of that link between service and a full place in society that the founders were so invested in militias and so worried about standing armies, which Samuel Adams warned were "always dangerous to the liberties of the people."

Many African-Americans understood that link in the Civil War, and again in World Wars I and II, when they clamored for combat roles, which they saw as stepping stones to equal rights. From Aristotle's Athens to Machiavelli's Florence to Thomas Jefferson's Virginia and Robert Gould Shaw's Boston and beyond, the tradition of the citizen-soldier has served the indispensable purposes of sustaining civic engagement, protecting individual liberty - and guaranteeing political accountability.

That tradition has now been all but abandoned. A comparison with a prior generation's war illuminates the point. In World War II, the United States put some 16 million men and women into uniform. What's more, it mobilized the economic, social and psychological resources of the society down to the last factory, rail car, classroom and victory garden. World War II was a "total war." Waging it compelled the participation of all citizens and an enormous commitment of society's energies.

But thanks to something that policymakers and academic experts grandly call the "revolution in military affairs," which has wedded the newest electronic and information technologies to the destructive purposes of the second-oldest profession, we now have an active-duty military establishment that is, proportionate to population, about 4 percent of the size of the force that won World War II. And today's military budget is about 4 percent of gross domestic product, as opposed to nearly 40 percent during World War II.

The implications are deeply unsettling: history's most potent military force can now be put into the field by a society that scarcely breaks a sweat when it does so. We can now wage war while putting at risk very few of our sons and daughters, none of whom is obliged to serve. Modern warfare lays no significant burdens on the larger body of citizens in whose name war is being waged.

This is not a healthy situation. It is, among other things, a standing invitation to the kind of military adventurism that the founders correctly feared was the greatest danger of standing armies - a danger made manifest in their day by the career of Napoleon Bonaparte, whom Jefferson described as having "transferred the destinies of the republic from the civil to the military arm."

Some will find it offensive to call today's armed forces a "mercenary army," but our troops are emphatically not the kind of citizen-soldiers that we fielded two generations ago - drawn from all ranks of society without respect to background or privilege or education, and mobilized on such a scale that civilian society's deep and durable consent to the resort to arms was absolutely necessary.

Leaving questions of equity aside, it cannot be wise for a democracy to let such an important function grow so far removed from popular participation and accountability. It makes some supremely important things too easy - like dealing out death and destruction to others, and seeking military solutions on the assumption they will be swifter and more cheaply bought than what could be accomplished by the more vexatious business of diplomacy.

The life of a robust democratic society should be strenuous; it should make demands on its citizens when they are asked to engage with issues of life and death. The "revolution in military affairs" has made obsolete the kind of huge army that fought World War II, but a universal duty to service - perhaps in the form of a lottery, or of compulsory national service with military duty as one option among several - would at least ensure that the civilian and military sectors do not become dangerously separate spheres. War is too important to be left either to the generals or the politicians. It must be the people's business.

David M. Kennedy, a professor of history at Stanford and the author of the Pulitzer-Prize winning "Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945," is working on a book about the American national character.

Posted by Nat at July 25, 2005 09:33 PM | TrackBack
Comments

Nat, I'm sure you can appreciate the fact that before the onset of the so-called "information age," war was a highly propagandized affair. Many young men who enlisted in the armed forces in both WWI and WWII did so because the government told them it was an honorable and patriotic duty while hiding all details of the horror of war.

Today, however, we live in a much different technological era. We have access to far more information than Americans had during any previous point in American history.

Keeping these two starkly different eras in mind, comparing the situation in which Americans enlisted to war in a previous era to the situation in which Americans enlist in war today is a bit silly.

Posted by: Ben at July 26, 2005 09:24 AM

The idea of part-time soldiers comprising the bulk of our military is no longer feasible. Today's front-line American soldier is one of the most highly trained individuals in the world. In ancient times, not only was everyone in better shape - you had to be, or you were dead - but tactics were pretty simple: grab a sharp/heavy object and lay about you for all you're worth. Casualty rates were appalling. Unless you were a highly-trained member of the nobility who could afford a horse and armor, you probably died really quickly.

Today's soldier possesses the same level of skill in his trade as any master craftsman does in theirs. Knowledge of weapons, communications, tactics, engineering, in addition to remarkable physical preparedness. Knowing not only how, but when and where to call in for that airstrike. Understanding how to work with a fire-team to flush out enemy combatants without exposing one's own teammates to enemy fire. There's a reason that it takes at least four months to turn a raw recruit into an infantryman.

Unless you want to mandate military service for all citizens, this doesn't really seem like a viable option.

Posted by: ryan at July 26, 2005 10:38 AM

Lest anyone think the training our soldiers receive is unnecessary or unimportant, let the record show that our troops are capable of inflicting 50:1 casualty ratios even in foul-ups as bad as Mogadishu.

Posted by: ryan at July 26, 2005 10:40 AM

I hate to dogpile here (well, that's not entirely true) but alot of recruitment problems have to do with the fact that the media is painted an obscenely bleak and inaccurate picture or the war. Note that troop retention is really excellent and that many reservists are moving from the reserves into the regular Army so they can stay longer. Glenn Reynolds points out "Perhaps the view of what's going on that the troops get in the field is more positive than the view that potential recruits get from the media."

But surely no one in our great country would misrepresent the reality of the war for policial or ideological gain. Say it isn't so.

Posted by: Matthias at July 26, 2005 11:37 AM

All of you glorifying our large standing army that goes on imperial rampages that are not only immoral but don't even serve our national interest are exactly the people Jefferson wanred us against when he warned against standing armies.

For example:

""The spirit of this country is totally adverse to a large military force." --Thomas Jefferson to Chandler Price, 1807. ME 11:160"

and

""Nor is it conceived needful or safe that a standing army should be kept up in time of peace for [defense against invasion]." --Thomas Jefferson: 1st Annual Message, 1801. ME 3:334"

At: http://etext.virginia.edu/jefferson/quotations/jeff1480.htm

SHAME ON YOU militarists for undermining the founding principles of our democracy. History will remember you as as supporting a tyranny that undermined our republic.

Posted by: Matthew Rogers at October 8, 2005 08:30 PM
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