Military Civic Action--U.S. troops working on nation-building
tasks with troops of another country--is traced from its formal
beginning under President Eisenhower and enthusiastic reception
under President Kennedy, through its successes and failures during
the Vietnam years, to its present status as a strategic tool.
Contributing authors debate the future role of Military Civic
Action as a way to retain a U.S. military presence around the
world, bolster emergent democracies, assist other militaries in
their transition to democratic military professionalism, reinforce
the humanitarian efforts of USAID and private volunteer
organizations, train U.S. units for worldwide flexible missions,
and protect the world from environmental degradation and the
scourge of drug abuse. Although this volume draws on the history of
U.S. Military Civic Action around the world, special emphasis is
placed on Latin America as the ideal focus for Military Civic
Action during the 1990s.
The authors argue that Military Civic Action is among the most
cost effective ways of achieving U.S. strategic objectives while
retaining and justifying the expense of a skilled, professional
U.S. military force. Military Civic Action incorporates some of the
deepest-held U.S. values and is a tool that can win the support of
liberals and conservatives alike. Nonetheless, in order for it to
be successful, Military Civic Action must be integrated into a
fully articulated national strategy in which the Congress, the
President, and the appropriate federal bureaucracies have reached
consensus. This book will be of interest to military professionals
and political scientists interested in foreign and defense
policy.
General
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