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Toward the National Security State - Civil-Military Relations during World War II (Hardcover)
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Toward the National Security State - Civil-Military Relations during World War II (Hardcover)
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American involvement in World War II greatly transformed U.S.
civil-military relations by propelling the U.S. military into a
prominent position within the national government. The war
established new linkages and a new unity between key civilian and
military personnel. And these new civil-military relations became
institutionalized with the postwar creation of the national
security state. Waddell explores these new developments and
examines how they affected the very nature of American governmental
power. War is considered the most significant influence on building
and transforming government institutions. And yet, scholars
interested in American political development tend to ignore World
War II while focusing on the Great Depression and Roosevelt's New
Deal. In turn, scholars who focus on the war tend to focus on the
diplomacy, strategies, battles, and personalities that dominated
the war itself. Rarely is the war considered from the perspective
of how it changed the fundamental nature of American government as
it led to the national security state, the military-industrial
complex, and the militarization of foreign policy. This book places
these dramatic shifts in the context of the changing civil-military
relations of World War II. It examines these relations in terms of
the three central areas of modern warfare-production, strategy, and
manpower. Chapters focus on the military-corporate relations
involved in mobilizing the "arsenal of democracy"; top-level
command relations between President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his
military commanders; and the civil-military tensions and relations
involved in mobilizing a mass citizen army. A final chapter
analyzes what came of these changesas the U.S. institutionalized a
striking new civil-military unity in and through the postwar
national security state.
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