Read Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their Country Online
Authors: Andrew J. Bacevich
Tags: #Political Science, #American Government, #General, #History, #Military, #United States, #21st Century
13
. In 1941, Marshall actually threatened to resign as army chief of staff over what he viewed as inappropriate intrusion into matters that rightly belonged to the military. The specific issue was the organization of Officer Candidate Schools. Intent on increasing the output of these schools, Secretary of War Henry Stimson and other civilians were willing to sacrifice quality for quantity. Marshall was opposed and later recalled, “If they were going to do it—and I considered it a colossal mistake—they would do it without me.” “Interview with General George C. Marshall,” January 22, 1957,
www.marshallfoundation.org/library/
… /Marshall_Interview_Tape10.pdf, accessed October 23, 2012.
14
. War Department Circular 347,
Military Establishment
, August 25, 1944.
15
.
Biennial Report of the Chief of Staff of the United States Army July 1, 1943 to June 30, 1945, to the Secretary of War
(New York, 1945), p. 117.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I began this book intending to write a conventional narrative history of U.S. civil-military relations since World War II, an important and understudied topic. I ended up somewhere else, steered onto a different course by my growing conviction that civil-military dysfunction offers merely one symptom of a larger problem: an approach to national security at odds with democratic values that actually undermines the country’s well-being. Riddled with contradictions and hypocrisy that no amount of patriotic sentimentality can disguise, our military system is broken. It produces results other than advertised. Worse, it is deeply wrong. What most Americans mistake for that system’s greatest strength is actually its abiding flaw: its reliance on a force of military professionals who exist at a considerable remove from the rest of society.
So I am grateful for the forbearance displayed by my friends Sara Bershtel, Tom Engelhardt, and John Wright as I changed course, and more grateful still for their encouragement, gentle coaching, and wise counsel. Rita Quintas and Victoria Haire demonstrated admirable professionalism and efficiency in transforming manuscript into book.
Friends and acquaintances who weighed in with ideas, insights, documents, and data (but who will by no means agree with all my conclusions) include Tami Biddle, Robert Bryce, Mike Few, Doug Fitzgerald, Gian Gentile, Chris Gray, John Hall, Lawrence Kaplan, Dick Kohn, Brian Linn, Mat Moten, Barrye Price, Bill Reffett, Tom Ricks, and Paul Yingling. Thanks to one and all.
In an unexpected and unmerited gift, my colleague Andrea Berlin called my attention to the quote from Edward Gibbon that serves as the epigraph to this book.
I finished this book during a leave of absence from Boston University. I’m grateful to Dean Gina Sapiro and to my department chairs, Bill Grimes and Bruce Schulman, for letting me have the time away and for their many other kindnesses.
I spent that semester as a visiting fellow at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame. The opportunity to spend some months at that great university, which values both the Catholic tradition and intellectual excellence, was a rare privilege. I thank Scott Appleby and Mike Desch for making my stay possible. I thank Anne Riordan and members of the Kroc staff for helping to make my visit enjoyable and productive. And in a special way, I also thank the Reverend Martin Nguyen, CSC. A gifted artist and teacher, Father Martin permitted my wife, Nancy, to sit in on his undergraduate painting class. She learned a lot and had great fun. That experience made our sojourn at Notre Dame special for her as well.
INDEX
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Aberdeen Scandal
Abrams, Creighton “Abe”
Abu Ghraib scandal
Academi (
formerly
Xe, Blackwater USA)
Afghanistan
government of
Soviet invasion of
targeted assassinations in
Afghanistan War (2001-)
contractors and
intellectuals and
McChrystal on
no definitive end of
African Americans
After Virtue
(MacIntyre)
all-volunteer army.
See also
U.S. army; warrior;
and specific individuals; policies; and wars
African Americans and
armed intervention enabled by
benefits of
burden of protracted war on
challenges of shift to
contractors and
cost of
democracy and
discipline and
gays and
GWOT outsourced to
lack of shared sacrifice and
McChrystal on
military ethics and
9/11 attacks and
Nixon establishes
policy elite and
public indifference to well-being of
unrealistic expectations for
warrior image and
women and
Al Qaeda
American Civil Liberties Union
American Revolutionary War
American West
An Khe
anticipatory defense
anticommunism
anti-Islam sentiment
antinuclear movement
antiwar movement
Iraq and
Vietnam and
Apple computer
Arabic language speakers
arms manufacturers
Armstrong, Lance
Aspen Ideas Festival of 2012
Aspin, Les
Assad, Bashar al-
Bachmann, Michele
Baghdad
fall of
Bailey, Beth
Balkans
Beard, Charles
Benton, Thomas Hart
Berlin War, fall of
Berman, Paul
Bezos, Jeff
Blackhawk Down
Black Military Resistance League
Black Power
Boers
Boot, Max
Bosnia
Boston Globe
Boston Red Sox
Bourne, Randolph
Boxer Rebellion
Boykin, William G. “Jerry”
Brady, Tom
brain injuries
Brezhnev, Leonid
Britain
British army
British empire
Brooks, David
Bryan, William Jennings
Buchanan, Patrick
Budweiser
Bündchen, Gisele
Bush, George H.W.
Bush, George W.
Afghanistan and
federal deficits and
GWOT and
intellectuals on
Iran and
Iraq and
“Mission Accomplished” and
9/11 and
preventive war and
State of the Union Address of 2002
Butler, Lee
Butler, Smedley
Byrd, Robert
Califano, Joseph
California
Calley, William
campaign contributions
Cantor, Eric
Capra, Frank
Caribbean
Carter, Jimmy
Carter Doctrine
Castro, Fidel
celebrities
Census Bureau
Center for Servicemen’s Rights
Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military.
See
Palm Center
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
Cheney, Dick
China
Christianity
citizenship
army as reflection of
rights and responsibilities of
citizen-soldiers.
See also
military conscription; US army;
and specific individuals; policies; and wars
contractors and
covenant between citizens and state and
end of, post-Vietnam
geography and
globalism and
limits on war and
Marshall on
McChrystal on
mobilization of, in emergency
need to revert to
reservists as
victories won by
warrior-professional vs.
Civil War
Clinton, Hillary
Clinton, William Jefferson “Bill”
Clinton Doctrine
Cohen, Richard
Cold War
end of
lessons of
colleges and universities
Colombia
combat
recurring tours
women and
Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan
communism
Competitive and Cooperative Aretai within the American Warfighting Ethos, The
(Westhusing)
conservatives
containment policy
dual
Contractors on the Battlefield
(Field Manual 100–21)
Copland, Aaron
corporate profits
corporate taxes
corruption
counterinsurgency (COIN)
counterterrorism
covert operations
Cozzens, James Gould
Crusader artillery program
Cuba
Curry, John Steuart
Daddis, Gregory A.
Davis, Benjamin O., Jr.
Davis, Benjamin O., Sr.
Declaration of Independence
Delta Force
democracy
Afghanistan and
Iraq and
shared rights and obligations and
Democratic Party
Dempsey, Martin
Desert Storm, Operation
deterrence
DiMaggio, Joe
“don’t ask, don’t tell” (DADT)
drone strikes
Dulles, John Foster
Duncan, David Douglas
Durand Line
DynCorp
East Asia
Eaton, Paul
economic well-being
Egypt
Eisenhower, Dwight D.
El Salvador
employment
Engiligy (
formerly
L-3 MPRI)
England, Lynndie
enlistment, two-year term
equality
Equal Rights Amendment
Europe
European Union
Evans, Walker
Failed States Index
Fairbanks, Douglas, Jr.
Family Research Council (FRC)
Faust, Drew
federal deficits
feminists
FighT bAck
Fil, Joseph
flexible response
Fonda, Henry
Force XXI
Ford, Gerald
Ford, John
Foreign Affairs
Fort Bragg GI Union
Fort Sill, Oklahoma
fragging
France
Franks, Tommy
freedom
Friedman, Milton
Fulda Gap
full spectrum dominance
Fussell, Paul
Future Combat Systems (FCS)
Gable, Clark
Gates, Bill
Gates, Robert
Gates Doctrine
gays in military
Gaza
geeks
General Motors (GM)
geography
Germany
reunification of
US forces in
WW I and
WW II and
Gerson, Michael
Gettysburg, Battle of
Gettysburg Address
global power projection
burden of, on warrior class
Greater Middle East and
ideology and
Iraq and
Israelification of operational purpose
lack of coherent purpose and
warrior vs. citizen-soldier and
Global War on Terrorism (GWOT).
See also
Afghanistan War; Iraq War; September 11, 2001
DADT and
economic and social consequences of
funding of
ideology and
intellectuals and
sacrifices and
three no’s of
transformation project and
government, trust in
Grapes of Wrath, The
(film)
Great Depression
Greater Middle East (GME)
Great Recession
Green Berets
Greenberg, Hank
Grenada intervention
Griffith, Robert
Ground Zero Mosque
Groupement Mobile 100
Guatemala
Haiti
Hale, David
Ham, Carter
Hammerstein, Oscar
Harvard University
Law School
Hawaii
Hezbollah
Hitchens, Christopher
Hitler, Adolf
Honduras
humanitarian intervention
human rights
abuses
Hussein, Saddam
Huston, John
IBM
ideology
Ignatius, David
imperialism
Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs)
Indochina War, First
influence peddling
information technology
intellectuals
International Burn a Koran Day
intifadas
Iran
coup of 1953
dual containment and
Israel and
Iran Air flight 655
Iraq.
See also
Desert Storm, Operation
IDF attack of 1981
invasion of Kuwait and Desert Storm (1990–91)
Iraqi Freedom, Operation
Iraqi Kurds
Iraqi police officers
Iraq
Iraq War (2003–11)
casualties
Clinton and
contractors and
end of
forgotten soldiers of
funding of
goals of
Gulf War as opening phase of
initial invasion of
insurgency in
intellectuals and
as policy failure
surge and
veterans of
warrior image and
women soldiers and
Islamism
Israel
Six Day War of 1967
Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
Italy
Japan
WW II and
Japanese Americans, internment of
Jim Crow
Jobs, Steve
Johnson, Lyndon B.
Joint Chiefs of Staff
Joint War Plans Committee
Judeo-Christian culture
Just, Ward
Kagan, Elena
Karpinski, Janis
Kayyem, Juliette
Kazin, Alfred
KBR
Keegan, John
Kennedy, Claudia
Kennedy, John F.
assassination of
Kennedy, Joseph P.
Kennedy, Ted
Khmer Rouge
Killer Angels, The
(Shaara)
Kimmel, Husband
King, Ernest
Kipling, Rudyard
KKK
Koran