Synopses & Reviews
How do civilians control the military? In the wake of September 11, the renewed presence of national security in everyday life has made this question all the more pressing. In this book, Peter Feaver proposes an ambitious new theory that treats civil-military relations as a principal-agent relationship, with the civilian executive monitoring the actions of military agents, the "armed servants" of the nation-state. Military obedience is not automatic but depends on strategic calculations of whether civilians will catch and punish misbehavior.
This model challenges Samuel Huntington's professionalism-based model of civil-military relations, and provides an innovative way of making sense of the U.S. Cold War and post-Cold War experience--especially the distinctively stormy civil-military relations of the Clinton era. In the decade after the Cold War ended, civilians and the military had a variety of run-ins over whether and how to use military force. These episodes, as interpreted by agency theory, contradict the conventional wisdom that civil-military relations matter only if there is risk of a coup. On the contrary, military professionalism does not by itself ensure unchallenged civilian authority. As Feaver argues, agency theory offers the best foundation for thinking about relations between military and civilian leaders, now and in the future.
Review
"Since its publication in 1957, Samuel Huntington's Soldier and the State has been the dominant work on civil-military relations. In that work, Huntington argued that the 'optimal' mode of civilian control over the military came in the form of 'objective control.' For Huntington, the primary goals of civilian elites are to ensure that the military is responsive to their demands (i.e., that civilians are in charge of the military, and not the other way around), and to ensure that the military is capable of performing its function well (i.e., protecting the state from external enemies). Objective control boiled down to permitting a norm of 'professionalism' to become entrenched in the officer corps: the military would refrain from intruding in politics if the civilians would enable the military to conduct its affairs according to its own determined standards. Noting that the patterns of Cold War and post-Cold War civil-military relations in the United States do not at all approximate the classical interpretation, Peter Feaver offers a novel explanation (based on the principal-agent framework) that more accurately describes civil-military relations in the U.S., while simultaneously placing the Huntingtonian explanation in a proper context. Feaver's Agency Theory is an important contribution to the literature to the extent that it provides the microfoundations for explaining how different instantiations of civil-military relations emerge. While agnostic as to the specific factors that can disturb a given equilibrium, Agency Theory is an important advancement—one that both permits great descriptive accuracy and offers important guidance to uncovering the ultimate causes of different forms of the relationship." Reviewed by Andrew Witmer, Virginia Quarterly Review (Copyright 2006 Virginia Quarterly Review)
Review
Feaver has written one of the best books on civil-military relations in several years...Armed Servants was largely completed before September 11th and published before the second Gulf War, but its implications for both are clear. Agency theory must now be accounted for in civil-military relations, thanks to Feaver. National Review
Review
Feaver's formulation of the challenge of civil-military relations as being analogous to the problems faced by managers in firms or political appointees in the Federal bureaucracy is not only appropriate. It is a useful corrective to the all-to-common view that civil-military relations are fine if there is no real danger of a coup d'état. Feaver also provides a very rich and nuanced account of Cold War and post-Cold War American civil-military relations, particularly emphasizing how civilian control has changed regarding use of force issues. Michael Desch, author of < i=""> Civilian Control of the Military: The Changing Security Environment <>
Review
Peter Feaver's excellent new book, Armed Servants, sheds much-needed light on civil-military relations in the U.S.; indeed, it may come to supplant Samuel Huntington's classic 1957 study of American civil-military relations, The Soldier and the State. Armed Servants should be read not only by academic specialists in national security, but also by military professionals--it will change the way they think about these issues. Mackubin Thomas Owens
Review
The current paradigm of the study of civil-military relations is dominated by some well written and carefully considered works that date from the Cold War...It is interesting to see a new challenge to that paradigm. Feaver has been a rather prolific author, with a number of books and articles on civil-military relations as well as American foreign and defense policies. Armed Servants genesis spans his academic career, and it represents a very well synthesized compilation of his earlier works...Feaver has presented a strong challenge to the existing paradigm. He provides a comprehensive review of the dominant civil-military relations theories as well as a well argued counterpoint to those theories. C. E. Welch - Choice
Review
Feaver offers an exhaustive review of the literature on American civil-military relations in the Cold War and post-Cold War period, and points out an important empirical puzzle for Samuel Huntington's argument about civil-military relations during the Cold War. Deborah Avant, author of < i=""> Political Institutions and Military Change: Lessons From Peripheral Wars <>
Review
Peter Feaver advances the study of civil-military relations to a new level of understanding. By dissecting the choices of, and influences on, civilian and military leaders, and interpreting their conduct against the backdrop of a practical theory of political behavior, he unmasks the reality behind the rhetoric of civilian control of the military in the United States. His book will immediately become indispensable not only for students and scholars, but for every military officer, politician, staffer on Capitol Hill, civil servant in the executive branch, and judicial officer in the nation's court system who participates in national defense. Richard Kohn, former Chief of Air Force History, United States Air Force, 1981-1991
Synopsis
How do civilians control the military? In the wake of September 11, the renewed presence of national security in everyday life has made this question all the more pressing. In this book, Peter Feaver proposes an ambitious new theory that treats civil-military relations as a principal-agent relationship, with the civilian executive monitoring the actions of military agents, the "armed servants" of the nation-state. Military obedience is not automatic but depends on strategic calculations of whether civilians will catch and punish misbehavior.<>
About the Author
Peter D. Feaver is Associate Professor of Political Science, Duke University.
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Huntington's Cold War Puzzle
3. The Informal Agency Theory
4. A Formal Agency Model of Civil-Military Relations
5. An Agency Theory Solution to the Cold War Puzzle
6. Explaining the Post-Cold War "Crisis," 1990-2000
7. Using Agency Theory to Explore the Use of Force in the Post-ColdWar Era
8. Conclusion
Notes
References
Index