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Restoring America's Military Prowess: Creating Reliable Civil-Military Relations, Sound Campaign Planning and Stability-Counter-insurgency Operations

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Restoring America's Military Prowess: Creating Reliable Civil-Military Relations, Sound Campaign Planning and Stability-Counter-insurgency Operations

Contributors:

By (Author) John E. Peters

ISBN:

9781442274716

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Publication Date:

29th September 2016

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Terrorism, armed struggle
International relations

Dewey:

355.033573

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

168

Dimensions:

Width 159mm, Height 239mm, Spine 19mm

Weight:

404g

Description

The U.S. military spends more than 14 countries combined and possesses state-of-the art weapons and equipment, yet after 13 years of effort, $1.4 trillion, and some 6,000 casualties, it still has been unable to defeat its enemies in Afghanistan and Iraq. The book explains why and how it can be remedied. It first demonstrates the negative effects of four factors that are prerequisites for military success and that have undermined U.S. military performance since the end of the Cold War. These include uneven civil-military relations; an inability to formulate and execute sound campaign plans; a mistaken approach to counter-insurgency, irregular warfare, and stability operations; and inattention to military options other than regime change. It also acknowledges that other factors often also intervene, and that the enemy plays a decisive role in military outcomes. Still, if the United States is to preserve the use of military force as a reasonable (albeit last resort) policy option, it must develop the means to maintain healthy, reliable civil-military relations, design and execute sound campaign plans appropriate to the adversary in question and the threat it poses to U.S. interests, conduct effective counter-insurgency and irregular warfare campaigns suitable given the size and capabilities of todays all volunteer armed forces, and develop a menu of military options beyond regime change. The intent is to bring attention to the under-performance of the U.S. armed forces in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere and prescribe remedies. These solutions cannot be left solely in the hands of the Department of Defense and congressional action and oversight will be essential to favorable outcomes. This is a timely survey as the military is facing downsizing in response to budget pressure that will constrain defense and counter-terrorism spending.

Reviews

The best military in the world wins every battleand loses wars. What's wrong with this picture Jed Peters knows. With the unsparing eye of a combat veteran and the analytic acumen of a defense policy expert, Peters digs deep. What he finds is troubling indeed. But he also recommends common-sense solutions. If you want to know how America can win the next war, this is the book to read. -- Daniel P. Bolger, Lieutenant General, USA (Ret); author of "Why We Lost: a Generals Inside Account of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars"
Restoring Americas Military Prowess is a distillation of its authors four decades of service and research divided, respectively and equally, between service in the U.S. Army, and research at the RAND Corporation. It starts with a conundrum: The U.S. military is the best-funded, best-equipped, and best-trained military establishment in the world, yet all of the wars and quasi-wars in which it has engaged since and including Viet Nam have been failures! Peterss resolution of the conundrum focuses on three disabling phenomena: defective U.S. civil-military relations; incapacity to formulate and implement effective planning for military campaigns; and misunderstanding of counter insurgencies and counterterrorism. The presidential candidates of both U.S. political parties as well as their Congressional candidates would do well to read and reflect on what Mr. Peters prescribes. -- Charles Wolf, RAND Chair in International Economics

Author Bio

John E. Peters, professor emeritus of policy analysis at the Pardee RAND Graduate School, Santa Monica, CA; former Senior Political Scientist, the RAND Corporation and U.S. Army officer.

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