Book Cover
E-book
Author Langston, Thomas S

Title Uneasy balance : civil-military relations in peacetime America since 1783 / Thomas S. Langston
Published Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, ©2003

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Description 1 online resource (viii, 198 pages)
Series Book collections on Project MUSE
Contents The civil-military bargain -- Postwar alignment and the perils of peace -- Successful realignments -- Poor realignments -- Two near disasters -- Military reform and service in the 1990s -- Barriers to balance -- Applying the lessons of the past
Summary In the first book to focus on civil-military tensions after American wars, Thomas Langston challenges conventional theory by arguing that neither civilian nor military elites deserve victory in this perennial struggle. What is needed instead, he concludes, is balance. In America's worst postwar episodes, those that followed the Civil War and the Vietnam War, balance was conspicuously absent. In the late 1860s and into the 1870s, the military became the tool of a divisive partisan program. As a result, when Reconstruction ended, so did popular support of the military. After the Vietnam War, military leaders were too successful in defending their institution against civilian commanders, leading some observers to declare a crisis in civil-military relations even before Bill Clinton became commander-in-chief. Is American military policy balanced today? No, but it may well be headed in that direction. At the end of the 1990s there was still no clear direction in military policy. The officer corps stubbornly clung to a Cold War force structure. A civilian-minded commander-in-chief, meanwhile, stretched a shrinking force across the globe. With the shocking events of September 11, 2001, clarifying the seriousness of the post-Cold War military policy, we may at last be moving toward a true realignment of civilian and military imperatives
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Civil-military relations -- United States -- History
Civil-military relations
United States
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2002156772
ISBN 9780801881459
0801881455