This is so wrong in so many ways. I will focus on the military side of things, but the problem is the same for police and other folks who think that only members of the particular profession can understand their profession:
- First, and, most obviously, civilian control of the military means that civilians have the final say on what the military does. If you don't like that, don't live in a democracy as this is a fundamental aspect of any democracy. Want the military to be entirely autonomous? Go to a military dictatorship. That sounds like a simplification, but it is a basic reality. In democracies, the civilians rule. Saying that civilians should do whatever folks with military experience tell them is fundamentally problematic. Yes, civilians with military experience can have valuable perspectives but that does not make them only people who can offer opinions or make decisions.
- Second, the idea that the military has a monopoly on expertise (not to mention wisdom) is a myth.
- It used to be the case when few civilians studied the military, but that time has come and gone. There are plenty of people across a variety of professions and disciplines that study the military. Some have experience in uniform, some don't. It is probably better for all concerned that a diversity of experiences and attitudes and background are deployed to study something, including the military, than just those who wore the uniform.
- There are plenty of military people who have lousy judgement who should not be consulted for expertise (Tommy Franks is the easy cheap shot, but to be fair I wouldn't trust Wesley Clark either). There are damn near infinite numbers of folks with military experience who have lousy judgement, just as there are similar numbers of non-military folks who have lousy judgement. Having a combat infantry badge means that one has probably seen combat (not all badges are equally earned), but not that each badge-wearer is better than any civilian expert or the average civilian expert.
- This idea made more sense when the military did mostly simple tasks--taking hills and such (stylized reality--war is and always has been complex). But the more armed forces are grappling with complex stuff (nuclear war, peacekeeping, counter-insurgency, etc), the more they are operating outside of their expertise and require outside inputs.
To twist a classic saying, if war is too important to be left to the generals, then studying the armed forces is too important to be left to the armed forces.
"Civ? Of course."
ReplyDeleteYou would think that Truman's relief of MacArthur and the Cuban Missile Crisis (or more recently, the Joint Chiefs' incompetence in Iraq 2003?) would have put this retort to rest quite some time ago. Apparently not.
Also, "women shouldn't serve in combat alongside men b/c Band of Brothers" brings me back to the days of DOMA. http://bit.ly/1W1woOJ
I always have a moment of hesitation every time I hear this "In democracies, the civilians rule" because it is only a 'half-truth'. We live in a democratic republic - not a 'pure' democracy - so the citizens don't rule, but they get to pick the guys who do.
ReplyDeleteWhy do I mention this? Because a week(ish) ago you made a comment about doing the right thing (pursuing the right policy decision) in the face of political pressure from the people/citizens. (For the Life of me I can't find the quote.) And if you take these two statements in the strict seem incompatible to me.
What I see it boils down too is: The people should rule, but the government has a duty to ignore the people if its in their own good. How do you balance that? How do you know what is and is not good for the people? Especially in military conflict where someone can sit down and sift through the economics of military affairs and conclude if we are to meet X military objective the odds are we will lose Y number of good men and women. Doesn't that become a values trade-off? Who should make that call?
Can you tell me how these two positions (1. The Citizens Rule, and 2. The government sometimes has a duty pursue policy decisions that are political unpopular) can be balanced? I'm not looking for a perfect political theories doctrine that can be applied in every and all cases, although that would be great, this is blogger and there is only so much time and space. If you had a future institutional suggestions on when to consult these outside expertise, when to listen to the people and when not too listen to the people, the 'types' of expertise that should be taken into account, what happens if these expertise clash with the military, that would already be... enlightening