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Civilian Control or Military Rule?

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Title: Civilian Control or Military Rule? Author: Jeff Dixon Last modified by: Jeff Dixon Created Date: 7/1/2006 2:57:35 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civilian Control or Military Rule?


1
Civilian Control or Military Rule?
  • The Future of Civil-Military Relations

2
I. Evolution of Civil-Military Relations
  • Newburgh Conspiracy (1783) Washingtons non-coup
  • Origins fiscal crisis under Articles of
    Confederation
  • Public resents pension obligations
  • Officer clique protests to Congress, warns of
    fatal effects if demands not met
  • Disenchanted veterans manipulated by Federalists
    (Hamilton, advocates of federal taxation) threat
    of coup used to justify federal expansion

3
5. The Conspiracy
  • Gates mobilizes support for mutiny (refusal to
    disband, threat of coup)
  • Gates Plan Co-opt or eliminate Washington, take
    control of government
  • Federalists warn Washington of plot (Federalist
    Plan Unsuccessful uprising to emphasize threat)

4
6. Washingtons Choice
  • March 1783 Gates circulates letter urging
    officers to meet (contrary to orders) If you
    have sense enough to discover and spirit to
    oppose tyranny, whatever garb it may assume,
    awake to your situation. If the present moment be
    lost, your threats hereafter will be as empty as
    your entreaties now. Appeal from the justice to
    the fears of government, and suspect the man who
    would advise to longer forbearance
  • Washington takes control, re-schedules meeting
    (instead of forbidding it)

5
Washington Stops the Coup
  • Gentlemen, you will permit me to put on my
    spectacles, for I have not only grown gray but
    almost blind in the service of my country.
  • Washington uses own prestige to shame pro-coup
    officers, gains expressions of loyalty
  • Federalist plot works Fearful Congress passes
    taxation measures

6
7. Key Points to Remember
  1. Civilians used military against civilian enemies
    (very common path to coups)
  2. Absence of junior-senior officer split allowed
    Washington to assume control
  3. Washington had other opportunities for leadership
    (see textbook on Constitutional Convention)

7
B. The Civil War
  • The onset of rebellion
  • The political logic of secession an outnumbered
    South depends on expansion of slavery to preserve
    parity in the Senate
  • Lincoln elected ? secession

8
c. Buchanan doesnothing
  • Cabinet members shift weapons from Northern to
    Southern arsenals so that they might be more
    easily seized by secessionists
  • Buchanan doesnt negotiate, mobilize, or even try
    to persuade
  • Buchanans Secretary of War becomes Confederate
    general (John B. Floyd)

9
2. Treason by American officers?
  • Treason against the United States, shall consist
    only in levying war against them, or in adhering
    to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.
  • 313 of 1108 (32) US Army officers join the
    Confederate Army
  • Major Twiggs (pro-South) surrenders 20 of the US
    Army to Texas before secession!
  • Civilian control maintained Confederate
    Constitution similar to US Constitution
  • Confederate armies surrender against civilian
    orders (Jefferson Davis insists on continued war)

10
3. The North Militarized Politics
  1. Lincoln vs. McClellan open campaigning for
    soldiers loyalties (compare to Zachary Taylors
    insistence on non-voting)
  2. Hookers proposed dictatorship Lincoln
    replies I have heard, in such way as to believe
    it, of your recently saying that both the Army
    and the Government needed a Dictator. Of course
    it was not for this, but in spite of it, that I
    have given you the command. Only those generals
    who gain success can set up dictators. What I now
    ask of you is military success, and I will risk
    the dictatorship.
  3. Military failures undermine prestige of
    anti-civilian generals Grant refuses to run
    against Lincoln or replace him as Republican
    nominee

11
4. Reconstruction and Posse Comitatus
  • Military rule during Reconstruction
  • End of Reconstruction Posse Comitatus Act. Goal
    prevent Army from supervising Southern
    elections
  • Whoever, except in cases and under
    circumstances expressly authorized by the
    Constitution or Act of Congress, willfully uses
    any part of the Army or the Air Force as a posse
    comitatus or otherwise to execute the laws shall
    be fined under this title or imprisoned not more
    than two years, or both

12
C. Truman and MacArthur
  • US suffers defeats when China intervenes in
    Korean War
  • MacArthur demands war with China
  • Truman tells him to shut up
  • MacArthur demands war with China and then
    issues his own ultimatum to China!
  • Truman fires MacArthur
  • Unpopular decision Congressional hearings,
    threat of impeachment
  • MacArthur loses support during hearings,
    Eisenhower becomes Republican nominee in 1952

13
D. Cold War Realities
  • Strong military is institutionalized becomes
    interest group vying for government funds
  • Predelegation
  • Begins in 1957, continues through end of Cold War
    (and beyond?)
  • US Commanders given authority to order
    retaliatory nuclear attacks if President
    unreachable (also given the unlock codes)

14
3. Military resistance to nuclear warfighting
LNOs
  1. Problem US nuclear war plan (SIOP) had no
    contingency calling for less than a few hundred
    nuclear weapons
  2. Eisenhower demands revisions to allow use of
    single weapons for political purposes (limited
    retaliation, response to conventional war)
  3. So does Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Carter,
    Reagan.yet SIOP never updated to include LNOs

15
4. Circumvention of civilian control The Air
Force and the unlock codes
  • Air Force forced to install locks (PALs) on
    nuclear weapons during 1960s.
  • PALs require secret code to physically enable
    weapon. Even if missile launched, warhead wont
    detonate without code. Prevents unauthorized use
    of nuclear weapons.
  • Air Force quietly sets code to 00000000 and
    tells just about everyone involved in the launch
    process!
  • 1977 Congressional hearings lead Air Force to
    finally pick a new code

16
E. 1986 Goldwater-Nichols
  • Origins
  • Failed/difficult joint operations of 1970s-1980s
    Congressional pressure for interservice unity
  • Joint Chiefs of Staff (commanders of the
    services) oppose reorganization
  • Nearly five years of lobbying and horse-trading
    follow
  • Key provision for our purposes Chairman of Joint
    Chiefs of Staff established as central military
    advisor to President
  • Effects
  • Notable reduction in inter-service rivalry
  • Military now speaks with one voice more
    difficult for civilians to oppose

17
F. Conclusions
  • Coup risk has usually been low
  • Few military officers ever had opportunity to
    launch coup
  • Those that had opportunity refused -- and later
    became President
  • Pressure for coup generally emanates from
    civilians seeking to counter political enemies
  • Bureaucratic resistance has increased much more
    difficult for President and Secretary of Defense
    to ensure implementation

18
II. The Military Learns to Play Politics A.
Military Opposition to Clinton
  • Origins
  • Characteristics of the President avoided Vietnam
    service, did drugs, expressed loathing for
    military service in 1969 letter, protested
    Vietnam War
  • Increasing partisanship in military (probably due
    to end of conscription) military has shifted
    Republican since 1970s (about 21 in general, up
    to 91 among elite officers)

19
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20
c. Changing of the guard the post-Vietnam
generation
21
d. The Gays in the Military Controversy
  • Clinton promises to allow openly gay people to
    serve in the US Armed forces
  • Widespread military opposition prevents policy
    implementation
  • Colin Powell (Chairman of JCS) denounces policy
    in Congressional hearings
  • Two Marine officers publish editorial in
    Washington Post warning that unless JCS keeps
    ban, it risks losing the loyalty of junior
    officers. Notes that a soldier swears
    allegiance to the Constitution, not to the
    Commander-in-Chief
  • Congress responds to military lobbying by
    codifying ban as law, preventing future
    Presidents from overturning it

22
2. Symptoms Repeated insubordination
  • Clintons first visit to aircraft carrier marked
    by open mockery to reporters by both enlisted
    personnel and officers
  • Air Force Major Gen. Harold Campbell forced to
    resign after he called President Clinton a
    "gay-loving, draft-dodging, pot-smoking,
    womanizing Commander-in-Chief
  • JCS openly opposes policies of Defense Secretary
    Les Aspin in 1993 ? repeated leaks to press by
    military officers ? Clinton forces Aspin to
    resign
  • Air Force chief of staff retires early
    (unprecedented), criticizes Clinton

23
B. Military Criticism of Rumsfeld
  • Rumsfeld tries to implement Revolution in
    Military Affairs services oppose cuts in
    weapons systems
  • Rumsfeld attacks generals who insist occupation
    of Iraq will require more than 100,000 troops
  • Retired generals begin to criticize Rumsfeld
  • Democrats find many to sign anti-Rumsfeld
    statements
  • Republicans respond with pro-Rumsfeld generals of
    their own
  • Note Civilian parties are competing for the
    endorsement of the military!

24
C. Procurement The Iron Triangle
  • Congress, the Pentagon, and Defense Contractors

25
1. Campaign Cash Defense Sector
26
2. Contracts and Congress
  1. Pentagon and defense contractors spread
    sub-contract work to key districts/states
  2. Programs often use many more contractors/locations
    than required, inflating costs (but maximizing
    political survivability)

27
3. The Follow-On Imperative
  • New weapons systems create more new weapons
    systems need to replace obsolete/aging weapons
  • Mission specialization increases number of
    weapons systems each specialized version
    requires different follow-on system

28
4. Example The F-22 Raptor
  • a. Overview
  • Planned during Cold War to defeat future Soviet
    fighters
  • Estimated cost 68 billion for 750 fighters
    (initial estimate) ? now down to 339 fighters
    at the same price
  • 1999 House tries to kill F-22
  • All six members of JCS publicly condemn decision
  • Congress discovers F-22 has 1000 subcontractors
    in 42 states!

29
b. Campaign Cash Lockheed-Martin
30
c. Follow-On Imperative The F-22
  • Air Force releases study showing F-15 is
    ineffective (F-22 is follow-on system)
  • Air Force rejects Joint Strike Fighter as
    alternative. Rationale JSF is to replace F-16,
    not F-15 (different follow-on system)

31
d. Outcome F-22 Preserved
  • Clinton threatens to veto cuts to F-22
  • House-Senate conference removes provision
  • Follow-up
  • F-22 still in FY2007 budget, despite repeated
    criticism by Rumsfeld
  • 65 billion now buys only 183 planes
  • 2006 GAO recommends against further spending

32
5. More examples FY2006 Budget
  • Secretary of Navy proposes building new destroyer
    in one shipyard instead of two in MS and ME
    (saves 300 million)
  • MS, ME Senators place hold on Secretarys
    promotion to deputy defense secretary
  • ME Senator attaches rider to defense bill in
    Armed Services Committee prohibiting
    consolidation of production
  • Rumsfeld suggests cutting major conventional
    systems for 5th year in a row -- effort is
    unsuccessful. Services propose cutting personnel
    to pay for new systems (the Washington Monument
    ploy)

33
6. Does the Iron Triangle threaten civilian
control?
  1. Executive control decreased Evidence includes
    Carters naval strategy and resistance to
    Clinton/Rumsfeld
  2. Congressional control increased Unhappy
    commanders lobby Congress to undo DoD decisions
  3. Is divided control over military decisions good
    or bad for civilian control?

34
D. Conclusions
  • Military has become politicized
  • Permanent standing army is large enough to be
    economically important
  • Rank-and-file have recently become much more
    partisan (shift away from conscription?)
  • Military has learned to protect interests within
    political system (organized lobbying)
  • Civilians attempt to manipulate military for
    partisan advantage
  • Tradition of deference has changed imagine
    generals publicly criticizing Lend-Lease or
    Trumans integration of the Army

35
III. The Risk of a Coup
  • Risk factors
  • Political institutions Dominant chief executive
  • Political conditions
  • Parochialism Parties represent closed groups
  • Polarization Politics is all-or-nothing
    struggle, losers are punished
  • Mobilization Parties mobilize followers for
    extra-legal collective action
  • History Recent coups
  • Economics Low GDP, negative growth, rents as
    large of economy

36
5. Military characteristics
  1. Partisanship Military prefers one party to
    others
  2. Civil-military values gap Civilians seen as
    corrupt and immoral
  3. Perceived effectiveness of military vs. civilian
    institutions

37
B. Evaluating the Risk to the US
  1. Political institutions strong executive
    increases coup risk
  2. Political conditions none of the risk factors
    apply
  3. History No
  4. Economics No

38
5. Military characteristics
  • Partisanship High and growing
  • Civil-military values gap?
  • Gap is smallest on foreign/defense policy
    except budget decisions
  • Gap is largest on budget decisions and social
    policy

39
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42
Military influence through later office-holding?
43
5. Military characteristics
  • Partisanship High and growing
  • Civil-military values gap?
  • Gap is smallest on foreign/defense policy
    except budget decisions
  • Gap is largest on budget decisions and social
    policy
  • Military perceived as more effective than
    civilians?

44
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46
May 2006
47
C. Status Respect for civilian control high
48
D. Conclusions
  1. Civil-military relations have deteriorated
  2. Strong executive increases vulnerability
  3. Nearly every other factor suggests very low coup
    risk
  4. Coup unlikely without change in
    political-economic conditions (economic collapse,
    open persecution of political opponents by ruling
    party, etc)
  5. Lesson American political culture and economic
    strength make our institutions stronger than they
    should be (on paper).
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