A couple of weeks ago, I got into a running skeet spat because I argued we ought not valorize a military member for protesting the Trump administration while in uniform. I argued that the US military has long stayed out of politics, and I meant partisan politics, even though it and any govt agency, especially armed ones, are inherently political.
Politics: the basic definition involves the making of decisions affecting the group/society. Because the military is an arm of government, anything involving it is inherently political even before one invokes Clausewitz's war is politics by other means.
So, yes, the military is always involved in politics. The use of it, the non-use of it (say on Jan 6th), are political. Its behavior in the seas off of Venezuela or in the war in Iran are political.
But are they partisan? Yes, the US military has taken sides in other people's conflicts---supporting the Afghan government against the Taliban, etc, but the US military has almost entirely stayed out of American politics. Yes, some retired generals ran for office and won (no Admirals, sorry) the Presidency with Ike being the most recent. Which is not very recent. The US military has not put its thumb on the scale for any election.
In these dire times, folks were supporting this one officer who publicly protested in uniform. To be clear, the regulations say he can protest as long as he does not wear his uniform. Why? Because, yes, even though this individual is a member of the military, they have the right to free speech. What they don't have the right to do is make it appear that the military is taking a side in partisan politics. This officer knew that, knew he was violating the regulations, and will pay a price for that. This is civil disobedience, which I am normally ok with. I am not ok with efforts to drag the military into politics, because it is hard to undo. Yes, Trump is awful, and yes, the military should disobey illegal orders (like firing on civilian boats in the Caribbean), but if we start asking the military to decide who governs, when will that stop? The best predictor of coups is the history of a country. The US hasn't had any coups, and that is a major factor helping to prevent coups. Break that once, and, let's how things go. And, yes, militaries suck at governing and at engaging in partisan politics.
I finally returned to this conversation due to an incredibly bad argument in a legit outlet (which has also published bad stuff before). The author is basically saying that the politicization of the military now is nothing new because MacArthur. And that is just dumb for a number of reasons:
- Mac was an exceptional case where the senior theater commander defied the President on multiple occasions (and, yes, this left the troops on the ground in worse positions)
- This was not a case of the military being dragged into politics (the problem of today) but of a military officer trying to jump into politics (Mac also explored running against FDR in 1944 when he was still commanding troops in the Pacific campaign).
- Back then, Mac was violating just one big norm. Today, Trump and Hegseth are violating piles of them (the data collection effort continues!)
- There has been much work of late by civil-military relations scholars directly addressing politicization of the military. This historian does his best economist imitation and ignores all of it..
To put my cards on the table, I am not an expert on the normative side of civil-military relations--what is a norm violation. The network I have helped to create, the Civil-Military Relations Network, will be studying both the normative and analytical questions on this topic, but my research agenda is more on the absence or presence of oversight. So, consult Risa Brooks and Christoph Harig and Pauline Kaurin and the like. But, please don't ask an historian who seems to focus on one event in the 1950s and hasn't considered what has happened since then, either by the US military and the politicians or by the scholars studying this stuff.
Oh, and yes, not all civ-mil folks buy the political/partisan distinction, but I do.









